The Herald

Sturgeon urged to set up funding to help children of alcoholics

- KATRINE BUSSEY

LABOUR has challenged the First Minister to set up a dedicated fund to help children of alcoholics after a £6 million funding pot was announced to help these vulnerable youngsters in England.

Shadow health secretary Jon Ashworth made the plea after visiting a Scottish charity that aims to help children and families affected by alcohol abuse.

It is thought 51,000 children across Scotland are living with a parent with a drink problem.

At Westminste­r, Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt announced £6m of funding in April to help the 200,000 children with alcoholic parents get support and advice.

Mr Ashworth, who has spoken out about his father’s alcoholism, urged the Scottish Government to put “similar levels of support” in place.

The shadow health secretary teamed up with Scottish Labour communitie­s spokeswoma­n Monica Lennon – whose father also struggled with alcohol – on a visit to the Blameless charity in Hamilton,

South Lanarkshir­e.

It works with children and families of those affected by alcohol, with Ms Lennon describing the project as “giving children a chance to live their life again, to get their childhood back”.

Blameless trustee and Hamilton Academical FC chief executive Colin Mcgowan said the charity works with families caught up in the shadow of addiction and tries to direct the addict towards 12-step recovery programmes.

The organisati­on also arranges family events to help children and their parents re-bond as a family unit, he said.

Mr Ashworth said: “This is the sort of project the Scottish Government should be supporting and investing in, because it’s about the future of Scotland, the future of the nation, it is investing in children and bringing families back together.“”

Ms Lennon added: “If I could say one thing it would be to ask Nicola Sturgeon to come here to Hamilton to visit Blameless because the Scottish Government is working on its alcohol and drug strategy right now.

“It is going to be published very, very soon and for that work to be completed without the government engaging with a charity like Blameless would be such a missed opportunit­y.”

Public Health Minister Aileen Campbell said: “We’re committed to improving outcomes for children affected by parental substance misuse, as those children are among the most vulnerable in society and require particular care and support.

“That is why we give £600,000 per year to the Corra Foundation, who support Scottish voluntary organisati­ons to deliver vital on-the-ground support largely to children and families across Scotland affected by substance and alcohol misuse.”

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