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6. Support for Adoption
Summary
6.1 The Group considered the legal framework
needed to underpin the assessment of the support needs
of adoptive families and the planning and delivery of
services to meet those needs. The Group also emphasised
its support for the recommendations made by Phase I,
and the need for adoption support services that are
based on a sound framework, are properly resourced, and
to which central government, local authorities and
other providers are committed.
6.2 The Group's major recommendations
are:
- adoption support services should be:
counselling, advice, information and financial
support, as well as other services prescribed by
regulation (6.12)
- adoption allowances should be paid under a
national scheme, provided for in regulations
(6.13)
- in general a local authority placing a
child for adoption should have responsibility for
providing adoption support services to the child
and the adoptive family for three years after the
adoption order, or until the child is 18 years of
age, whichever occurs sooner (6.19)
- adoption support services should be
available to all parties involved in adoption, who
should be entitled to an assessment of their need
for support (6.21 and 6.22)
- there should be a contract between the
local authority adoption agency, the adopters, and
any adopted child who is aged 12 or over, detailing
the services that the agency will provide
(6.23)
Current law
6.3 The provisions for post-adoption support are
contained in s.1 of the 1978 Act. The provisions require
local authorities to provide a service to meet the needs of
adopted children, adoptive parents and the birth parents of
adopted children. In particular, the local authority should
provide counselling and assistance (although not in cash,
except for allowances) to adopted children and adoptive
parents, and counselling for other persons affected by
adoption.
1 Adoption allowances may be paid in certain
circumstances, including to meet children's needs arising
from mental or physical illness.
2 Children in long term foster placements remain
looked after children and the local authority has duties to
support them under the relevant legislation.
3
Difficulties with the current system
6.4 The first phase of the Adoption Policy Review
considered practice issues related to post-adoption
support, and made a number of recommendations to address
the problems it identified. These included: the need to
ensure the availability of appropriate professional
support; the need for local authorities to include
post-adoption services in their Services Plans; the need
for a support agreement between the adoption agency and the
other parties to the adoption; and the need for a national
adoption support network.
4 The second phase of the review has concentrated
on the legal framework for post adoption support. The
Adoption and Children Act 2002 will introduce changes to
the system of support in England and Wales, which the Group
also considered.
6.5 There are a number of difficulties with the current
legal system.
5 For example:
- who should provide services for adopted children
and adults, and adoptive families, who no longer live
in the area where the adoption took place, or who do
not live in the area of the local authority placing the
child? Currently, the duty to provide support lies on
the local authority where the person is living,
irrespective of where the adoption took place, or the
child's original residence.
6
- adoption contracts between adoption agencies and
prospective adopters, as recommended in the first
phase, are a good practice tool, but currently have no
legal underpinning.
- there is currently a great deal of variation in
practice on adoption allowances and no way to arrange
allowances after an adoption has taken place.
6.6 The 2002 Act contains a number of provisions
changing the support system in England and Wales that could
also be considered for Scotland. These include:
- support is available to all those connected with an
adoption.
- an agency must assess the needs of anyone seeking
support and prepare a plan to meet those needs.
- local authorities must plan for adoption support
service in their area.
7
Views from consultation
6.7 The consultation with young people highlighted the
importance of effective support once adopted.
8 Young people identified being able to speak to
someone they trust, and knowing that their views were being
listened to as the two most important support needs. For
many young people their adoptive parents were an important
source of support, as were other people known to the young
person, such as social workers, other family and friends.
In one example, a young woman highlighted that, as they
grow older, young people need support independent of that
given to their parents. She had found regular meetings with
an adoption counsellor useful. Other young people
emphasised the need for opportunities to meet other young
people who have been adopted, and to have a chance to
discuss issues of concern to them. In another example, a
young woman, who was adopted but was currently living in
foster care, said she had found the most helpful form of
support to be other young people who had been through
similar experiences. This particular young woman had found
being in a residential home had let her share her
experiences with other young people.
6.8. The support needs identified by young people were
often specific to that person and required knowledge of
their circumstances, so more general sources of advice,
such as magazines and the internet, were seen as less
helpful.
Proposals for change
6.9 As well as considering the legal framework for
adoption support the Group established a general principle
that children growing up away from their birth family
should have access to support. The Group also emphasised
its support for the recommendations of Phase I.
The Group recommends that there should be adoption
support services that are based on a sound legal framework,
are properly resourced, and that have the commitment of
central government, local authorities and other
providers. The Group also considered that there
should, as far as practicable, be equal access to support
services and equal provision of support services across
Scotland.
6.10 The Group considered that the current legal
provisions are too brief. Although guidance can provide
further details, it is crucial that the duties imposed by
primary legislation on local authorities are as clear and
as wide-ranging as necessary. The Group believes the
legislation about adoption support services needs to
specify:
- what are adoption support services?
- who has duties to provide adoption support
services?
- who is entitled to adoption support services and
when?
What are adoption support services?
6.11 Adoption support services should meet a range of
needs from those of new adoptive families, to families with
older adopted children, to adults who have been adopted or
have been affected by adoption in some way. As well as
support for families, they include tracing services, and
counselling for adopted adults and others involved in
trying to make contact.
9
6.12
The Group recommends that adoption support services
should be: counselling, advice, information and financial
support, as well as other services prescribed by
regulation. This follows the definition in the
2002 Act.
10 The powers to prescribe other services by
regulation has now been exercised in the Adoption Support
Services Regulations 2005, which come into force in
December 2005.
11 These regulations specify, as part of the
adoption support service, further services:
- support to groups of adopted children, adopters and
birth parents;
- assistance, including mediation, in arrangements
for contact between adopted children and their birth
parents, siblings and other relatives;
- services to meet the therapeutic needs of adopted
children;
- assistance to adopters such as training to meet
special needs and respite care;
- mediation and other services if there is a
disruption in an adoption placement, or risk of
one.
There will similarly be other services required in
Scotland in addition to those identified by the Group. The
Group believes that further consultation on these services
should be carried out to identify the detailed need for
support, which was beyond the Group's remit.
6.13 The Group recommends that adopters and adopted
children should be able to receive financial support up to
the child's 18th birthday. Financial support should be
available to ensure that any carers that choose to adopt
are not financially penalised. The current principles
underpinning financial support should be revised and there
should be consistency in adoption allowances across
Scotland.
12 The Group recommends that adoption allowances
should be paid under a national scheme, provided for in
regulations. Each local authority agency would be
responsible for deciding who was entitled to allowances,
but the scheme should be standard throughout Scotland, and
decisions should be reviewed as part of inspection of
services.
6.14
The Group recommends that the current restriction
on adoptive families receiving cash instead of services
should be removed.
13 This would provide flexibility of provision
of services where these are not available directly from a
local authority, but might be available from a private or
voluntary sector provider. The adoptive family could
arrange to receive the services directly if the local
authority underwrite its cost. This is the position in
England.
14
Who has duties to provide adoption support
services?
6.15
The Group recommends that the adoption service
provided by every local authority should clearly include
adoption support services, and local authorities
should have a duty to prepare an adoption service plan
including their adoption support services.
15 It should also be clear that the adoption support
service is the responsibility of the whole local authority,
not just social services. It would therefore be preferable
for the adoption support plan to form part of the children
services plan for the local authority area.
16 Local authorities should be able to seek
assistance in delivering these services from other local
authorities and from all health service providers, which
should be obliged to assist (within certain limits).
17
6.16 To ensure that the adoption support services plan
is properly prepared and delivered,
the Group recommends that each local authority
should have an adoption support officer within the senior
management team for social services who has lead
responsibility for service provision.
6.17
The Group recommends that there should be a Code of
Practice for the provision of adoption support
services. This should complement the existing
National Care Standards for adoption agencies published by
the Scottish Executive.
6.18
The Group recommends that legislation should allow
for voluntary, specialist adoption support agencies to be
established, subject to the same registration and
inspection as other voluntary adoption agencies.
18 Local authorities would be allowed to use other
adoption agencies as now and adoption support agencies to
assist them in carrying out their duties to provide
adoption support services.
19
6.19 Adoption support services are a life-long
commitment to the adopted person and others, but families
move around and there is a need for clarity about
responsibility in these circumstances.
The Group recommends that, in general, a local
authority placing a child for adoption should retain
responsibility for providing adoption support services to
the child and the adoptive family for three years after the
adoption order, after which point, if the adopted person is
under 18 years of age, the responsibility would become the
responsibility of the local authority where the adopted
person and the family lives. Responsibility could
be transferred earlier with the agreement of the family,
and both local authorities. Adoption support services for
birth parents should be provided by the placing local
authority for three years after the adoption order, and
then by the local authority where the parents live. For
others affected by adoption, adoption support services
should be provided by the local authority where the person
lives.
6.20 This follows the model proposed for England, except
that the Group does not recommend that continuing financial
support to adoptive families should always be provided by
the placing local authority.
20 This adds too much complexity to the system and
obliges the adoptive family to maintain relations with two
local authorities for their services. Financial support
should also come from the local authority in whose area the
family lives.
Who is entitled to adoption support services
and when?
6.21
The Group recommends that adoption support services
should be available for all parties involved in
adoption:
- adoptees and children placed for adoption,
including both those over and under 16;
- adopters, including prospective adopters, after
placement of a child;
- birth parents who have/had parental
responsibilities and whose children have been placed
for adoption or been adopted;
- others affected by adoption, including members of
the extended birth family.
The Group emphasises that these groups should be
entitled to services appropriate to their needs and the
rights of the various parties involved would have to be
balanced if there was any conflict. For example, the right
of adopters to decline or reduce support services should be
balanced with the right of their adopted children to access
the services they need.
6.22
Each of these groups should be entitled to an
assessment of their need for adoption services.
21 The local authority should then plan how any
assessed needs are to be met. These plans should
incorporate services available from the social work, health
and education services, for example any additional support
for learning plans. It is for consideration whether, as in
England and Wales, the local authority should retain the
discretion not to provide services.
22 However, if a person is refused an adoption
support service after assessment, either because there is
no assessed need or the local authority decides not to
provide the service, the decision of the local authority
should be subject to review. Plans for providing adoption
support services must be kept under review by the local
authority.
6.23
Following assessment and a plan, there should be a
contract between the local authority adoption agency, the
adopters, and any adopted child who is aged 12 or over,
detailing the services that the agency will
provide. There should be scope for review of the
contract by any of the parties and in all cases annually,
until the liability of the agency ceases at the end of
three years from the order, when the family resides in
another area, or the adopted person reaches 18 years of
age. If the contract expires after three years from the
order, the agency in whose area the adoptive family now
lives should take account of the previous contract with the
placing agency in assessing and providing services.
Support in other permanence placements
6.24 This subject is dealt with in more detail in other
parts of this report.
23 Children subject to the proposed Permanence Order
will remain looked after and therefore entitled to support
from the local authority.
24 The Group also recommends that looked after
children whose carers have applied for or obtained an order
under s.11 of the 1995 Act should be entitled to an
assessment of their support needs.
25
Recommendations of Chapter 6 - support for
adoption
33. There should be adoption support services
that are based on a sound legal framework, are properly
resourced, and that have the commitment of central
government, local authorities and other providers.
(6.9)
34. Adoption support services should be:
counselling, advice, information and financial support,
as well as other services prescribed by regulation.
(6.12)
35. Adoption allowances should be paid under a
national scheme, provided for in regulations.
(6.13)
36. The current restriction on adoptive
families receiving cash instead of services from
adoption agencies should be removed. (6.14)
37. The adoption service provided by every
local authority should unequivocally include adoption
support services. (6.15).
38. Each local authority should have an
adoption support officer within the senior management
team for social services who will have lead
responsibility for service provision. (6.16)
39. There should be a Code of Practice for the
provision of adoption support services. (6.17)
40. Legislation should provide for voluntary,
specialist adoption support agencies to be established.
(6.18)
41. In general, a local authority placing a
child for adoption should retain responsibility for
providing adoption support services to the child and
the adoptive family for three years after the adoption
order, after which point, if the adopted person is
under 18 years of age, the responsibility would become
the responsibility of the local authority where the
adopted person and the family lives. (6.19)
42. Adoption support services should be
available for all parties involved in adoption.
(6.21)
43. Each party to an adoption should be
entitled to an assessment of their need for adoption
services. The local authority should then plan how any
assessed needs are to be met (6.22)
44. Where services are being provided for a
child and the adopters following assessment and a plan,
there should be a contract between the local authority
adoption agency, the adopters, and any adopted child
who is aged 12 or over, detailing the services that the
agency will provide. (6.23)
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