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Integrated children's services must have social care focus, say directors

Posted: 06 January 2005 | Subscribe Online


Education departments are significantly outperforming their counterparts in children's social services, according to the comprehensive performance assessment for 2004, published last month.

In response, the Association of Directors of Social Services has warned that councils will have to focus on children's social services if they want improvements in education to be recognised by future, integrated inspections.

This was the final CPA based on separate ratings for education and children's social services. Education scored two points higher on the four-point scale than children's social services in almost one-fifth of councils.
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In a further 68 councils, education scores were one point higher. By contrast, children's social services performed better than education in just six councils.

From this year, councils will receive a single rating for children's services, incorporating education and children's social care. Councils will have to perform well in both services to gain a high score.

John Coughlan, chair of the ADSS children and families committee, said the 2004 scores reflected the huge challenges facing social care and the fact that "in recent years the focus of resources has been on education".

He said that having to perform well in both services to score highly overall would focus councils' attention on improving the performance of children's social services.
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Overall, the CPA ratings for the 150 single tier and county councils in England for 2004 showed a significant improvement in councils' performance, with 41 rated as excellent (compared with 26 in 2003), 60 as good (56), 33 as fair (40), 15 as weak (18) and just one as poor (10).

The only "poor" council, Hull, has failed to improve its rating since the system began in 2002 despite the intervention of government trouble shooter Tony Allen in November 2003 following a series of critical Audit Commission reports.

Allen will now work alongside new chief executive Kim Ryley until improvements are made, but the Office of the Deputy Prime Minister has signalled that a failure to raise standards in the near future could result in the council being "removed of powers".


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