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Tranquility Bay

Tranquility Bay
PDC 0062.JPG
Location

Treasure Beach, Jamaica

Tranquility Bay is located in Jamaica
Tranquility Bay
Coordinates 17°52′14″N 77°45′04″W / 17.87056°N 77.75111°W / 17.87056; -77.75111Coordinates: 17°52′14″N 77°45′04″W / 17.87056°N 77.75111°W / 17.87056; -77.75111
Information
School type private
Motto "Working for the future of the world"
Established 1997
Director Jay Kay
Accreditation Northwest Association of Accredited Schools
Affiliation World Wide Association of Specialty Programs

Treasure Beach, Jamaica

Tranquility Bay was a residential treatment facility affiliated with World Wide Association of Specialty Programs and Schools (WWASP), that operated from 1997 to early 2009. It was located in Calabash Bay, Saint Elizabeth Parish, Jamaica.

The director was Jay Kay, a college dropout with no training in child development, and who is son of WWASP president Ken Kay. The cost for one child ranged from $25,000 to $40,000 a year. Tranquility Bay was generally acknowledged as the toughest of the WWASP schools. As with other WWASP facilities, Tranquility Bay has been the subject of much controversy, including allegations of torture, unsanitary living conditions, unqualified employees, and denial of medical care; these claims have been the subject of multiple lawsuits from former Tranquility Bay residents.

Tranquility Bay stated that it was dedicated to helping parents who are having difficulty with their children, whether they are doing drugs, breaking the law, or being disobedient or disrespectful. In 2003, Kay said "if I have kids, and they start giving me a problem, well, they are going straight in the program. If I had to, I'd pull the trigger without hesitation"; however, in 1999, Kay (who at that time was not working for WWASP) said that the Tranquility Bay staff were "untrained", without "credentials of any kind", and that Tranquility Bay "could be leading these kids to long-term problems that we don't have a clue about because we're not going about it in the proper way".

Children as young as 12 were admitted to Tranquility Bay, for reasons ranging from drug use to conflicts with a new stepmother. From 2002 to 2005 the Government of the Cayman Islands sent some delinquent youth to Tranquility Bay; the government funded the students as they were located in Tranquility Bay.

Tranquility Bay was shut down in January 2009, after the case of Isaac Hersh gained national media and political attention and years of alleged abuse and torture came to light. Many politicians, including Hillary Clinton, were involved in Isaac's release.


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