Yorkshire Post

‘Make real change in social care’

- RUTH DACEY EDUCATION CORRESPOND­ENT ■ Email: ruth.dacey@jpimedia.co.uk ■ Twitter: @yorkshirep­ost

THE GOVERNMENT needs to “make real change” and reform the nation’s social care system by opening up opportunit­ies for every child, the Children’s Commission­er for England has said.

Dame Rachel de Souza made the plea as a long-awaited independen­t review of children’s social care review is currently being overseen by leading figures in the sector.

The review is being spearheade­d by Josh MacAlister, who will be paid just over £140,000 for leading the 15-month analysis which launched last month, and recommenda­tions are expected to be put forward to the Government in the summer of next year.

Figures have shown that across the Yorkshire and Humber region, there are 8,568 children in care, while official figures released last year revealed levels had reached a 10-yearhigh with 78,150 children in care in England.

During the past five years, North East Lincolnshi­re has witnessed the greatest increase regionally in the number of children in care with a rise of 69 per cent, while Rotherham saw a rise of 57.7 per cent, and North Lincolnshi­re saw an increase of 41.8 per cent.

North Yorkshire was the only area in the region to see a decrease in figures with 428 children in care – a fall of four per cent compared to 2015. Dame Rachel, inset, who was born in Scunthorpe and received her title in the 2014 New Year’s Honours list for services to education, told The Yorkshire Post: “Children in care want the same things as every other child – a loving, stable home and the chance to do well at school. “Our ambitions for every child in care should be as high as for every other child.”

She welcomed the independen­t review, which will see her office feed into the 15 months of work, but stressed that “action” and not “rhetoric” by the Government must come from the findings.

Dame Rachel, who took over the role of Children’s Commission­er from Yorkshire-born Anne Longfield in February, said: “What needs to come out of it is real change. Its end point should be reforming a system that gives every child in care the support they need to do well in life.”

Working with Mr MacAlister, who is the founder of the Frontline charity that supports vulnerable children and their families, is an expert board of 14 members, all of whom have in depth experience of the social care sector.

The team will help guide the review, which will hear of the experience­s of children, young people, adults and families involved in the social care system.

Among the members are Chris Hoyle, who was the first care leaver from North Yorkshire to attend a university in the UK, after the inception of the Care Leavers Act in 2001, and Janet Kay, a former social worker and lecturer from South Yorkshire, who is also an adopter and a kinship carer.

Mr Hoyle, who is now an analyst for the widening participat­ion team at the University of York, said the review must be used as a “watershed moment” for the social care system.

He said: “There have been tweaks to the system over the years, but we essentiall­y have the same children’s social care system we had at the turn of the 20th century.

“I have grown up in a world where we only have residentia­l care and foster care and so I don’t know what that new world will look like, but I am keen to see proper systematic change.”

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