Rochdale Observer

Children ‘in cycles of neglect and abuse’ Watchdog concern despite service improvemen­ts

- NICK STATHAM Local Democracy Service

VULNERABLE youngsters are experienci­ng ‘repeated cycles of neglect and domestic abuse’ despite improvemen­ts to children’s services in Rochdale.

Ofsted made the worrying finding after officials carried out a ‘focused visit’ to assess the council-run service’s performanc­e last month.

This was a follow-up to a 2018 inspection which found the experience­s and progress of children who need help and protection, ‘required improvemen­t to be good’.

The watchdog reported that the quality of work with children in need of protection had improved ‘in some areas’ – leading to a good understand­ing of children’s needs.

It also praised the service for keeping pace with increasing demand, despite the borough having experience­d high rates of Covid19 throughout the pandemic.

However the service was still found to ‘require improvemen­t to be good’ due to shortcomin­gs in some areas – including the ‘understand­ing of and response to domestic abuse’.

The report reads: “An increasing number of children in Rochdale experience emotional harm as a result of the impact of domestic abuse. Children and adults experienci­ng domestic abuse have access to specialist services.

“However, the nature of abuse, the behaviour of those who abuse, and the experience­s of the victims of domestic abuse are not always comprehens­ively assessed and understood.

“This means that some children repeatedly experience harmful situations because the plans to protect them are overly optimistic.”

An important role of children’s services is to carry out assessment­s of youngsters who may have unmet needs or be at risk of harm.

These were said to have improved since the last inspection, with ‘children’s wishes and feelings’ being ‘well considered’ in the majority of cases.

However, some failed to give ‘effective considerat­ion of children’s histories and the effectiven­ess of support previously received’.

This meant that some children – particular­ly those experienci­ng neglect – ‘continued to experience risk and harm as previously unsuccessf­ul actions are repeated’.

Ofsted has been telling the council its children’s services ‘require improvemen­t’ since 2014 – having found child protection arrangemen­ts were ‘inadequate’ two years earlier.

And although the last three inspection­s have noted progress and ‘positive developmen­ts’, this has not been enough to secure a ‘good’ rating.

Following last month’s inspection, the watchdog says children’s services must still improve in four ‘areas of social work practice’.

These include its focus on the progress and impact of child protection planning, its understand­ing and response to domestic abuse and the quality of auditing practices.

Finally, management must improve its oversight of the ‘quality and timeliness of pre-proceeding­s work for children and families’.

Pre-proceeding­s are entered into when a local authority has concerns about the care a child is receiving. The aim is to avoid court proceeding­s, but only when there are no immediate and pressing concerns about the child’s welfare.

Councillor Rachel Massey, cabinet member for children’s services and education, said the council was pleased Ofsted had recognised that improvemen­ts it had made – and that the authority was on its ‘journey to ‘good’.

She said: “We have already made changes to further improve some aspects of our service that Ofsted highlighte­d in their visit and we continue to look for ways to improve our service, based on their feedback, so that we provide the very best support to children, young people and families.

“Our teams have been incredibly stretched during the pandemic as demand has risen and we’re pleased to hear the feedback from our staff that they enjoy working here and feel supported.”

Coun Massey added: “The Covid-19 lockdowns were an incredibly difficult time for all social workers and staff who work closely with children as workloads increased significan­tly and they couldn’t have the usual sight of children they normally would. The way our staff dealt with that, showing creativity and innovation, is a credit to them.”

 ??  ?? ●● Council children’s services and education chief Coun Rachel Massey.
●● Council children’s services and education chief Coun Rachel Massey.

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