TS20-20 Sexual harassment and wrongful dismissal accountability


Their Story Matter with Sara Troy and her guest JoAnn Ewin, on-air from May 14th

JoAnn Ewin was an exemplary nurse working at Little Sandy Correctional, but one day she said no to a date with the warden and her life was sent upside down. Today 6 years later she is still fighting for her wrongful dismissal and the justification of being blacklisted and persecuted.

Will justice prevail or will she be caught in the big man’s cluTS20-20 Sexual harassment and wrongful dismissal accountabilityb of sweeping it all under the rug? She shares her story with us and prays that justice will prevail in June at her next court hearing.

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JoAnn Ewin says”I started work at Little Sandy Correctional Complex on November 5, 2012. I was originally hired by the KY. DOC and Correct Care Integrated Health. Then in the fall of 2013, they lost their contract to Correct Care Solutions. Before I was hired I had to go through a background check and was drug tested. The drug test was done at the prison. I was interviewed at the prison by Heather Nickell, acting HSA (Health Services Administrator), Deputy Warden, Mary Godfrey, and Warden Joseph P. Meko. I had to meet Warden Meko’s approval and he had to give the go-ahead to the company before they would hire me. I was issued two badges, one from the KY DOC and one from the company. Both had a photopic on them. CCIH and CCS never had any of their company personnel at the prison. CCS sent representatives to the prison when they won the bid for the new contract to ensure a smooth transfer from CCIH. Everyone in the medical department had to go through doing all the new employee paperwork. All business was conducted by the HSA via internet and phone calls. All medical staff and correctional officers (new hires and all other staff) received the same training. Only correctional officers receive weapons training. This training was done at LSCC in Sandy Hook. Then yearly, all staff have to complete online training that is required.

I was written up by a CO (correctional officer) at the prison on October 20, 2013. I was in segregation doing my evening medication pass which usually took place at 10:00 p.m or close to that time frame. There was an inmate that was in solitary confinement because he had attempted suicide the day before. He had been given Lexapro and Seroquel by the company psychiatrist for depression and anxiety-related issues. The Dr. issued an order for him to have a sack lunch with his night-time meds. All medical staff knew the order existed and that the inmate had to have food with an evening med pass. The officers in segregation were responsible for making sure that these “sack lunches” were available to give inmates that had a special order or were diabetics. Sometimes, when they had no lunches the nurse would have to go to the kitchen for the food themselves. I had to do this on a few occasions myself. I was written up by the CO that assisted me with my rounds that night for “following the Dr.s order by giving the inmate food so he wouldn’t become nauseated from the meds. He had to have food in his stomach or he would vomit profusely. The officer stated in his report I had given the inmate food and broke the rule “staff is not allowed to give inmates anything”. I was later taken to the warden’s office and was interrogated for over 2 hours about the incident by the warden and internal affairs personnel. I explained to them that the Dr., had given the inmate an order for the food and I was following his order. (I have a copy of the order and the write up). The warden then told me, ” I don’t know why this officer is wasting my time with such petty issues” and he sent me on to medical to finish my shift.

We had an inmate that suffered from a broken jaw at the same time as this was going on. Another inmate hit him in the face with a lock. An R.N. I worked with on the second shift would go or send me to the facility kitchen to get extra food for this inmate. He DID NOT have a Dr. order for this extra food. She told me the evenings she wasn’t on duty to make sure he got this food and I did. I was never written up for doing this nor was she. I felt like I was a target. The acting HSA at the time and nurse practitioner tried to do away with the Dr.s order. They tried to change the order to “crackers” with meds. I told them they didn’t have the authority to change or cancel a Dr’s order and I would continue to give the food. That’s when the acting HSA started retaliating against me. I felt like a target.

I was hired by Warden Meko on November 5, 2012 and was terminated by him on April 16, 2014. I had no idea I was going to be fired. I hadn’t had any write ups or hadn’t been reprimanded in anyway and wasn’t given any paperwork explaining why I was losing my security clearance. I later learned I was deemed a “security risk” but never have learned what that risk was. My HSA, Kimberly Duvall, was waiting for me that evening. When she saw me she met me outside I hadn’t even been allowed to go into the building where I worked. She approached me and said we need to go to the warden’s office. I ask her why, she said I don’t know, we’ll find out when we get there. She knew all along what was going to take place. We went into his office and he told me to give him my badges that he was terminating me by pulling my security clearance. I ask him “why”? He said he no longer wanted me there. I’ll never forget the way he looked at me when he said that. He then told me to leave and get the hell out of his sight. Kim sat there and never once offered any support in my defense. All she said was “this is the warden’s house he can do what he want he wants to when he feels like it”. I gave him my badges and left. I found out later that he sent out a memo to all thirteen state facilities black balling from ever being able to work in a state prison the rest of my nursing career. I was never given a chance to talk to anyone about what happened.

My nursing record has never had any negativity or black marks on it at any time or even at the time I was terminated at LSCC. My name and reputation have been permanently damaged by this. It prevented me from getting a few good jobs after the prison because once an employer ask me and knew I had been terminated from my job there they wouldn’t hire me. It looked like “I” had done something wrong when I hadn’t.

I applied for unemployment benefits and was denied. I hired an attorney, had a hearing and won my benefits! I received UI for 26 weeks and received the maxium amount allowed at the time. My paychecks came from CCS and were deposited into my checking account. We were paid bi-weekly. In 2013 I earned $40,000. When a nurse was needed to fill someone else’s shift I was the one they called. I worked every shift they had at the prison. The HSA was responsible for making the work schedule.

I was under so much stress while I worked at the prison that in early 2014 I was put on Celexa or Prozac for anxiety. I was having insomnia and suffering from headaches and other stress-related problems. I am still on Seroquel to this day. I still have bad dreams and insomnia related to what I went through while working there.

My attorney is the only person that knows my story and what happened while I worked there. Little did I know during that time four female CO’s (correctional officers) were being sexually harassed by their male supervisor. I was terminated on April 16, 2014 and they filed their lawsuit in August of 2014. I heard talk while I was there but had no idea the extent of what they were enduring.

I tried for 2-3 weeks to contact the HR department at CCS. No one would ever take my call or call me back. I left countless messages. The warden supervised all activity and all employees at the prison. Everything had to go through him and have his approval. I was warned by a co-worker after I started work there to watch the warden. I never paid a lot of attention to the remark and concentrated on my job. After I had worked there a while when I would see the warden, he was always friendly, smiling, and winking. Then all that changed one day in February 2014. I was going into work one evening in February. Some of the officers and the warden were standing around talking and laughing. He caught me alone as I was going through the metal detector. He asks me, “how are things down in medical”? I replied, ” things are good as far as I know”. He said, “if you ever need anything let me know, maybe we can have a drink sometime”. I replied “no thank you” and gathered my bag in a rush and went on to the medical department which was in a separate building from entry. I couldn’t believe what I had just heard. I tried to avoid all contact with him after that.

I never filed a complaint or any type or report against the warden after this happened. People ask me why and the reasons were simple. I had my 18-year-old son that was in his senior year of high school. He needed money for senior-related expenses. Prom, pictures, etc. I was afraid of retaliation, but I lost my job anyway. I was ashamed and thought no one would believe me. The only person I confided in was a co-worker. Somehow the warden learned I had told her about his advances and in Sept. 2014 he terminated her in the same way he did me. She was never able to get any help from the company we worked for either. She has filed a separate lawsuit in 2015. The warden retired with his full pension and moved to Georgia. A report from the KY Personnel Cabinet came out in May 2019 exposing the warden and LSCC revealing a culture existed within LSCC which may have contributed to acts of sexual harassment and a reluctance to report allegations of sexual harassment. One report of sexual harassment was never investigated at all. Complaints were also “swept under the rug”. The report is public knowledge and was filed on May 14, 2019.

I have had a civil suit filed in Elliott County Circuit Court since Dec. 28, 2014. 14-CI-00084. My case has laid idle I would say at least 75% of the time since it has been filed. I have no idea(s) why it has or is lingering in court for so long. But I certainly would like to have it settled this year. I do know the residing judge will probably make the final ruling and I will not have a jury trial like my attorney ask for back in the beginning. I want due justice that I am entitled to. I was terminated for saying “no” and want the world to know my story. No one should have this much power over another.



PRISON MISHANDLED COMPLAINTS

JODY_Kilgore@yahoo.com

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TS 20-19 Rebecca Joy Loving Life after leaving the Cult

Their Story Matters with Sara Troy and her guest Rebecca Joy, on-air from May 5th

My journey of self-discovery began a few years after leaving a well-known, international cult I was born into. After leaving the cult, I believed that if I were to leave my painful life I would be happy and be loved. I was grateful for my physical freedom that I never experienced before starting a new life, but my emotional pain from the past haunted me feeling the same negative emotions of being unworthy of love and unworthy to live. Like most traumatized people, they hope for a better life but unsure of how to go about it.

AUDIO ONLY

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My first biggest change of awareness happened when I went to school for hypnosis and NLP. I realized that if I wanted to change my life, I had to change myself from the inside out through healing the unconscious past memories and transforming my perceptions. I began to realize that no one could save me but within myself.

That was more than 16 years ago. My passion is now helping people know who they are and to heal and empower themselves. As Glinda the Good Witch from the Wizard of Oz, “You’ve always had the power, my dear, you just had to learn it for yourself.” You are worthy and loved just for being here. There is nothing that you have to do to be worthy. You are one with the infinite.

Please tell all the contacts in your messenger list not to accept friendship request from Andrea Wilson. She is a hacker and has the system connected to your Facebook account. If one of your contacts accepts it, you will also be hacked, so make sure that all your friends know it.

Email; rebeccajoyhypnosis@gmail.com

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TSM20-15 Mark Balla Discovering my inner humanitarian


Their Story Matter with Sara Troy and her guest Mark Bello, on air from April 7th

During a business trip to India in 2011, Mark Balla made an unexpected discovery, a discover that was to turn his understanding of our world upside down. He was so shaken by what he learned that he felt unable to simply walk away.

More often than not, when people are confronted by a major issue with global implications you will hear them say “What can I do? I’m only one person.” Mark decided that such a response would be unacceptable, and he made up his mind to get involved. Within three years he had walked away from paid employment, delivered a TED talk, founded a charity, joined a Rotary Club and started a project that has since impacted directly and indirectly on the lives of hundreds of thousands of people.


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After completing a degree majoring in Linguistics in the 1980s, Mark Balla took a job working for Lonely Planet Publications, first as an editor and later as a travel writer. Among others, Mark was involved in writing travel guides to various European and Latin American countries.

After leaving Lonely Planet, he spent a number of years working in the commercial shipbuilding industry with a particular focus on trade exhibitions and trade publishing. In the early 2000s, Mark and his wife Annie started their own business in the CD and DVD manufacturing industry. The business grew strongly and was eventually sold to an Australian based supplier. The buyer established  a joint venture manufacturing business in India and asked Mark to join the board. This is where his Indian adventure began.

Mark and Annie live in Melbourne, Australia. They have two adult children and a cat. Mark has a complicated relationship with both the cat and his golf handicap. He is an enthusiastic member of the Rotary Club of Box Hill Central where he will be club president in 2020/21. He and Annie are avid travelers, both believing that the world is far too interesting a place not to have a good look at it.


www.toiletwarrior.net

https://www.youtube.com/ – TEDx talk

https://www.operationtoilets.org.au

https://www.boxhillcentralrotary.org.au

Information on childhood slavery

https://www.boxhillcentralrotary.org.au/end-slavery.html

https://www.facebook.com/TltWarrior

https://www.facebook.com/wecannotwait


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TM19-40 Jay Westbrook Compassionate Journey Death with Dignity


Crossing Over with Dignity, Death with Dignity, Grief & Loss  on Their Story Matters with Sara Troy and her guest Jay Westbrook, on-air from October 1st

Because of Jay’s deep, long, and intimate relationship with suffering, he has been able to comfortably bear witness to the suffering of the dying, to do so with a compassionate presence, and has been able to develop & cultivate tools to help people die more tenderly and their families to grieve more gently.


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Jay Westbrook, MS, RN is a multiple award-winning clinician, author, speaker, and Visiting Faculty Scholar at Harvard Medical School’s Palliative Care Department.

He has worked bedside with the dying & the grieving for over 30 years, is nationally recognized as an expert on the constellation of issues surrounding End-of-Life, and is highly skilled in working with the spiritual, emotional, & physical suffering of people approaching the end of their lives, and their grieving families and caregivers.

He has also served as Senior Grief & Loss Counselor for multiple Southern California treatment centers, assisting in breaking the pattern of grief-related substance abuse and relapse.

He is Clinical Director of Compassionate Journey, an End-of-Life Clinical and Education Service, and lectures nationally at both the keynote and breakout levels.

“Westbrook employs a narrative style, in the Native American tradition, to provide riveting, amazingly inspiring, and powerful presentations on the transformative aspects of suffering and on using suffering to awaken compassion.”

“Your stories & grace have haunted my thoughts & helped me tremendously.” – E. Richardson, M.D.

“Your heart is so beautiful, your courage endless.  In 90 minutes you filled my heart, renewed my soul, and changed – forever – the way I will approach & perform my work. Thank you”  –  C. Downey, M.D.

“Extraordinary care & teaching & modeling, Jay … You did an amazing job.”  –  S. Block, M.D.

Compassionate Journeys: Lessons From My Work With the Dying 

By G. Jay Westbrook

“An amazing, profound, moving, & inspirational collection of powerful stand-alone stories – shared in the narrative style of Native Americans – each of which illustrates a tool for co-journeying with the dying, and which can be used equally well with the dying, their families, or to train clinical professionals.” 

CompassionateJourney@hotmail.com

.facebook.com/jay.westbrook.73
Compassionate Journeys with Jay Westbrook


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TS19-32 Caring for Our Elderly Wisdom Keepers with Phyllis Ayman


Their Story Matters with Sara Troy and her guest Phyllis Ayman, on air from July 30th

Phyllis Ayman, MS/SLP, CDP     PMA Speech Solutions, LLP

Caring for Our Wisdom Keepers.  Our Elder Citizens who have contributed to building our respective society’s, giving birth to the next generation, and have fought on our behalf in wars on foreign soils, deserve respect, dignity, quality of life and quality of care as they continue life’s journey into their advancing years, especially in the over 15,000 of our nationals nursing homes.

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Phyllis Ayman, an author of the international best-selling book “OVERDUE Quality Care for Our Elder Citizens”, published February 8, 2019, has become known as “The Voice for Eldercare Advocacy”. Her first book “Nursing Homes to Rehabilitation Centers…What Every Person Needs to Know” was published in December 2017. 

 She is an Eldercare Advisor/Coach,  Advocate, Keynote and Breakout Speaker, Speech & Language Pathologist and Certified Dementia Practitioner who brings an insider’s view into the nursing home industry after working in 40+ skilled nursing/short-term rehabilitation facilities for over 25 years. 

 Phyllis provides the necessary information and valuable unique insight from an insight perspective for individuals and families so they can become more effective advocates when seeking care for themselves or their loved ones in a short-term rehabilitation, traditional long-term or memory care stay within a skilled nursing facility. 

 As a speech & language pathologist and Certified Dementia Practitioner, Phyllis has been known for her empathy and high standards of care while building and creating innovative programs in an effort to improve the quality of life and quality of care for all nursing home residents. Her specialties have included working with patients having all stages of respiratory disease, including those who are ventilator dependent or have tracheostomy tubes, Parkinson’s Disease, strokes, and other neurologic impairments, Alzheimer’s Disease and other dementias, and impairments in swallowing. 

 Phyllis has been a regular guest on WGCH AM Greenwich Business Talk Radio since November 2018 and now brings her own guests whom she interviews on the “Darby and Friends” show. She was also interviewed on the Sustainable Success Show and the Amplified Radio Show on the Voice America’s Influencer Channel.  She joined the team at HPATV as the host and Associate Producer of “The Golden Years….Understanding Better Living” in April 2019.  She has been interviewed on other podcasts and blogcast radio shows, independent TV stations, and has plans to launch her own radio show on the Voice America channel September 5th. 

She conducts Webinars and Seminars on Caregiving and “The Sandwich Generation” for national insurance providers, small business and major corporations in the public and private sector, and is a keynote and breakout speaker on Aging and Eldercare in America, Caregiving, Communication, Empathy and Cultural diversity. She serves as a board member of the Massachusetts Advocates of Nursing Home Reform.


? https://www.voiceforeldercare.com 

FB Voice for Eldercare Advocacy; www.facebook.com/phyllisayman 

FB Author page www.facebook.com/phyllis4qualityeldercare

twitter.com/VforEldercare

www.instagram/voiceofeldercare

PHYLLIS’S NEW SHOW ON SENOIRS STRAIGHT TALK


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