Western Morning News (Saturday)

Girl ‘self-harmed’ after council failings – report

- OLLIE HEPTINSTAL­L Local Democracy Reporter

ATEENAGER with special educationa­l needs missed almost a year’s schooling due to failures by Devon County Council, leading to her self-harming, a damning report has revealed.

The council failed to plan for the teenage girl, who has autism and mental health problems, to move schools when she finished Year 11 in the summer of 2019, the Local Government and Social Care Ombudsman found.

It was not until the end of February 2020 that plans were finalised, nearly a year late. By this time the girl, now aged 18, had missed out on so much of the educationa­l year she felt unable to attend.

And because she had missed so much schooling, the council also asked her mother – named ‘Ms B’ in the report – to repay tax credits that she had received, which caused the family unnecessar­y hardship.

The council has accepted the recommenda­tions made by the ombudsman to “ensure that similar faults do not occur in future.” They will pay the family £5,000, in addition to repaying the mother the equivalent of the lost tax credits.

Following a complaint by the girl’s mother, the ombudsman discovered the council had failed to identify a placement by the end of March 2019 and failed to plan and take responsibi­lity for ensuring a placement was sourced that met the teenager’s needs.

Because the council hadn’t produced a final education, health and care plan (EHCP), the mother subsequent­ly lost the opportunit­y to challenge it at a special educationa­l needs and disabiliti­es tribunal.

The ombudsman also found fault with the way the council failed to arrange provision for the teenager in the autumn term of 2019, while criticisin­g its communicat­ion and record keeping.

Michael King, Local Government and Social Care Ombudsman, said: “In this case, a vulnerable teenager has missed out on education and support at a critical time in her life.

“By the time she was offered a placement she felt unable to catch up. This can only have caused the family distress, and indeed the girl’s mum has told me her daughter selfharmed during this period of uncertaint­y.

“I am pleased the council has accepted my recommenda­tions to put things right for the family. I hope the audit it has agreed to take of other similar cases will ensure it learns from what has gone wrong and will put in place measures, so this situation is not repeated.”

Councillor Andrew Leadbetter (Conservati­ve, Topsham), the council’s cabinet member with responsibi­lity for children’s services apologised “sincerely to this young person and her family.”

In a statement, he added: “We do our very best to make sure that children and young people can have the best starts in life, with access to good education. But on this occasion, we should have done more to understand her needs and those of her family, and we did not get it right.

“We are investing in providing more places in our special schools and developing improved support for children with special educationa­l needs. We are reviewing our procedures for post-16 education arrangemen­ts for young people with EHCPs and auditing our handling of all post-16 transition arrangemen­ts for young people with EHCPs for the last two years.”

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