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Minister gets tough over registration

Posted: 09 September 2004 | Subscribe Online


Community care minister Stephen Ladyman is said to be appalled with the low number of social workers who have so far signed up to the social care register.

Ladyman was due to write to every local authority chief executive this week ordering them to put pressure on heads of social services to ensure most of their staff are registered over the next few months.

Community Care understands that Ladyman was livid with recent figures, which showed only a quarter of social workers had either registered or applied, and has asked for weekly updates.
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He has also taken the unusual step of circulating figures for the number of social workers registered in every authority, in effect naming and shaming those slow to act.

The figures show that few councils have more than half of their social workers registered or awaiting completion of their application, while two-thirds still have less than one in 10 registered or outstanding.

Social services directors blame the slow uptake on difficulties with the application form and process.

The General Social Care Council, which has already tried to simplify things, has promised to make the process less bureaucratic and asked for feedback on further changes it could make.
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Other problems to affect the uptake include arguments over whether councils should pay for social workers to register and concerns that they will be forced to pay twice in the first year.

Jane Held, who is leading the project for the GSCC, warned social workers that they would need to send in completed applications by early December to be registered for the 31 March 2005 deadline. After that date no one will be able to be employed as a social worker without being registered.


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