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Dividends of the Hodge controversy

Posted: 10 July 2003 | Subscribe Online


T he continuing saga of whether Margaret Hodge should go or stay has produced an unexpected bonus for social care - for once, it isn't social workers who are being clobbered.

The suitability of Hodge as children's minister, given her reluctance to act for two years during the sex abuse scandal in children's homes in Islington in the early 1990s, has also revealed a number of quiet heroes.

Among them are Liz Davies, a senior social worker in 1990, and David Cofie, her manager. Recent coverage reminds us how well they performed their duties, attempting to investigate a suspected paedophile ring and support children in care. Their names have only now been revealed.
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Davies and Cofie, rightly, eventually became whistle-blowers. As a result, inquiries singled out 22 employees as suspected paedophiles, names that have never been made public (so where are they now?).

Rare tributes to the power of social care have also come from the survivors of abuse. Liam Lucas was placed in care at the age of nine when his mother died of a drug overdose. He was abused for three years. Eventually he went to live with Kate and Brian Cairns.

"Liam was the most traumatised child I'd come across in 20 years as a foster mother and social worker," Mrs Cairns says.

Liam became a young offender, hooked on heroin. He attacked and tried to strangle Kate. The Cairns, nevertheless, stood by him.

Now, Liam, 26, is clean, in work, and calls the Cairns "mum" and "dad". He says he owes his life to the couple.
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Last week too, shop worker Callie Rogers, aged 16, won £1. 8m in the lottery. For a year she has lived with her foster parents Brian and Sheila Holmes in a council flat. They have helped to reunite Callie and her mother and encouraged the 16 year old to return to full-time education.

Among the presents Callie intends to buy with her winnings is a wheelchair for her foster mother. "It couldn't have happened to a nicer girl", said Brian Holmes.

Social work is on the threshold of a bright new future: a degree qualification, improved standards, supervision and inspection.

Over time these changes should work towards erasing the twin images in the public's mind, of the social worker as bungler or baby snatcher. As this recent crop of stories reminds us yet again, social care at its best, is truly transformational.


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