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Rights still a priority despite loss of post

Posted: 04 August 2005 | Subscribe Online


The rights of children in Oxfordshire will continue to be a priority for authorities despite the end of England's first local children's commissioner post, the county council has insisted.

The posts of Oxfordshire's commissioner, Ianthe Maclagan, and two support staff ended in the spring after funding problems. The team had been funded by the council and Save the Children since 1998, with both investing up to £80,000 a year.

The council reduced its commitment to £40,000 a year from 2004 for three years, which Save the Children said it would match. But the charity later said a reorganisation meant it was not able to match-fund the posts, and the organisations were unable to find other partners willing to provide the necessary funding to keep the team going.
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But Shruti Tanna, assistant programme director in the Midlands for Save the Children, said the council's decision to halve its contribution to the project had also been responsible for its closure.

The council's social and health care directorate is continuing to invest £40,000 a year in children's rights initiatives. Half is going towards co-ordinating children's rights champions in other agencies, and half to multi-agency consultation networks so the views of children and parents are heard during the development of children's services.


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