People are always more likely to achieve their potential when there is continuity and consistency in their lives. And there are few things more disruptive in life than moving home - you lose your friends, school and neighbours, and swap them for the unknown and for possible isolation. In the UK, up to the age of 18, a young person can expect on average to move home twice. And yet in one year alone (2001-2), one in seven children in care moved home three times, according to Social Exclusion Unit figures.
Another excellent development for young people is access to their own "digital vault". Here, a young person can store items such as photos, records of achievement, GCSE project work, and life-story information. It is a space that only the young person can enter - although if access is needed under the Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act 2000, this can happen. The contents can be downloaded onto a CD.
Security and protection are locked into CareZone. For example, the digital vault has individually encrypted files behind 10 layers of security including virus-checking, content-filtering, and physical and geographical security measures. Only an authentic user will even know which bits of data are theirs to access, and only they will have the key to unlock them.
As Susanna Cheal, chief executive of the Who Cares? Trust, says, "Wherever the child ends up in care, CareZone will be theirs: personal, safe, stable and private."
Background
Scheme: CareZone - a secure website for young people in care.
Inspiration: To respond to the frequent requests from children and young people for privacy, a voice, real choices and confidentiality, while aiming to prevent young people in care becoming an information technology.
Cost: £1m through the Department of Health and Department for Education and Skills; £427,000 from the Community Fund (UK) for staffing costs.
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Details of government consultations
04 July 2008
Government Legislation
04 July 2008
Private Member Bills
04 July 2008