The Press and Journal (Inverness, Highlands, and Islands)

Guardian scheme won’t work if abusers opt out – Swinney

Swinney vows to press on

- BY CALUM ROSS

JOHNS win neyh as admitted that high profile cases in the Highlands show that the controvers­ial named person scheme stops working if abusers simply opt out.

The deputy firstminis­ter said the ser-

vice “relies on co-operation” of parents as he vowed to press forward with a nationwide rollout of the Highland Council-developed scheme despite vocal opposition.

The Press and Journal revealed in June that tragic Inverness toddler Clyde Campbell had no contact with his named person in the year-and-a-half leading up to his cot death – because his mother Amanda Hardie askedthe guardians to stay away.

Hardie, who repeatedly left the two-year-old unattended in her city flat in the run-up to his death, was jailed for 10 months inMay, and aHighland Council review is under way.

Last month, Fort Augustus woman Lanna Monaghan was jailed for more than three years for a catalogue of abuse on a another toddler, including shocking him with an electrifie­d dog training collar.

That victim also had an assigned named person, which is ahealth visitorunt­il the child attends school, as the system has been operating in the Highlands for six years.

Mr Swinney, the SNP education secretary, was quizzed about the cases by the Press and Journal in Inverness yesterday.

He said: “Sadly there are very difficult situations, and, unfortunat­ely, children sometimes come to harm and we have to do everything we possibly can to minimise that. But the examples that we’ve had of these cases demonstrat­e a

“It’s an overreachi­ng policy which intrudes on family life”

significan­t amount of willingnes­s of the individual­s responsibl­e not to co-operate with public authoritie­s, and the named person service relies on co-operation.

“That is what it was founded upon, and we want to make sure that it’s rolled out for the benefit of young people in Scotland.”

The minister added the “key evidence” from the Highland model was greater early interventi­on in situations where a youngster have difficulti­es, and a “very significan­t reduction in the number of children on the at-risk register, and the number of cases going to the children’s panel”.

He said: “These have been really significan­t achievemen­ts because of the early interventi­on activity that the named person service represents.”

Mr Swinney also said that he remained “committed” to the policy, although it will not be rolled out nationally on the last day of August as initially planned, pending changes being made to comply with a European human rights legislatio­n and a ruling by the UK Supreme Court.

Scottish Conservati­ve shadow education secretary Liz Smith said: “If named person was just about co- operation, the SNP wouldn’t be in the mess it finds itself in.

“It’s an over-reaching policy which intrudes on family life, however Mr Swinney dresses it up.

“What theSNPshou­ld be admitting is every child in Scotland having a named person will dilute resources for those most in need.

“And that’s what really risks more of these tragic cases occurring.”

SIR, – It's a familiar tale. The king (Busby, Revie, Ferguson, Ramsay, Salmond) leaves the stage and the obvious heir apparent is brought in, to great acclaim.

There's a raft of new signings (100,000), early success (56 MPs elected) then an inexplicab­le run of bad results (scandals, Forth Bridge, two defeats in five months by the GERS, a score draw in the Holyrood elections, shocking education, health, housing and police stats, extra time required for fracking and named person, and a shock exit from the Europa League).

The old guard (Salmond, Sillars,

 ??  ?? FACING QUESTIONS: John Swinney said the named person scheme relies on co-operation
FACING QUESTIONS: John Swinney said the named person scheme relies on co-operation
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 ??  ?? Clyde Campbell Amanda Hardie
Clyde Campbell Amanda Hardie

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