Raising Thomas
Alex Coolman
COSTA MESA -- Raising Thomas is difficult. In a small apartment on
Joann Street, Terry Meek is trying to figure out how she can keep doing
it.
Meek is pretty sure that Thomas, her 4-year-old son, suffers from a
form of autism. But convincing school district and county officials of
that is proving to be a battle.
And for the widow of Timothy Ray Meek, the Newport Beach dory
fisherman who was lost at sea in 1998, the struggle to get help for
Thomas is more than a fight with bureaucracy: it’s an attempt to hold
together the last remnants of her family.
On a recent afternoon, Meek was sorting through a stack of paper,
forms she’d printed from the Internet. The papers were dense with terms
like “unnecessary institutionalization” and “litigation strategies,” and
Meek looked like she’d had about as much of this kind of reading as she
could take.
Thomas stood at the front door, pulling unhappily at the handle and
complaining that he wanted to go outside.
“In a minute,” Meek told him. “We’ll go and get you some ice cream.”
These kinds of minor parenting tasks -- getting a treat, buying a toy
-- are things 40-year-old Meek can handle. But Thomas, who has
developmental disorders that cause him to be impatient, temperamental and
sometimes violent, needs more than a few gentle bribes.
Thomas needs some professional help. And Meek says her efforts to
obtain it -- from the county and the school district -- haven’t been
fruitful.
Though Thomas, who attends Step by Step preschool, is in a special
education program, Meek is concerned that the school’s approach -- which
focuses on his learning disabilities -- isn’t as broad as it should be.
“It doesn’t treat the behavioral component of his problem,” she said.
The difficulty Meek is having in getting help for her son has its
roots in the nature of his behavior. Though he’s obviously a troubled
child, and though Meek can recite a list of injuries she’s received at
his hands, Thomas’ behavior does not fit neatly into a single diagnostic
category.
The most obvious behavioral difficulties involve his unpredictable
temper and certain physical quirks, such as hand fluttering and
occasionally poor coordination. Meek thinks her son is autistic, and
she’s got doctors to say as much.
But so far it’s been impossible to get county and school district
officials to agree with this diagnosis and to provide the services --
such as a parenting aide -- that Meek says she needs.
The Regional Center of Orange County is the nonprofit agency that
contracts with the state of California to provide services for people
with developmental disabilities. Karen Taylor, a spokeswoman for the
center, said the process of getting services for a child can sometimes be
challenging.
“It’s hard for parents and families, too,” she said. “It can be
overwhelming.”
However, Taylor said the categories used for assessing the needs of
individuals are far from arbitrary.
“It’s very comprehensive, and we do have specific criteria -- medical,
psychological and social assessments -- that are evaluated.
“The needs are determined on an individual basis and we have certain
guidelines that we follow for determining what services” will be given.
“If parents don’t agree, they do have the right to appeal.”
Both the Regional Center and the Newport-Mesa Unified School District
are prohibited from discussing the cases of individual students. But
Patrick Ryan, the director of special education for Newport-Mesa, said
the district strives to provide the best possible care for its students.
“We’re legally bound as a public entity to provide the services for
students who are eligible, and we’re also required to find out who’s
eligible, and we have all those processes in place,” Ryan said.
For Meek, though, negotiating the bureaucracy has proved to be a
tiring and expensive process.
At a September meeting, she is scheduled to negotiate with the
Regional Center over the issue of what services Thomas should receive.
But she says she worries that she won’t have enough money to pay for the
attorneys she needs to fight the case.
“What I’m trying to get is the chance to keep my son, and to prevent
him from going to an institution,” she said.
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