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Councillors demand inquiry into Cardiff's social services department

Posted: 29 August 2002 | Subscribe Online


Opposition councillors at Cardiff Council have called for an independent public inquiry into the way the city's social services are run.

They are concerned about the treatment of whistleblowers and a forthcoming joint review that is expected to be highly critical. They claim that public money is being used to pay a private law firm to fight staff who raise concerns about standards.

Last week senior social worker Neil White was sacked because he allegedly refused to discipline a worker, Beverley Bush, who had blown the whistle on abuse at Cardiff's Hazelcroft residential home for older people. His union, the British Union of Social Work Employees (BUSWE), has written to every member of the council protesting at his dismissal.
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Earlier this year, the sacking of social worker Charles Faber sparked a one-day strike. He had led the council's emergency duty team for 20 years and blew the whistle over his concerns about services for children in the city.

Conservative group leader Gareth Neale claimed the bill for legal services from a private law firm was now running into hundreds of thousands of pounds and was a waste of public money: "When a firm like that works on a case it costs around £250 per hour and this has been going on for around 11 months. This is all about the council denying that they are doing anything wrong."
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He said the council had already begun reorganising social services in Cardiff in the light of the critical joint review report expected shortly.

Neale added that he understood the review to be the most damning social services report ever published in England and Wales.

A spokesman for the council declined to comment.


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