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黑料吃瓜网 teens look to neighboring town as a model for mental health help

Killingly High School seniors (L-R) Alyssa Caron, Olivia McOsker, Calvin Sandberg, Amelie van der Swaagh talk about the importance of mental health support.
Tyler Russell
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黑料吃瓜网
From left, Killingly High School seniors Alyssa Caron, Olivia McOsker, Calvin Sandberg and Amelie van der Swaagh hang out during a recent walk. In talking about Killingly's Board of Education rejecting a free school-based mental health center at their school, Amelie said, "I've battled anxiety all my life. And I realized that so many people around me who I care about need the help, and either because they can't afford a therapist, or they can't go to their parents or something."

Four Killingly High School seniors often walk to their favorite park near their school to hang out. It鈥檚 been rough being a teenager through the pandemic, but these four friends are still able to joke about how music helps them get through tough days.

鈥淓veryone at school always has earbuds in all the time,鈥 said Calvin Sandberg, a senior at Killingly High. He explained that music plays a big role in their daily lives to help them feel less stressed. 鈥淟ike 80% of the time we鈥檙e walking through the hallways, getting to where we need to be.鈥

Fellow senior Olivia McOsker agreed. 鈥淏ut if you forget your AirPods, then the day鈥檚 ruined,鈥 Olivia said with a laugh. 鈥淥r if the AirPods die.鈥

鈥淚t鈥檚 immediately a bad day if the AirPods are dead,鈥 Calvin said.

But these students also want to turn to something other than music to cope with tough issues. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said a third of high schoolers reported having poor mental health in 2020, and latest show that there鈥檚 a teenage mental health crisis that鈥檚 only getting worse.

Calvin and Olivia鈥檚 friends say they have become their own mental health advocates, after Killingly鈥檚 Board of Education earlier this year rejected a free school-based mental health center at the high school.

鈥淭hings were stressful with all my AP [advanced placement] classes and thinking about college, but the anxiety started to get worse with the Board of Ed,鈥 said Alyssa Caron, a Killingly High School senior, who started getting bad anxiety during her junior year. 鈥淭hem just shooting the plan down like that, it really took a toll on me. Especially because we need the help.鈥

Alyssa Caron and Olivia McOsker (L-R), seniors at Killingly High School.
Tyler Russell
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黑料吃瓜网
Alyssa Caron (left) and Olivia McOsker are seniors at Killingly High School.

The school district received $3.2 million in federal COVID-19 relief funding to help set up the mental health center at Killingly High School. But the school board voted against the plan in March, citing reasons such as a lack of transparency and an intrusion into parental rights.

Parents in support of the center filed a complaint with the state Department of Education, arguing that the school district failed to provide mental health services to students in need. The department found the complaint to be substantial and opened an investigation. A report on the decision not to open a mental health center was expected in October, but now it鈥檚 expected to be released next month.

Senior Amelie van der Swaagh said that if they had access to mental health support at school in the meantime, things would be better.

鈥淚鈥檝e battled anxiety all my life,鈥 Amelie said. 鈥淎nd I realized that so many people around me who I care about need the help, and either because they can鈥檛 afford a therapist, or they can鈥檛 go to their parents or something.鈥

Mental health: A political issue?

One major concern from critics who rejected the Killingly mental health center was that parents won鈥檛 be involved in the counseling process. That鈥檚 despite a recommendation from the 黑料吃瓜网 Association of School Based Health Centers that Killingly set up one or more centers because there aren鈥檛 enough local mental health services for kids.

Based on the association鈥檚 report, Killingly is one of 21 towns that need school-based mental health centers. The report recommended four centers for Killingly: at Killingly High, H.H. Ellis Technical High School, Killingly Intermediate School and Killingly Memorial School.

鈥淲hen the board first started talking about the possibility, we thought, 鈥極K maybe people are taking us seriously,鈥 and I think all of our guidance counselors thought they were finally going to have resources to help more students in the correct way that they need,鈥 Olivia said.

School-based mental health centers have been around 黑料吃瓜网 since 1982. Right now, there are about 100 school health sites that specifically provide mental health services across 黑料吃瓜网, according to the 黑料吃瓜网 Association of School Based Mental Health Centers.

Speaking on April 28 in support of a no-cost, school-based mental health center, Killingly resident Kristine Cicchetti said to the town鈥檚 Board of Education, 鈥淚鈥檓 tired, I'm angry, I'm getting fed up. Like everybody has echoed here tonight, how long does this have to go on? How much information has to be presented to the board before you understand that this is needed?"
File: Mark Mirko
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黑料吃瓜网
Speaking on April 28, 2022, in support of a no-cost, school-based mental health center, Killingly resident Kristine Cicchetti told the town鈥檚 Board of Education: 鈥淚鈥檓 tired, I'm angry, I'm getting fed up. Like everybody has echoed here tonight, how long does this have to go on? How much information has to be presented to the board before you understand that this is needed?"

鈥淚t鈥檚 not a new concept,鈥 said Dr. Lynn Linde, an executive director for the American Counseling Association, who says states have been using this model for years.

Linde said what is new, is that mental health has become in culture wars across the country. She said the lack of trust between parents and schools is polarizing in a way that didn鈥檛 exist 10 years ago.

鈥淭he message it sends to adolescents is that 鈥榊ou don't matter. We know best,鈥欌 Linde said. 鈥淎nd what you鈥檙e feeling is not as important as what we think. And that only exacerbates the mental health crisis among adolescents.鈥

Killingly student Olivia described a similar feeling.

鈥淲hen the board said no, it felt like our struggles were invalidated, and the whole thing felt politicized. Mental illness doesn鈥檛 care what party you are, it will affect anybody,鈥 she said.

Members of the Republican-led Killingly school board did not respond to multiple requests for an interview. CT Public Radio also reached out to Killingly High School for comment about what resources are available to students in need.

鈥淥ur last normal year of school was eighth grade,鈥 Olivia said. 鈥淥ur whole four years of high school is all politicized, from the pandemic to mental health to climate change. We shouldn鈥檛 have to spend all of our time fighting for our own rights.鈥

A model next door

Sandra Fairbairn, a behavioral health operations director with Generations Family Health, helps run the mental health center based at Putnam Middle School in a town next to Killingly.

The center is a typical office space, much like a nurse鈥檚 office, Fairbairn said. Beanbags and student artwork fill the space.

Visual representations of emotions can help those struggling to find the right words for their feelings. These are some that adorn the walls in the offices of Putnam's school based health center.
Tyler Russell
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黑料吃瓜网
Visual representations of emotions adorn the walls in the offices of Putnam's school-based health center.

鈥淗ere, students can come in and meet with the front-end person and let the clinician know that they鈥檙e here,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 really important for students to be able to access it because it鈥檚 a peace of mind for them.鈥

Fairbairn declined to comment directly on the Killingly controversy. But she said at her center, students fill out paperwork with family members first. The two licensed clinicians here follow all the same rules that any doctor would have to with minors, so parents are involved in the process.

鈥淧roper consents are completed, and it鈥檚 returned and then we get them into our system and get an appointment scheduled for them,鈥 Fairbairn said.

Michael Morrill, Putnam Board of Education member, has served for almost 18 years. Officials at Putnam Middle School talk about their school based mental health center.
Tyler Russell
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黑料吃瓜网
Michael Morrill, Putnam Board of Education member, has served for almost 18 years.

鈥淲e have had zero parental complaints, only success, at no costs for nine years,鈥 said Michael Morrill, a Democratic school board member in Putnam. He has spoken out at Killingly school board meetings about his experience starting the center a decade ago.

鈥淕enerations has proved that here, that parents are a part of the process. And I think the victims of this controversy are clearly our kids.鈥

Morrill said this is a generation of kids that experiences stress from school shootings to social media, which leads to a growing concern on the effects of stress on students.

鈥淭hey are just in such a different scope of need. As individual school districts, we cannot provide the level of help that these kids need,鈥 he said. 鈥淭he partnership between the district and Generations is a beautiful way to provide that support.鈥

At the end of the day, the high school students in Killingly want a mental health center like what their friends have in the next town over.

鈥淲hat鈥檚 the difference with the Putnam kids versus the Killingly kids?鈥 said Alyssa.鈥淲hy can鈥檛 Killingly kids get the help that we need?鈥

Catherine is the Host of 黑料吃瓜网鈥檚 morning talk show and podcast, Where We Live. Catherine and the WWL team focus on going beyond the headlines to bring in meaningful conversations that put 黑料吃瓜网 in context.

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