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Arthurworrey launches appeal

Posted: 26 May 2005 | Subscribe Online


Victoria Climbie's social worker this week began a fight to have her named removed from the Protection of Children Act List.

Lisa Arthurworrey is appealing against the decision by the Department for Education and Skills to put her on the list of people deemed unsuitable to work with children.

Her barrister Peter Jackson QC told the Care Standards Tribunal in London that placing Arthurworrey on the Protection of Children Act list would bar her from working in social services, schools or the NHS, prevent her from fostering or, if she had a child of her own, stop her running a parent teacher association or going on school trips.

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He said there were seven "barriers to good practice," which put her mistakes into context including inexperience, lack of training, overwork and non-existent supervision.

He questioned why not one senior manager at Haringey Council had been placed on the list.

But Philip Coppel, acting for government, said people were only placed on the list if they were guilty of misconduct, which placed a child at risk of harm and were unsuitable to work with children.

He said she was unsuitable to work with children because of her failure to acknowledge the true nature of her responsibilities and omissions.

A key witness said that some of the training Arthurworrey had received at Haringey Council may not have been as good as he had previously thought.

Bernard Monaghan, author of a report into the internal investigation of staff in the Victoria ClimbiŽ case, told the tribunal he had been presented with a statement by a police officer involved in the council's training by Arthurworrey's barrister and had changed his view.
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At the time of writing his report Monaghan had felt that the training was of good quality.

Arthurworrey was sacked for professional misconduct and placed on the list, alongside social work manager Angella Mairs.

Mairs successfully appealed against her inclusion on the list last November but the DfES is challenging the tribunal's decision in the High Court.

  • Six police officers involved in Victoria Climbie's case have been reprimanded for neglecting their duty of care towards the eight-year-old. All bar a detective chief inspector received reprimands after admitting to failing to investigate or supervise investigations relating to her care at Metropolitan Police misconduct hearings. The DCI denied charges which the Met refused to disclose, and was formally cautioned after being found guilty by a hearing
  • Follow the tribunal at www.com munitycare.co.uk


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