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Essential

CRARR Real-World Autism Simulation & Safety Readiness School

Avatar:  Danny Joyner Danny Joyner
Idea Submission for The People's Money:
CRARR proposes the creation of a first-of-its-kind Real-World Autism Simulation & Safety Readiness School—a specialized educational environment offering real-world scenario training, sensory-responsive classrooms, crisis-prevention protocols, and family-centered support. The program integrates crisis-prevention procedures, safety standards, structured curriculum, family intake support, and professional staff training, as documented in our manuals. This project directly improves community safety, enhances access to high-quality services for autistic children and adults, reduces emergency escalations, and trains families, schools, and first-responders. Citations: Safety manual  · Curriculum  · Parent intake packet  A. Program Components 1. Safety & Crisis Prevention Program Based on CRARR’s Safety & Crisis Policy Manual, including procedures, safety standards, and crisis-prevention models. Citation:  2. Full Specialized Curriculum for Autistic Students Includes communication training, sensory regulation, social modeling, real-world scenario rehearsal, and behavior-support modules. Citation:  3. Real-World Simulation Blueprint The school includes staged environments such as: • mock grocery store • mock MTA station • mock doctor’s office • sensory-friendly “calming pods” • safety practice hall Based on CRARR’s floor plan document. Citation:  4. Full School Charter & Operating Framework Defines governance, standards, operational procedures, compliance, and program structure. Citation:  5. Parent & Family Intake & Support Division Provides family assessments, stress-reduction support, service navigation, and individualized plans. Citation:  6. Staff Certification & Training Program Includes modules for safety, de-escalation, autism-sensitive teaching, scenario-based instruction, and multi-sensory support. Citation:  7. Community Outreach & Awareness Campaign Uses CRARR’s marketing materials to engage local families, schools, community groups, and youth organizations. Citation:  ⸻ B. Who This Serves • Autistic youth & adults • Non-verbal children • Families needing support & training • NYC schools (for partnership training) • First responders & community organizations ⸻ C. Expected Outcomes • Reduction in emergency escalations involving autistic individuals • Increased safety and community integration • Higher confidence and independence for autistic students • Improved parent capacity, stability, and crisis-prevention knowledge • Stronger city-school-family collaboration systems ⸻ 5. PROJECT LOCATION A dedicated school facility within NYC, adaptable to any borough depending on awarded funding and site availability. Floor plan and layout are included in the CRARR floor plan documentation. Citation:  ⸻ 6. COST ESTIMATE (PB Budget Recommended Range: $50k–$5M) A flexible version is provided, depending on final scale NYC approves. Phase 1: Build-Out & Simulation Rooms — $1.2M • Construction + interior simulation build • Safety infrastructure • Sensory rooms • Accessibility upgrades (Referenced in floor plan and safety manual) Phase 2: Curriculum, Training & Program Delivery — $450k • Curriculum implementation • Teacher training • Autism-specialist onboarding Phase 3: Community Outreach Campaign — $80k (Create awareness so families can access resources) Phase 4: Parent Intake & Support Office — $120k TOTAL REQUEST: $1.85M ⸻ 7. IMPLEMENTATION PLAN Month 1–3: Compliance & Final Site Approval Based on the CRARR Full School Charter standards and safety requirements. Citation:  Month 4–6: Build-Out & Simulation Room Construction Following blueprint structure. Citation:  Month 7–9: Hiring, Training & Certification According to CRARR Staff Training Manual. Citation:  Month 10–12: Enrollment, Family Intake & Program Launch Parent Intake Packet informs all intake procedures. Citation:  ⸻ 8. EQUITY & COMMUNITY IMPACT This project directly benefits: • Low-income families • Non-verbal or high-support autistic students • Families experiencing crisis or instability • Communities with limited autism-support access CRARR directly aligns with NYC goals for accessibility, safety, inclusion, family empowerment, disability justice, and community wellbeing. ⸻ 9. LONG-TERM SUSTAINABILITY Once established, the CRARR school becomes a permanent community asset. Sustainability is supported through: • annual enrollment • city partnerships • training contracts with schools and hospitals • community workshops • low operational cost after initial build-out The manuals (safety, curriculum, staff training) ensure the program remains consistent, replicable, and scalable. Citations: Safety Manual  Curriculum  Training Manual  ⸻ 10. ATTACHMENTS (Provided Upon NYC PB Request) The proposal references the following internal documents: • Safety & Crisis Policy Manual  • Grant-Ready Proposal Packet  • Building Floor Plan Overview  • Full School Charter  • Parent Intake Packet  • Full Curriculum  • Marketing Materials Overview  • Staff Training Manual 
What is the problem your idea aims to address?
NYC families raising autistic children frequently encounter: • Lack of real-world training environments to prepare for public interactions • High risk of escalation in unfamiliar public environments • Limited school options with comprehensive autism-sensitive crisis prevention • Gaps between home, school, and city services • Overwhelmed parents without training or structured support CRARR directly addresses these unmet needs by creating a safe, controlled, simulated “mini-city” school environment that mirrors real-world triggers and teaches adaptive skills, helping children remain regulated and safe in public settings. CRARR also reduces emergency calls by training families and educators in best-practice safety protocols found in our Safety & Crisis Manual .
Which groups does your idea focus on? Select all that apply
Youth (under 24)
Older Adults (65 +)
Public Housing Residents
Justice Impacted People
People with Disabilities
Limited English Speakers
Immigrants / Migrants
Veterans
LGBTQIA+ People
Parents
Unhoused People
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