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The big question

Posted: 29 July 2004 | Subscribe Online


Will England's new children's commissioner make any difference to young people's lives?   

Angie Lawrence
Single parent

If the commissioner is as free from government control as it promises, and if their reports are not vetted, they can make a difference. I agree with the need for a strategic rather than watchdog role. In this way the commissioner will be more effective in helping staff involved in a child's life to communicate successfully.

Shaun Webster
Change self-advocacy group

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It might be a good thing. I'd want them to include disabled children and those with learning difficulties. I hope a commissioner would encourage social services to improve but I don't know if this will happen. I get angry when people are left out, I hope a commissioner will change that.

Jean Stogdon
Grandparents Plus

We are in danger of putting all our hopes from how we have failed our children into the commissioner. There must have been a some political ambivalence about this role otherwise we'd have had it before. I'd welcome a person in a powerful post who'd pick up on wrong thinking before the professionals do.

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Kierra Box
Young people's campaigner

He or she could have a great impact, but only if young people are involved in developing and implementing the post and only if the commissioner is given true powers to change the way we are treated in society. I worry the commissioner may become a token gesture, unaccountable to and unknown by those who need representation.



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