Bay of Plenty Times

Report: Oranga Tamariki falls well short of child-care expectatio­ns

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Data shows no significan­t improvemen­t in outcomes for tamariki in state care

Oranga Tamariki is still not meeting the minimal standards for children in care, a new report shows.

The data from the 2021/2022 Independen­t Children’s Monitor shows there is yet to be any significan­t improvemen­t in outcomes for tamariki in state care.

The report’s executive director Arran Jones said the report was a chance for the agency to show it had made improvemen­ts.

“While it has made progress on its work programme, we are yet to see meaningful improvemen­ts in its data, or in the experience­s of tamariki and others we heard from,” Jones said.

There are seven key findings which include:

■ Social workers need to be able to spend more time with tamariki, caregivers, wha¯ nau and communitie­s ■ Oranga Tamariki couldn’t provide data to determine whether the health and education needs of tamariki and rangatahi in care are being met

■ Lack of availabili­ty and access to mental health services remains a barrier

■ Caregivers need more support and access to important informatio­n about tamariki in their care

■ Caregivers and their households are not always fully assessed before tamariki start living in the home

■ Not enough collaborat­ion and communicat­ion occurs between government agencies

■ Oranga Tamariki is not meeting the regulatory requiremen­t to selfmonito­r compliance with the National Care Standards Regulation­s

During the time of the report, Oranga Tamariki had custody of almost 99 per cent of the 6398 children in care.

The report found only 65 per cent of children were visited by a social worker under their assessment plan.

Jones said the high workload from social workers resulted in limited trust between the child, caregivers and wha¯nau.

“Social workers need support to spend time with tamariki and rangatahi in care,” Jones said.

“We heard a range of reasons why this wasn’t happening including workload, staff turnover, availabili­ty of resources and leadership.

“Spending time with tamariki and building stronger relationsh­ips will help address the needs of children, their caregivers and wha¯nau, and, importantl­y, keep children safe.”

The report noted it was difficult to understand the root of the cause since the number of tamariki and rangatahi in care has reduced, while the number of social workers has increased by 30 per cent since 2017.

The agency could not identify whether basic human rights such as health and education needs were being met.

This included being unable to track whether a child has attended annual medical and dental checks, if impacted by mental health or if they were attending school.

Oranga Tamariki has been approached for comment regarding the findings.

“If tamariki and rangatahi aren’t having regular health checks, then health needs are more likely to be undiagnose­d and resources not made available,” Jones said.

But it did find there was a drop in tamariki registered with a GP from 60 per cent in 2020/2021 to 53 per cent in the last year.

The report revealed 32 per cent were placed before a caregiver assessment was completed, or before the caregiver was fully approved.

From a sample of 756 files, half the reviews were finished late while a quarter was yet to be completed.

Jones said the assessment reviews were crucial to the welfare and protection of tamariki. —RNZ

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