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Welsh directors call for grants to stay

Posted: 29 July 2004 | Subscribe Online


Welsh social services directors have called for dedicated grants for children's services to continue after a Welsh assembly report found child protection services to be patchy.

An overview report on child protection by the Welsh assembly's health and social services committee published last week found that some local authorities were struggling to cope with a significant increase in referrals to child protection services (news, page 10, 22 July).

The report found high re-referral rates in councils with a limited service provision and very high threshold criteria to gain access.
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Timely core assessments were not being completed in many authorities and there was little evidence of good analysis in assessments. The quality of case files was found to be not good enough, with some authorities still keeping family files instead of one for each child.

Hugh Gardner, chair of the Association of Directors of Social Services in Wales, urged the Welsh assembly to scrap proposals to consolidate the children first grant into the local authority revenue support grant. The grant accounts for about 10 per cent of children's budgets.
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"There is a clear case for targeted resources," he said. "We know that where we get a clear sense of direction and resources linked to that we get development."

Joe Howsam, ADSS Wales child care spokesperson, also warned that increasing first line management, as proposed by Lord Laming in the Victoria Climbie Report, would deplete the pool of experienced social workers. "There's a tension about how quickly we can move forward," he said.


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