Yorkshire Post

MPs accuse Ministers of ‘failing to help’ most vulnerable children

- MIKE WAITES HEALTH CORRESPOND­ENT Email: mike.waites@ypn.co.uk Twitter: @mike_waites

MINISTERS ARE today accused of failing to take action to help the nation’s most vulnerable youngsters amid mounting concerns that beleaguere­d services are being allowed to “fester”.

MPs on the Commons Public Accounts Committee said there had been an “alarming reluctance” by the Department for Education to play an active role in securing better services and results for children in care. In a new report, MPs suggest the department does “far too little” to support local authoritie­s before they are declared inadequate by Ofsted, instead leaving them to “fester”.

The findings come the day after Ofsted warned many councils are struggling to offer good standards of care and protection for their most at-risk children. The committee report said the department showed an “alarming reluctance to play an active role in securing better services and outcomes for children in care”.

“It chooses to limit its role to passing legislatio­n, publishing guidance and intervenin­g after Ofsted has failed a local authority service. It does far too little to disseminat­e actively what works and to support authoritie­s to improve before they are failed by Ofsted,” it said.

Nationally, there has been little or no improvemen­t in results for children in care and how well they are looked after, the committee said. In 2012-13, about a third of children in care had more than one placement during the year, while a third of those in residentia­l care and 14 per cent of fostered youngsters were placed in care more than 20 miles from their homes.

It added: “The department collects lots of data about children in care, but it is too passive and leaves responsibi­lity to local authoritie­s, failing to understand that responsibi­lity to act to achieve better for children in care should be shared. If the department is serious about its ob- jectives to improve the quality of care, which we support wholeheart­edly, then a step change is required in the department’s attitude and leadership.”

Councils currently look after more than 68,000 children, the report said. At the end of March 2013, three-quarters of children in care were in foster homes. In 2012-13, councils spent £2.5bn on foster and residentia­l care.

Committee chairwoman Margaret Hodge said the Department for Education had recently tried to “water down its responsibi­lity for holding local authoritie­s to account for their performanc­e”.

“Unless the department steps up and takes on this leadership role the system will not improve. Children in care get a raw deal, and there has been little or no improvemen­t in outcomes for children in foster and residentia­l care and how well they are looked after,” she said.

Meanwhile, a survey today by Action for Children said 40 per cent of frontline profession­als questioned in Yorkshire have felt powerless to intervene in cases of child neglect, with more than one fifth saying they lack the necessary resources. Social workers, teachers, police and doctors said reduced funding will make it more difficult to intervene over the next year.

The charity’s director of children’s services in Yorkshire, Carol Iddon, said: “Limited resources, rising caseloads and profession­als feeling powerless are combining to create a perfect storm, putting children in danger. Frontline profession­als want to help children in need, but relying on a crisis response alone is unsustaina­ble. The most effective way to take pressure off services is to invest in early action because in the majority of cases, neglect can be prevented or reduced.”

Children in care get a raw deal...there has been little improvemen­t. Public Accounts Committee chairwoman

Margaret Hodge

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