MOVES UNDERWAY TO SET UP COMMISSION ON ABUSE

    Social care leaders are to be asked to support a national
    commission of inquiry into child abuse similar to the body launched
    in Ireland last year.

    Deryk Mead, chief executive of children’s charity NCH, is to
    meet Irish government officials this summer to investigate whether
    a commission could work in this country.

    He believes a joint initiative between the Association of
    Directors of Social Services, the Local Government Association and
    the Social Services Inspectorate, discussed at the ADSS spring
    seminar, could help develop a national body to co-ordinate
    responses to abuse scandals.

    NCH would be prepared to make a financial commitment to the
    development, but insurers which work with organisations facing
    compensation claims from victims of abuse, could also be approached
    to help finance the initiative, he said. Funding for at least six
    month’s development work would be required.

    Mead said: “We have put a lot of effort in with our insurance
    company to make sure the whole system works as far as possible to
    assist people who used to be in our care.

    “But we now feel there may be a better way this can be
    approached nationally,” he said.

    A commission could help to codify the legal issues and good
    management practice, he said, to ensure cases are handled more
    speedily and effectively.

     

     

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