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Charities criticise Hodge's plan to take struggling trusts from councils

Posted: 23 October 2003 | Subscribe Online


Government plans to take failing children's trusts away from local authorities and give them to voluntary or private providers came under fire this week.

In a media interview last week, children's minister Margaret Hodge said that where a children's trust was failing to provide good quality services, the government would intervene and pass control to either another trust, or a voluntary or private sector provider.

Chris Hanvey, UK director of operations at children's charity Barnardo's, said that becoming involved to this extent and taking on formal statutory responsibilities was something that "most voluntary organisations would want to think about hard".
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"The reason I think people build relationships with voluntary sector workers is that we don't have those statutory responsibilities.

"This would put a very different light on that relationship with our service users. We would not be the voluntary sector any more. There would also be less opportunity for innovation. And it would make fund-raising more difficult, because people would see it as subsidising government services."

Hanvey also doubted whether private providers would be interested in taking control, even if the idea were legally viable.

"The failing or death of a child would have all the same reverberations for a children's trust [as it does for a social services department now] and a lot of negative publicity."

Erica De'Ath, chief executive of the National Council of Voluntary Child Care Organisations, insisted that, although the voluntary sector could play a key role in co-ordinating services, "overall responsibility has to lie with one of the statutory services".
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She added that if children's trusts were supposed to be commissioning bodies it would be "extremely difficult" for the voluntary sector to commission services using education, health and social services' budgets without their co-operation.

In addition, it would be difficult for elected members to pass over responsibility for budgets to the voluntary sector, which is not publicly accountable.

She would rather see how the voluntary sector could be enabled to work with children's trusts to ensure that they did not fail.


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