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This week's diary is by a family placement panels manager for a local authority

Posted: 09 May 2002 | Subscribe Online


Tuesday
My computer allows me some relaxing mini-breaks during two hours' quality spreadsheet time. It's like the machine playing statues with me: the first cursor to move is a sissy. These jams would drive me to distraction if I didn't see them as opportunities for kettle-filling and answering e-mails.

Wednesday
Why do social services departments have procedure manuals? So social workers can leave them on the shelf to gather dust. In common with many other departments, our procedures are not updated as regularly as they should be. In our defence, we have recently completed a major exercise on the core business of family placement teams, which should help. As chairperson of the fostering panels, I've rung several social workers recently and tried to find a way of saying "did you look at the procedures before completing this assessment?" without them hearing my teeth grinding. I must admit that the combination of the introduction of competency-based assessments, the implications of the human rights legislation and the regulations around offences can result in some finely balanced decisions. For example, when are people too old to foster? Presumably under human rights law, the answer would have to be never, unless it can be demonstrated that they do not have the skills and abilities required.

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Thursday
Long panel day today. All of us are nearly in tears for the foster mother of a severely disabled boy. After we thank her profusely for caring for him she insists that he has enriched her family's lives beyond measure and asks if we could please reassure her that he will not have to leave them when he is 18. The social worker blanches at the thought of finding her way through the maze that will be the process of transfer from children's to adults' services, but will, I know, succeed. We approve an enthusiastic and thoughtful young childless couple who want to start with weekend fostering. The woman has taken the trouble of spending her lunch hours in the staff nursery at her work to experience child care first-hand. This could be the beginning of a long career as foster carers. The final foster carers' review involves one of six sets of carers from one extended family, spanning three generations. We must be getting something right.

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Friday
Morning spent wrestling with how to reorganise the way we pay foster carers, in a group including six current carers. We want to pay according to the skill of the carers rather than by labelling the child as more or less "difficult". Defining where we want to get to is relatively straightforward, particularly with advice from the Fostering Network and using the experience of neighbouring departments. But there are two big problems: how to get there without disadvantaging any carers, and - surprise, surprise - no new money to get a new scheme started. We will get there. We owe it to present and future foster carers to make sure they are properly recompensed for one of the most important jobs around.

 



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