Nine out of 10 decisions to bring a child back from an out-of-authority placement are reversed following intervention from the office of the Children’s Rights Director, delegates at Community Care Live Children & Families were told today.
Children’s Rights Director Roger Morgan said that complaints from children about being brought back from successful placements for financial or policy reasons were now the “biggest source of the commission’s casework”.
He said that children were being told that their out-of-authority placements were being terminated because the local authority was “short of money or had had a change of policy”.
“Neither of these are valid reasons for pulling a child back from a placement,” Morgan said. “The only valid reason is if the placement is not working out.”
Morgan said that complaints about this issue were now so common that he had developed a standard letter to send out to every director of children’s services implicated.
“Frighteningly, nine out of 10 of those cases get changed after they receive our letter. But what about the children who don’t write?” Morgan asked.
Welcoming the green paper on children in care published earlier this week, Morgan said he would be looking to find out from children how much of it was actually delivered on and whether placements improved as a result.
Children deliver their rights agenda to the UN
12 June 2008
MPs and peers: Social work practices must face human rights check
26 March 2008
Public inquiry into prison treatment of self-harming young woman
20 December 2007
Charities criticise government’s lack of progress on children’s rights
28 November 2006
LGA issues child protection warning about obese children
Phil Hope succeeds Ivan Lewis as adult social care minister
Cafcass to introduce competence-based pay for practitioners
DH study reveals councils still haven't embraced personalisation
Details of government consultations
02 October 2008
Private Member Bills
25 July 2008
Government Legislation
25 July 2008