Oh, yeah. That is part of the plan!
I'm not making excuses, I'm telling it like it is. I have a sister who is mentally ill, and she can't work or keep an apartment on her own either. If you met her you'd understand why. She stopped maturing when she was 19, the same year she became psychotic. If not for family helping her get medical help and assistance finding a secure place to live she would be living under a bridge. We don't want that for our young men.
We are trying to change the way we have been dealing with the guys. The fact that they have ADHD and bipolar inherently makes it more difficult for them to be successful in the traditional way. Perhaps you don't understand that--bipolar can be every bit as debilitating as heart disease or stroke. The reason we're going slow with this is because they need help learning. We have obviously not been too successful with this, which is why we are tightening up now and making much stiffer penalties. Setting them both in the street isn't going to teach them to swim. It may very well exacerbate their mental illness and make it very hard for them to continue going to school and finding a job.
Today I sought out some counseling to help me figure out how to approach this. The therapist is in agreement with everything--the contract, the penalties, the deadlines. We have decided that 30 days will give them time to get enrolled for the fall quarter, if they're going to do that, and get a job.
I agree. I think you're doing the right thing for YOUR situation, where something more extreme would probably be right for someone else's situation.