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Phil Andrews is the Director of Crime Prevention Initiatives for the State's Attorney's Office of Montgomery County, Maryland. [1] From 1998-2014, he served for four terms on the Montgomery County Council. Andrews was born in Washington, D.C., and grew up in Montgomery County, MD.
In his Master's Thesis Project: Systematic Programming to Increase Responsible Academic Learning—A Change Project in a Montgomery County Day Treatment Program (1987, Lincoln University), Bradley S. LeVan reports that "PVA, where academic concerns are combined with counseling and family intervention, is a sound model for day treatment. Both ...
House Of Ruth expands its shelter, services and sets up the first, statewide, 24-hour hotline for victims of domestic violence. 1983. House Of Ruth opens a legal clinic to provide legal services to victims of domestic violence and expands its voluntary batterers’ program to include court-ordered abusers.
Apr. 15—Montgomery County residents still struggling to pay the rent due to pandemic hardship may now apply for assistance through a new $15.8 million relief program. "There is still a strong ...
Feb. 20—LEWISBURG — The 19-year-old former resident aide at Heritage Springs Memory Care pleaded guilty on Tuesday to extensive elder abuse at the Lewisburg facility. On Tuesday in Union ...
A lawsuit accuses Orange County and the city of Anaheim of failing to intervene to stop the abuse of two young girls by their father and stepmother. 10-year-old's torture, abuse was ignored for ...
Founded by the non-profit Equal Justice Initiative, it opened in downtown Montgomery, Alabama on April 26, 2018. [2] [3] It consists of a memorial square with 805 hanging steel rectangles representing each of the U.S. counties where a documented lynching took place. It includes sculptures depicting themes related to racial violence.
Last year, the state declined to renew YSI’s contract for that program, a 154-bed facility called Thompson Academy where state officials over the years had documented frequent violence and failures to report serious incidents. But that decision was not due to poor performance, according to a letter the state sent to the company in August 2012.