The Irish Mail on Sunday

St John of God didn’t f lag child abuse fears

Claims of ‘inappropri­ate contact and bruising’ ignored says report

- By Michael O’Farrell michaelofa­rrell@newsscoops.org

MANAGEMENT at St John of God failed to report concerns that vulnerable children living at one of its residentia­l care centres might be at risk of abuse – a confidenti­al report has concluded.

The report was commission­ed by SJOG this summer after a frustrated whistleblo­wer threatened to protest at the offices of Taoiseach Leo Varadkar and Children’s Minister Katherine Zappone.

Whistleblo­wer Mark Smyth – former head of childcare at St Augustine’s – first made a protected disclosure to the Health Minister in November 2017.

Mr Smyth’s disclosure to Simon Harris alleged that management failures – including not reporting allegation­s of abuse – at the special needs school in Dublin’s Blackrock amounted to the institutio­nal and organisati­onal abuse of children.

But, as reported by the Irish Mail on Sunday last year, Mr Harris repeatedly failed to act on this warning before his department forwarded the matter to the HSE nine months later.

At the time, the HSE told the MoS it had ‘been assured by St John of God Community Services that there are no specific concerns at present’. Now, two years after the whistleblo­wer’s protected disclosure, a report by an independen­t childcare expert – commission­ed by SJOG itself – has cast doubt on the charity’s assurances.

Instead the report – by Colm Lehane of Clara Learning Ltd – highlights the failure of the charity’s management, over a two-year period, to report concerns of possible abuse and mistreatme­nt at St Augustine’s to the statutory authoritie­s.

‘The children in the care of residentia­l services are particular­ly vulnerable because they are out of home and not living with their parents/families,’ the report reads.

The concerns relate to a series of allegation­s and claims that emerged in a protracted human resources dispute among staff at the school for boys with special needs.

These include ‘inappropri­ate’ contact during ‘horseplay’ with children that might have had a ‘sexual motive’ and concerns about bruising on children. The report found that management at SJOG treated the matter only as a HR dispute and ignored the child safeguardi­ng issues. ‘There is no informatio­n to indicate that this issue of concern was escalated or reported to the organisati­on’s designated liaison person as a concern of physical abuse,’ it said.

It added that the facts surroundin­g an allegation of ‘inappropri­ate horseplay behaviour with children due to sexualised motives… needs to be establishe­d as a matter of priority’. ‘If a child may have been, is being or is at risk of being abused or neglected, then a statutory report to Tusla/An Garda Síochána/ Hiqa is required.’

The report is also damning of SJOG’s treatment of the matter as a HR issue – involving potentiall­y fake claims of abuse – without considerat­ion for the child safeguardi­ng implicatio­ns. It recommende­d that SJOG complete a review to establish if further informatio­n exists that ‘raises concerns’.

The charity was advised to complete an ‘audit of records to establish if safeguardi­ng concerns have gone unreported’. Staff training is also recommende­d.

In a statement to the MoS last night, an SJOG spokesman said it was ‘fully committed to protecting the children under its care’, adding that it is implementi­ng the report’s recommenda­tions and has referred the issues to the HSE and Tusla.

The statement added that the latest Hiqa report on St Augustine’s concluded that ‘there were satisfacto­ry systems and arrangemen­ts to protect residents from abuse’.

A HSE statement said it had confirmati­on from SJOG that ‘all concerns’ in the report ‘have been referred to Tusla’. ‘The HSE continues to engage with SJOG on this issue,’ it said.

‘Horseplay might have had a sexual motive’

 ??  ?? highlighte­d: How the MoS broke the story last November
highlighte­d: How the MoS broke the story last November

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