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“It’s Like Jail”: Colorado Youth Describe Abusive Life Inside Psychiatric Center

A state-licensed youth psychiatric facility is under fire after a three-year study found repeated abuses, high restraint rates and a string of broken promises to reform.

The Southern Peaks Regional Treatment Center (SPRTC) in Cañon City, Colorado, is a facility specializing in the housing and treatment of youth aged 10–18 who have “significant emotional, social, behavioral and/or psychiatric disorders.”

“Let me out. I didn’t know it was this bad.” —Youth Resident, Southern Peaks Regional Treatment Center

What exactly that “treatment” consists of was laid bare in a report by Disability Law Colorado (DLC), a nonprofit advocacy organization.

“Unsafe” is one of the delicate adjectives used in the report to describe conditions at SPRTC. “Often unkind” is the phrase used to characterize the staff, who, according to various children, will say things to them like, “you suck” and “you’re a piece of crap.”

One child said he was told to “go kill myself.”

Name-calling is one thing, but physical abuse in the form of excessive restraints and coercive “therapy” is another.

“SPRTC continues to be more broadly known for their use of restraints rather than treatment.”

The case of Brandy Fogle’s autistic 13-year-old son appears to be a typical one. Fogle, who has been at the facility since January, is restrained multiple times weekly, for up to one hour and 20 minutes. “I can’t imagine,” Ms. Fogle said, “being held down by four to five adults for a few minutes, let alone an hour and 20 minutes.”

The brutality inflicted on her son is among the roughly 75 documented restraint incidents per month at SPRTC as of May 2025—a rate significantly higher than other comparable facilities in Colorado.

The cruel use of restraints is mirrored in the facility’s unsafe conditions and its striking lack of care and compassion. “We have had numerous children report to us that they have received raw or undercooked food, including raw chicken,” says DLC. “Multiple children have reported getting food poisoning while in the care of SPRTC.”

And as for the housing, it “cannot be described as feeling homelike,” the report discloses. “Children have metal beds and dark rooms with breakable windows. Their common areas are filled with furniture that is often found in correctional settings like jails and prisons. This furniture is even less homelike and welcoming than the furniture in juvenile corrections facilities in Colorado.”

Or as one child expressed, “It’s like jail.”

SPRTC claimed to have set up a Youth Advisory Council to allow for feedback from residents about the facility, but when the DLC visited, there was no such council.

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