Tranquility Bay is a well-known World Wide Association of Specialty Programs and Schools facility, operated on the island nation of Jamaica. It was opened in 1997. The director is Jay Kay, son of WWASP president Ken Kay. The cost for one child ranges from $25,000 to $40,000 a year.
The organization emphasizes that it teaches "respect for authority" and that its programs are "tough". Jay Kay stated that "if I have kids, and they start giving me a problem, well they are going straight in the programme. If I had to, I'd pull the trigger without hesitation." (Aitkenhead 2003) Children as young as 12 have been admitted to Tranquility Bay, for reasons ranging from drug use to conflicts with a new stepmother.
On June 17, 2003, the New York Times reported about complaints against Tranquility Bay staff by former customers:
Aaron Kravig, who was court-ordered to spend about a year in the facility, delivered the following sworn testimony about Tranquility Bay regarding the sanitary conditions:
Teens had to shower twice per day. The witness said that although he asked for medical treatment, he could not get his scabies treated until he left the facility:
According to Kravig, the facility used a "level system" based on score points, where students on the lower levels "have no privileges whatsoever" and cannot talk to anyone but students on the higher levels, nor contact their parents, until they have reached "level III". It took Kravig 6 or 7 months to reach that level. Letters to parents were screened by the staff, with sections deemed problematic marked out.
Students were not allowed to talk during meals; instead they were forced to listen to "motivational tapes" and take notes. Kravigs described meals as "not very nutritional" - a sandwich for lunch, sometimes without any meat, and "a plate of rice with a little bit of meat" for dinner.
There were 5 different categories of "consequences" (punishments) for every different rule violation. Category II punishments (given for violations like talking to other students) required students to write a 3,000 word essay. Kravig received 74 such punishments. "By the end you will have bruises on your fingers from pressing the pen; your whole arm will hurt; you will pretty much be numb (...)." Category III punishments are given for refusing orders or fighting among students:
According to his testimony, Kravig was in "observation placement" described above once for four and once for twenty-one days. At night, students were required to do fitness time, which Kravig described as severe. Students who did not complete their punishment were restrained. Two or three and up to nine or ten staff members would
Category IV and V entailed longer observation placements for more "severe acts" like obtaining tobacco or alcohol, or making "run plans", which, according to Kravig, was already the case when students looked out the window or one student picked up another's writings. Self-injury also entailed a category V punishment.
Kravig describes a suicide in the girl's facility, and claims that his towel was used to pick up the girl, returned to him with a large blood spot, and that he was not given a fresh towel.
The facility was cleaned when parents would come to visit (which was only allowed for higher level students). Parents who would come uninvited, according to Kravig, were not allowed to see their children. Although the facility is on Jamaica, popular among tourists, there was no fishing, swimming, or snorkling. Kravig also describes what could be interpreted as false advertising:
In the same case, Lindsey Wise delivered testimony about her stay at Tranquility Bay. She was signed up for the program by her parents at age 16, after having unsuccessfully participated in a different WWASPS program. She was escorted to the airport alone by program staff, and her testimony about the level system etc. corresponds with the one by Kravig. According to her testimony, she spent two months in staff watch (because she cracked her knuckles, deemed "self-injury"), which she described as follows:
During her two months of staff watch, she "wasn't allowed to touch or read books" and did not attend school. While Kravig was restrained only once, Wise, who was at the girls' facility, claimed that she was restrained "too many times to remember". About the sanitary conditions, she said:
Negative letters to her parents were considered "manipulation", which reduced her score within the system and sometimes entailed "consequences". Wise confirmed Kravig's testimony regarding medical treatment; like Kravig, she was told to stop complaining and denied medical treatment, in her case for severe acne and a yeast infection.
In the first month, during staff watch, students were not allowed to do any fitness activities, and after the students complained, they were assigned, according to Wise's testimony, "5000 jumping jacks and 3000 crunches and 200 push-ups three times per day". If students failed to complete the exercises, they were restrained, which may explain the high number of restraints reported by Lindsey. She also confirmed the suicide reported by Kravig, by Valerie Herron on August 10, 2001. According to Wise, Herron's clothes, notebook, pens and other personal belongings were given to other students for re-use; no discussions about the incident took place, and "the staff just acted like it was something that was normal."
Wise also reported that she "would go to sleep every night hearing people scream."
In early 2003, journalist Decca Aitkenhead gained access to Tranquility Bay. According to her article for the British Observer Magazine, "parents sign a legal contract with Tranquility Bay granting 49 per cent custody rights." This allows the facility staff to use the physical force they deem necessary to control "their" child and waives the facility's liability for harm. This also explains why students are assigned to "families". According to the article, they have to address their family representative as "Mom" or "Dad".
The article discusses the seminars in which students have to share details of their life. Aitkenhead cites one former student, Scott Burkett:
Burkett explains that such private information frequently involves past relationships, which the "family" representative will often use later to degrade and humiliate the student using questions like "How many of your friends do you think girlfriend is sleeping with right now?"
Burkett also cites the case of a boy being caught with used tissues which were suspected to be leftovers of masturbation:
Regarding "observational placement", the article quotes Jay Kay that "the record is actually held by a female", who, on and off, spent 18 months lying on her face. Other humiliation methods are apparently used. At the time of Aitkenhead's visit, one girl had to wear a sign around her neck with the text "I've been in this programme for three years, and I am still pulling crap."
As for "restraint", the article cites an unnamed student:
This description, with the student calmly removing their own watch, clearly rules out that restraint is used in the way the word suggests -- to restrain a student who is out of control -- and shows that it is instead practiced as a method of corporal punishment.
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It uses material from the
"Tranquility Bay".
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