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External placements for looked-after children lead to budget overspends

Posted: 05 December 2002 | Subscribe Online


More than one in five looked-after children are being placed in care outside the boundaries of the responsible council.

A review of local authority children's services by the Quality Protects programme has found that 22 per cent of children are placed externally, often inappropriately, potentially compromising the safety of the child and the financial stability of the council.

Of the 32 council social services inspections analysed in Delivering Quality Children's Services, there was a clear link between the amount councils spent on out-of-area placements and their levels of overspend.

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The nine councils that spent less than 9 per cent of their total children's budget on external placements all balanced the books, whereas those which had 20 per cent of children in external placements were on average 10 per cent overspent - one council overspent by nearly 25 per cent.

The review team concludes that an over-reliance on "spot" purchasing of external placements could see costs "spiral" out of control, with many councils being caught in a situation of rising demand and limited supply and being left with little scope for developing preventive services.

The review, which analysed inspections of children's services carried out between August 2000 and July 2001, also highlights concerns among social workers over the standard of child and adolescent mental health services. They found CAMHS "unresponsive", particularly failing disabled children and young carers where services were underdeveloped, and lacked co-ordination and integration.
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After analysing files, inspectors had concerns about child protection issues in 12 per cent of cases, double the number from the previous inspection programme.

Most councils were poor at meeting timescales for initial child protection conference and one-monthly reviews, while 14 councils had "serious deficiencies" in staff recruitment procedures for safeguarding children.

The recruitment and retention of staff, particularly in London, was having a major impact on the quality of services and the review found that only a few councils had long-term plans in place to tackle it.

"Delivering Quality Children's Services" from www.doh.gov.uk/ssi/deliveringqualitycs.pdf

 

 



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