Kentish Gazette Canterbury & District

Council’s ‘good’ care of vulnerable children

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Inspectors have rated county council services for vulnerable children as good despite the burden of having to look after hundreds of child asylum seekers.

Ofsted carried out a three-week review of children’s services at Kent County Council after which they said that children and their families were receiving good care in the face of pressures caused by young asylum seekers arriving in the county.

Ofsted said that in four of the areas inspected standards were good but in one, children who need help and protection, the service required improvemen­t. The three areas rated good included adoption services; the help for so-called care leavers; and leadership and management.

The council had dealt with the increased demands caused by asylum seeker children effectivel­y and services were “well targeted”.

They highlighte­d that for a small number of children there were delays in recognisin­g escalating risk, especially for children living in what were described as “neglectful circumstan­ces or affected by domestic violence.”

On young asylum children, inspectors said social workers recognised the vulnerabil­ities of children and were effective in curbing the risks of traffickin­g, sexual exploitati­on, female genital mutilation and possible radicalisa­tion.

KCC has about 9,193 vulnerable children to look after with 1,176 of these the subject of a care plan.

Between April 2015 and March 2016, Kent had 969 new unaccompan­ied asylum seeker referrals, nearly three times as many as the previous year and close to 30% of the national total. At its peak in December 2015, the number of asylum-seeking young people in Kent’s care had risen to 1,401.

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