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A cohesive identity

Posted: 13 November 2003 | Subscribe Online


Social care workforce training was given a significant boost last week when it emerged that the organisation responsible for it, the Topss UK Partnership, was to become a sector skills council. When it takes effect next April, Skills for Care should make it easier to develop strategies for identifying and meeting skills needs across social care and to argue the case to government for better funding.

All this builds on the important work already done by Topss in laying the foundations for training 1.4 million social care workers. But, in another sense, the stakes will be even higher for Skills for Care than they are for Topss. Skills for Care, unlike Topss in its existing form, will be responsible for the entire workforce, including a range of auxiliary staff working in care settings. As Topss itself says, it will be easier to pass on to these groups the "values and needs specific to social care".
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The idea of a cohesive social care workforce with a common set of values and a specific set of needs is very attractive. It was an idea that the health secretary John Reid may have had in mind when he mentioned values 34 times in his otherwise vacuous speech to the National Social Services Conference last month. Social care is increasingly criss-crossed with fault lines - between health, social services and education, between the statutory, voluntary and private sectors, and between adults' and children's services - and a strong social care identity that transcends these boundaries is imperative.

Yet, if proposals in the children's green paper ever get off the drawing board, this imperative will be ignored. It recommends that the children and families workforce should have its own sector skills council, which risks wrecking the aspirations of social care to a single, clear professional identity. Much better would be to extend Topss' existing geographical federal structure to client groups. Skills for Care would then be the only sector skills council, though it would have adults' and children's divisions each with a degree of autonomy. It would be a pity if, having won its own sector skills council at last, social care itself were to lose the name of profession.


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