Daily Mail

Huge fall in adoptions as council staff turn to Zoom

- By Steve Doughty Social Affairs Correspond­ent

THE number of children adopted into family homes from council care has plunged during the pandemic.

And one of the key reasons for the fall is social workers using Zoom and social media to communicat­e with troubled children and their families rather than talking face-toface, a survey has found.

It is the latest setback for the campaign for more adoptions championed by government­s of all parties for the past 20 years.

Education Secretary Gavin Williamson said last week: ‘In January I asked councils to put adoption at the top of their agendas, and to make sure that people [prospectiv­e adopters] are not being turned away because they are too old, or had a low income, or because of their faith, ethnicity or sexual orientatio­n.’ The failure of social workers to respond to his promptings was revealed in a survey of council’s children’s services, published by the Department for Education.

Based on a series of questionna­ires put to councils since March, it disclosed that ‘a small number of local authoritie­s reported that they are experienci­ng an increase in the stock of looked-after children’ – children in their care.

The survey revealed that the reason for a fall of adoptions during the pandemic was ‘a lack of direct work with families and services’ and delays in court hearings.

This meant that planned permanency moves were not happening.’

It said that in the second week of September, 32 per cent of children in care had not been in contact with a social worker for four weeks.

Only just over one in 20 children living with their families but at high risk had spoken with a social worker in the same period.

Nearly one in four of other children considered in need had received no contact from a social worker for nearly a month.

The isolation of children at risk during the pandemic came despite the heavy use by social workers of the internet.

‘ To stay in touch, alternativ­e forms of communicat­ion – for example, telephone calls and WhatsApp – were used, and some local authoritie­s provided children and families with new technology,’ the survey said.

It said social workers began faceto-face meetings again as lockdown eased in June but because of second wave fears, ‘ staff working arrangemen­ts, face-to-face visits and contact between parents and children are again being reviewed’.

Successive government­s have tried to encourage social workers to place children taken into care with permanent new families through adoption, but with little success.

Michael Gove, himself an adopted child, pressed repeatedly when Education Secretary for an end to barriers against adoption raised by social workers,

But adoption numbers have fallen heavily over the past five years.

At the same time the number of those living in children’s homes or with foster families have reached record levels.

They began to rise in 2008 after the Baby P scandal broke. Baby P, 17-month-old Peter Connelly, died in 2007 at the hands of his mother and two men.

He was left to live with his mother even after social workers, police and health workers had seen him 60 times.

‘Lack of direct work with families’

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom