
The General Social Care Council failed to ensure public safety
by deliberately stalling cases of social workers accused of
misconduct in order to save money.
The revelation emerged in a
shocking assessment of the regulator’s conduct
system by the Council for Healthcare Regulatory Excellence,
which found the backlog of cases that led to the suspension of
chief executive Mike Wardle in July had existed for “many
years”, and at one time stood at more than 700.
Serious failings
During a six-week investigation, the CHRE, which oversees the
work of healthcare regulators, uncovered serious failings in three
main areas: a lack of scrutiny; the quality of information provided
to committees; and the standard of risk assessments. It also
identified:
- Cases managed with no overarching case-management or
risk-management systems, leading to important files being
mislaid
- Cases allocated to investigators on an ad hoc basis without
consideration of their caseloads
- Poor-quality investigations, record-keeping and inconsistent
decision-making
- Inexperienced staff not provided with adequate training or
guidance
- Differences in performance and procedures because teams
were split between offices in Rugby and London
- Inadequate performance management
Backlog known "at all levels"
The most damning evidence came from GSCC conduct officials, who
told the CHRE they felt pressurised by their managers from 2007
onwards not to proceed with cases for financial reasons,
“regardless of the public protection implications”.
The existence of a backlog of cases was “well known at all
levels” of the organisation but the council, the regulator’s
strategic body, failed to take action because it did not understand
the implications of the failures.
Even the the Department of Health was aware of the situation,
and council members said they believed the DH had approved the
management decision to allow cases to remain unprocessed.
"Not effective, efficient or well-governed"The report, published weeks after
Community Care revealed the average length of time it took
the GSCC to process cases was more than two years, concluded
the overall system was “not effective, efficient or
well-governed”.
Recommendations
The CHRE produced a string of wide-ranging recommendations,
including replacing the conduct system for social workers with a
“fitness to practise” regime of the kind used by healthcare
regulators; allowing committees to impose conditions as a new type
of sanction; giving the GSCC new powers requiring employers to
share information about concerns about employees; increasing
registration fees for social workers to improve efficiency; and
referring appeals to the High Court rather than the upper-tier
tribunal.
It also recommended that the GSCC should become more financially
independent of the Department of Health.
Background
The CHRE’s review was ordered in July by health secretary Andy
Burnham after
203 unallocated conduct cases came to light, including 21 with
public protection concerns. This prompted the suspension of
Wardle, who took over the running of the organisation in October
2007.
Management instructionsThe chief executive’s report to the council in September 2007
stated that the head of conduct had been instructed not to schedule
any more conduct hearings until the following year, because the
conduct department had overspent its budget for 2007-8.
The policy was reiterated in July 2008, in an email telling
staff to delay cases until after March 2009 due to “severely
limited funds”. They only referred the most serious cases to
interim suspension order hearings, such as those involving violence
or child abuse.
Recovery plan
The report noted that Rosie Varley, the GSCC's chair, who
assumed her role in November 2008, the council and senior managers
were addressing the problems and had developed a recovery plan,
which was being discussed with the DH.
Responding to the CHRE probe, Varley
welcomed the report and said she was pleased the recommendations
were in line with the GSCC's recovery plan.
She added: "There is a lot of work still to do to get the
conduct function onto a sustainable footing, but we now have
greater clarity of focus and a platform to build from. I have
invited the CHRE back next year to examine the progress made on our
transformation plan, and I am confident that we will then be able
to demonstrate that we are rigorously and robustly exercising our
powers to hold social workers to account for their conduct.”
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