Summary of the April 7, 2025, Topeka Capital-Journal article:
The federal Office of Refugee Resettlement (ORR) ordered the removal of 15 children from group homes operated by The Villages Inc. in Topeka (10 children) and Lawrence (5 children). The children were relocated to another facility in New York.
Key Details:
- Reason: Alleged violations of the code of conduct at the facilities.
- Response by The Villages: Executive Director Judette Padilla and five other employees are no longer with the organization (resignation/firing details not specified). The organization is reorganizing its management team, with Chief Compliance Officer Mark Burenheide named as interim executive director.
- Ongoing Efforts: The Villages is working with ORR on corrective action plans to address issues, ensure child safety, preserve its federal contract, and retain jobs. It has a long history of caring for children.
- One Exception: A Kansas District Court judge issued an order preventing ORR from moving one additional child, who remains at The Villages.
Background on The Villages:
- Nonprofit founded in 1964 by Dr. Karl Menninger on 400 acres west of Topeka.
- Operates five houses in Topeka and two in Lawrence; capacity for 60 minors and ~95 employees.
- Has housed unaccompanied immigrant children/refugee minors (including some separated at the U.S.-Mexico border) under ORR care since at least 2018.
The article frames the incident as a compliance and management issue at the local nonprofit, with leadership emphasizing commitment to corrective measures. This ties into broader local discussions in Topeka about group homes, refugee services, and child welfare.
No detailed public information is available on Mark Burenheide’s specific prior knowledge of the alleged code of conduct violations that led to the ORR’s actions in early 2025.
Background on Mark Burenheide
- He served as Chief Compliance Officer at The Villages Inc. before being named interim executive director (and later full CEO) following the April 2025 shakeup.
- As CCO, his role inherently involved overseeing regulatory compliance, policies, internal controls, risk management, and adherence to standards — especially critical for an organization contracted with the federal Office of Refugee Resettlement (ORR) caring for vulnerable unaccompanied minors.
- Post-incident, the organization (via Board President Elizabeth Bell) announced management reorganization, employee departures (including former Executive Director Judette Padilla and five others), and work on corrective action plans with ORR to address issues, ensure child safety, and preserve the federal contract.
Timeline and Context
- March 28, 2025: ORR suspended new placements at The Villages, citing code of conduct violations.
- April 7, 2025: ORR ordered removal of 15 children (10 from Topeka, 5 from Lawrence) to a New York facility. Burenheide was publicly named interim leader in the organization’s response.
- The ORR contract (active since ~2018) was a major funding source, supporting up to 60 minors and ~95 staff. It ended by late 2025, prompting a pivot to other services like a maternity shelter for expectant mothers (opened 2026) and community programs (e.g., Sugar Works Adventure Challenge Course).
In a May 2026 TK Magazine profile, Burenheide described the post-ORR period as a time of “rediscover[ing] ourselves” and “starting from the ground up,” focusing on the organization’s original mission roots (founded 1964 by Dr. Karl Menninger) while adapting to new community needs. He emphasized therapeutic nature-based programs, skills training, and returning to core values.
What Is Known (and Not Known) About His Involvement
- No public reports, investigations, lawsuits, or statements directly implicate Burenheide in the violations, cover-ups, or prior awareness of specific problems. Searches across news, public records, and organizational filings turn up nothing tying him personally to misconduct.
- As CCO, it is reasonable to infer he would have been involved in compliance monitoring, audits, reporting to ORR, and any internal reviews — meaning he was likely aware of some operational or regulatory issues before the March/April 2025 actions. However, the exact nature, severity, and timing of what he “knew” (versus what escalated to ORR’s intervention) remain undisclosed publicly.
- The organization’s response framed the issues as addressable through leadership changes and corrective plans, without assigning individual blame beyond the departures of Padilla and others.
- Past scrutiny of The Villages (e.g., 2018 concerns over a staff member with prior allegations) was handled separately and did not involve Burenheide in available records.
Bottom line: Public sources do not provide a “smoking gun” or deep details on Burenheide’s knowledge. His promotion to interim/CEO amid the crisis suggests the board viewed him as part of the solution (leveraging his compliance expertise) rather than part of the problem. For more specifics, official ORR reports, internal audits, or Kansas regulatory filings (if obtainable via open records requests like KORA) would be needed, but nothing granular has surfaced in media or online. The organization has since stabilized and shifted focus under his leadership
No, Judette Padilla is not the mayor's wife.
- Previous mayor (at the time of the April 2025 article): Michael "Mike" Padilla. His wife is Ronnie (or Ronni) Padilla.
- Current mayor (as of 2026): Spencer Duncan, whose wife is Barbara Duncan.
Judette Padilla is a longtime employee (and former Executive Director) of The Villages Inc., a separate Topeka nonprofit. She has no publicly reported spousal connection to either mayor. Padilla is a fairly common surname, and searches show no family link between her and Mike Padilla in news coverage or public records
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