| Ofsted has published a suite of good practice resources to support those working in services for children and families. These include one highlighting the use of case audits to improve practice in Halton Borough Council; and another outlining the work of Kensington Children’s Centre in reaching families most in need of intervention and support. |
| Source: Ofsted Press Release 07 January 2013 |
| Further information: Good practice resource – improving the quality of practice through case audit: Halton Borough Council (PDF version) |
| Good practice resource – Supporting the ‘hard to reach’: Kensington Children’s Centre |
| Good practice resource – Excellent assessment, intervention and contact work leading to positive change: Eva Armsby Family Centre |
| Good practice resource – Mutual trust and support: East Hastings Children’s Centre |
| Good practice resource – Improving outcomes for looked after children and care leavers: London Borough of Ealing |
Category Archives: News
The Government has published the Mid-Term Review of progress towards implementing the coalition agreement
| The Government has published the Mid-Term Review of progress towards implementing the coalition agreement signed in May 2010. Key policies still to be implemented include: revised statutory guidance on child protection; reform of family law to reduce delays in care proceedings; ensuring 4200 extra health visitors are in post by April 2015. |
| Source: Cabinet Office Press Release 07 January 2013 |
| Further information: The Coalition: together in the national interest (PDF version) |
Cafcass has released December 2012 statistics for care applications
| Cafcass has released December 2012 statistics for care applications. The figure of 847 applications is a 4.3% increase on December 2011 levels. Between April and December 2012 Cafcass received a total of 8,135 applications. This figure is 8% higher when compared to the same period last year. |
| Source: Cafcass 09 January 2013 |
The Ministry of Justice is consulting on reforms aimed at tackling re-offending
| The Ministry of Justice is consulting on reforms aimed at tackling re-offending. Proposals include: mandatory supervision and tailored rehabilitation for all offenders on release from prison; opening up rehabilitation services to private and voluntary sector providers. |
| Source: Ministry of Justice press release 09 January 2013 |
| Further information: Transforming rehabilitation: a revolution in the way we manage offenders |
The Metropolitan Police Service and the NSPCC have published their joint report into sexual allegations made against Jimmy Savile
| The Metropolitan Police Service and the NSPCC have published their joint report into sexual allegations made against Jimmy Savile. Detailing the work of Operation Yewtree, key figures include: 600 people came forward with information, 450 relating to Jimmy Savile; 214 criminal offences have been recorded against 28 police forces; of his victims, 73% were children under 18. |
| Source: Metropolitan Police 11 January 2013 |
| Further information: Giving victims a voice: joint report into sexual allegations made against Jimmy Savile (PDF version) |
The Scottish Parliament Health and Sport Committee has launched an inquiry into teenage pregnancy
| The Scottish Parliament Health and Sport Committee has launched an inquiry into teenage pregnancy. It will examine whether current actions are enough to reduce teenage pregnancy over the long-term. It will also evaluate support available to girls at risk of pregnancy as well as to young mothers. The committee has issued a call for evidence and the deadline for responses in 7 February. |
| Source: Scottish Parliament 07 January 2013 |
The Department of Education has launched a consultation on local authority responsibilities towards children looked after following remand
| The Department of Education has launched a consultation on local authority responsibilities towardschildren looked after following remand. Views are sought on proposals to amend the Care Planning, Placement and Case Review (England) Regulations 2010 to take into account circumstances of children who have been remanded into local authority or youth detention accommodation. Closing date is 6 February 2013. |
| Source: Department for Education 09 January 2013 |
| Further information: Local authority responsibilities towards children looked after following remand: consultation on changes to the Care Planning, Placement and Care Review Regulations 2010 (PDF version) |
The Department for Education has produced a map for potential adopters highlighting the number of children waiting to be adopted in each local authority area in England.
| The Department for Education has produced a map for potential adopters highlighting the number of children waiting to be adopted in each local authority area in England. From Friday 11 January 2013, would-be adopters can access a new mapshowing the areas with the highest number of children waiting for new homes. The map shows the number of children in each local authority waiting for a family to adopt them, showing potential adopters how many children are waiting in their area and elsewhere. Additional information can be found on our adoption scorecards page. |
| Source: Department for Education 11 January 2013 |
The Education Minister in Wales has launched a smartphone app offering information, advice and guidance to young people
| The Education Minister in Wales has launched a smartphone app offering information, advice and guidance to young people. The app, managed by SNAP Cymru, targets 11-to 25-year-olds, and will provide information on a range of issues including bullying and young people’s rights. |
| Source: Welsh Assembly Government 10 January 2013 |
Social services can support Travellers through effective monitoring
Social services can support Travellers through effective monitoring
Acute needs of marginalised Gypsies and Irish Traveller groups could be better addressed by improved use of more information
In 2011 Gypsies and Irish Travellers were for the first time recognised as an ethnic group on the UK census, under the code “W3”. In the wake of the census, many statutory services are following suit and including a “Gypsy or Irish Traveller” category in their own ethnic monitoring procedures.
This recognition is undoubtedly a step in the right direction for a marginalised community with acute needs in terms of housing, healthcare, education and social care.
Gypsies and Irish Travellers are “the most excluded ethnic minority groups in British society today“. Life expectancy is 10-12 years below the national average and 18% of Gypsy and Traveller mothers have experienced the death of a child, compared to less than 1% of the general population. In addition, 25% of Gypsy and Traveller children are not enrolled in education and, for those that do attend, educational attainment is lower than for any other ethnic group.
Research into the social care needs of Gypsies and Travellers has found that a culture of self-reliance means that people often tend to “make do” and not complain rather than seeking support from social services.
Service providers will not necessarily realise that a client comes from a Travelling background and may consequently neglect to consider issues such as low literacy or accommodation difficulties.
In this context it is of great concern that innovative community social work projects such as the Haringey travelling people’s team, which engages Gypsy and Traveller families before crises occur, are falling victim to local government cuts.
In April 2012 the Department for Communities and Local Governmentpublished 28 cross-departmental commitments to improve outcomes for Gypsies and Travellers. Key points included tasking the NHS and local governments with identifying ways to include the needs of Gypsies and Travellers in the commissioning of health services and ensuring that the needs of Gypsies and Travellers are reflected in joint strategic needs assessments.
Gypsies and Travellers are also to be specifically highlighted as a vulnerable group in the revised Ofsted framework and will be included in the Department of Work and Pensions’ monitoring system when universal credit is introduced later this year.
But tickboxes on forms can achieve little unless staff are pro-active in their approach to monitoring. This has been demonstrated in the case of the prison service, where a huge disparity exists between two distinct monitoring regimes: prisons themselves have a W3 category on their “P-Nomis” system but it is up to Traveller prisoners to volunteer this information at reception.
Currently only 219 prisoners in England and Wales are registered as W3; 0.2% of the prison population. In contrast, the prison inspectorate makes a point of asking every prisoner surveyed: “Do you consider yourself to be Gypsy/Romany/Traveller?; 5% of prisoners in local prisons responded “yes” to this question.
Effective monitoring can give services more of an insight into their Gypsy and Traveller user group and allow them to reflect on how organisational practices meet the needs of this community.
Being counted is a vital first step to making a community feel like it counts. The kind of pro-active monitoring exemplified by the prison inspectorate is a vital tool for addressing the extreme marginalisation of Gypsy and Traveller communities in the UK.
It is the start of a dialogue with a user group who often feel ignored and unwanted.
Joe Cottrell-Boyce is the policy officer at the Irish chaplaincy in Britain’s Traveller Project, working with Gypsies and Travellers in the criminal justice system.
Source: BBC

