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New ratings reveal rise in standards

Posted: 13 November 2003 | Subscribe Online


Hard work and a greater awareness of performance management in social services departments and councils has resulted in a "significant overall improvement" in the performance of councils in this year's star ratings.

The ratings, due to be published this week, reveal that 41 social services departments improved, while only six deteriorated.

Of the 12 councils awarded zero stars in 2002, six were awarded one star and one - East Sussex - was awarded two. However, five of the councils awarded zero stars in 2002 again failed to gain a star and have been joined by a further three struggling departments.

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At the other end of the scale, the number of social services departments boasting three stars has increased from 11 to 16.

Association of Directors of Social Services spokesperson on performance and management Paul Snell said the improvements were the culmination of a number of factors and reflected a greater awareness and improved mechanisms of performance management which helped departments focus on delivery of services at the front end.

"This is a tribute to the hard work of care and social workers at all levels and confirms the sense directors have had even last year that improvements in performance were in the pipeline," he added.

East Sussex social services director David Archibald said that his department's achievement reflected the huge amount of work carried out in the past few years as well as greater political backing. "Child protection is good and the number of foster carers and adopters has risen while older people's services, which were a big problem, have been transformed," Archibald said.

"Historically we admitted too many people into nursing and residential care, which we've reduced by a third, and increased by 39 per cent the number of people receiving intensive home care."
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Haringey director Anne Bristow said her department's move from zero to one star reflected the commitment of staff, while Coventry director John Bolton attributed the progress of his department, also from zero to one star, to better interagency working.

A spokesperson for Cumbria social services department, which fell from one star to zero stars, said the council attributed the fall to problems in children's services. An interim director of social services and new head of children's services who will work towards the aims of the children's green paper have now been appointed.

How they fared

Three stars: 16 departments (Bexley, Blackburn with Darwen, Bolton, Cornwall, Derbyshire, Kensington&Chelsea, Kent, Kingston upon Thames, Kirklees, Knowsley, Leicestershire, Newcastle upon Tyne, North Lincolnshire, Sunderland, Wandsworth, Westminster)

Two stars: 74 departments

One star: 52 departments

Zero-stars: 8 departments (Bedfordshire, Birmingham, Bromley, Cumbria, Oldham, Plymouth, Swindon, Waltham Forest)



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