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CRARR Real-World Autism Simulation & Safety Readiness School

Avatar:  Danny Joyner Danny Joyner
Idea Submission for The People's Money:
CRARR (Community Real-World Autism Response & Readiness) proposes the development of a specialized school and training center in NYC designed to support autistic children, non-verbal students, teens, and adults through real-world simulations, safety protocols, and crisis-prevention systems. The program is grounded in the following internal frameworks you provided: • Safety & Crisis Manual  • Full School Charter  • Curriculum Framework  • Parent Intake Protocols  • Staff Training Manual  • Building Floor-Plan Simulation Layout  • Marketing & Community Outreach Plan  This project provides a safe, controlled, autism-supportive mini-city environment that prepares students for real life while also training families, educators, and community responders. ⸻ 3. Problem Statement / Community Need NYC is home to tens of thousands of autistic children and adults, yet: • Schools lack real-world practice environments • Many children experience overwhelm, shutdowns, or meltdowns in public settings • Families are often untrained in crisis-prevention • Public safety incidents involving autistic individuals continue to rise • Parents face difficulty navigating services without structured guidance • Non-verbal students lack access to specialized support systems CRARR directly solves these problems by offering the first simulation-based autism readiness school in NYC, reducing emergency escalations and increasing independence. ⸻ 4. Project Description A. Program Components 1. Real-World Simulation School A fully structured environment with staged public life settings: • Mock MTA subway area • Grocery store • Doctor/dental office • Classroom street-crossing simulation • Cafeteria / restaurant setup • “Calming zones” & sensory-regulation rooms Based on the CRARR floor-plan blueprint.  ⸻ 2. Full Autism-Support Curriculum The curriculum provides: • Sensory regulation training • Communication support for verbal & non-verbal students • Life skills & self-advocacy • Social navigation practice • Emotional-safety & coping tools • Daily-living routines Cited from the CRARR Curriculum document.  ⸻ 3. Crisis Prevention & Safety Protocols CRARR integrates structured procedures from the Safety & Crisis Manual: • De-escalation frameworks • Staff emergency-response steps • Supervision standards • Risk-assessment models • Step-by-step protocols for high-stress scenarios  ⸻ 4. Staff Training & Certification All staff complete CRARR’s training modules such as: • Trauma-informed care • Autism safety standards • Community interaction readiness • Communication models • Simulation leadership  ⸻ 5. Family Intake, Support & Coaching The Parent Intake Packet outlines how CRARR will: • Assess each child • Gather sensory + behavioral profiles • Create individualized support plans • Coach families in crisis prevention • Provide consistent communication  ⸻ 6. Community Engagement & Outreach CRARR’s marketing materials include strategies for: • Public awareness • Event outreach • Digital campaigns • School & hospital partnerships  ⸻ 5. Who This Project Serves • Autistic children (ages 5–18) • Non-verbal and high-support students • Autistic adults needing daily-living support • Families seeking guidance • NYC schools (partnership training) • First responders & community leaders ⸻ 6. Project Goals / Expected Outcomes A. Safety & Crisis Reduction • Fewer emergency escalations involving autistic individuals • Parents trained in de-escalation and crisis prevention B. Emotional & Behavioral Stability • Increased emotional-regulation capacity for students • Reduced school suspensions and behavioral incidents C. Increased Community Inclusion • Students confidently navigating public spaces • More positive interactions with community members D. Family Empowerment • Families equipped with tools to support their child • Lower caregiver stress and burnout E. Institutional Collaboration • Schools and agencies trained using CRARR frameworks ⸻ 7. Location A leased or city-designated facility in Queens, Brooklyn, Manhattan, or the Bronx. The building layout (floor plan) is designed to fit multiple facility types and sizes.  ⸻ 8. Budget Estimate Phase 1 — Build-Out & Simulation Construction ($1,200,000) • Construction of mock city environments • Sensory room build • Accessibility improvements • Safety upgrades Phase 2 — Curriculum, Training & Staffing ($450,000) • Autism specialists • Program directors • Training modules Phase 3 — Family Intake Department ($120,000) Phase 4 — Outreach & Community Integration ($80,000) TOTAL REQUEST: $1.85 MILLION ⸻ 9. Implementation Timeline Months 1–3: Facility Preparation & Compliance Based on CRARR’s Charter & Safety standards   Months 4–6: Build-Out & Simulation Install Following the floor plan blueprint  Months 7–9: Hiring & Staff Training Using CRARR’s Staff Training Manual  Months 10–12: Enrollment & Program Launch Using CRARR’s Parent Intake Packet  ⸻ 10. Community Impact & Equity CRARR improves equity by serving: • Low-income families • Disabled children with high-support needs • Non-verbal students • Families with limited access to resources • Immigrant families needing structured guidance This project supports NYC’s goals for: • safety • inclusion • disability justice • early intervention • family stabilization • community well-being ⸻ 11. Sustainability Plan The program sustains itself through: • Ongoing student enrollment • City partnerships • Training contracts with schools & agencies • Community workshops • Low operating costs once build-out is complete CRARR manuals ensure operational consistency: Safety Manual  Curriculum Framework  Staff Training Manual 
What is the problem your idea aims to address?
NYC is home to tens of thousands of autistic children and adults, yet: • Schools lack real-world practice environments • Many children experience overwhelm, shutdowns, or meltdowns in public settings • Families are often untrained in crisis-prevention • Public safety incidents involving autistic individuals continue to rise • Parents face difficulty navigating services without structured guidance • Non-verbal students lack access to specialized support systems CRARR directly solves these problems by offering the first simulation-based autism readiness school in NYC, reducing emergency escalations and increasing independence.
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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