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Councils given three months to pass adopters' names to national register

Posted: 19 August 2004 | Subscribe Online


Social services must pass on adopters' details to the National Adoption Register within three months rather than six in a move to improve the register's performance.

The three-month timescale was a compromise between the Department for Education and Skills and local authorities.

Councils incur high costs in recruiting couples. They believed it would be money wasted if the names were passed on to the register immediately after the prospective adopters were approved, as DfES wanted.
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A DfES spokesperson said it was hoped the change would address "unnecessary delays in the matching process".

Wrangling over the future of the register delayed a decision to re-tender the contract, leading to a three-month extension for the provider, Norwood.

The agency faced criticism for matching only 75 hard-to-place children with adopters in the register's first two years of operation, despite an investment of £1.25m.

A source told Community Care that local authorities had opposed giving adopters' details to the register too quickly. "Adoption consortia have been very effective, and there's a worry that it might discourage that," he said. "You should not discourage something that's working to prop up something that is not."

Families are "traded" between consortia members free or at a reduced fee - as little as £3,000, compared with a typical £20,000 interagency fee.
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Norwood's contract expired in August, but was extended to 30 November due to delays in getting a new tender in place. Funding for the register has now been confirmed until March 2006.

The DfES spokesperson said the extension would allow the government to reassess the specification. "This process took longer than envisaged so we extended the current contract for a minimum period."

Felicity Collier, chief executive of Baaf Adoption and Fostering, which is bidding for the contract, said there was a place for a national adoption register.

"Of the 250 children we placed last year, many were to people who had come forward who were newly approved as adopters," she said. "It shows you need a range of ways to reach potential adopters."


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