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The Children and Family Court Advisory and Support System is close to meltdown just six months after it came into being, according to staff working within the child protection

Thursday 27 September 2001 10:18

The Children and Family Court Advisory and Support System is close to meltdown just six months after it came into being, according to staff working within the child protection system.

Following a High Court judgement that it had acted “unlawfully” in withdrawing self-employed contracts from children’s guardians (News, page 4, 20 September), the departure of two key members of its senior management team has been confirmed.

Senior family judge Nigel Fricker  has resigned from the Cafcass board, and director of operations Joe Kuipers is to leave.

In addition, over a third of the service’s public law managers - formerly managers of the 57 local authority guardian panels which transferred to Cafcass - have left.

In an open letter to the Cafcass chairperson Anthony Hewson, the latest to leave, Cumbria manager Geoffrey Applegarth, has expressed regret over his decision.

“In Cumbria at least, Cafcass has failed on almost every count to  improve the level and quality of service to children and the courts,” says Applegarth. “And nationally Cafcass is dangerously close to paralysis.”

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