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10. Fostering Issues
Summary
10.1 The Group considered a range of issues
arising from current statutory provisions for
fostering, including support, allowances, restrictions
on who can foster, assessment of carers for immediate
placement, and private fostering.
10.2 The Group's major recommendations
are:
- the support needs of children and carers
should be should be re-assessed following a
Permanence Order and support should continue to be
available to children and carers if a s.11 order is
made in respect of a looked after child (10.7 and
10.11)
- there should be a nationally agreed scheme
of adequate allowances for foster carers
(10.14)
- adults of the same sex living in the same
household should be allowed to foster children
(10.19)
- carers looking after children in immediate
placements should be fully assessed within four
months (10.24)
- kinship care and private fostering should
be examined further (10.48 and 10.52)
Issues with fostering
10.3 The Permanence Order proposed by the Group is
intended
inter alia to address the legal status of children
in long-term fostering.
1 The Group also examined a range of issues arising
from the current arrangements for fostering which have
either led to practical problems or been the subject of
criticism. The issues considered were identified in
Choices for Children or arose from consultation or
the Group's own discussions.
2
Public fostering
Support for children and carers in long-term
placements
10.4 There is extensive statutory provision and guidance
on the duties of local authorities to assess and meet the
needs of looked after children and support foster carers.
3 For looked after children, local authorities must
assess the child's needs and draw up a care plan which
details how these needs are to be met.
4 Care plans must be reviewed on a regular basis,
generally every six months.
5 For foster carers, local authorities must agree -
in writing - the support and training they will provide to
the carer.
6 Local authorities may also pay allowances and
reward payments to foster carers.
7
10.5 Children in long term placements, and their carers,
should continue to have access to support from the local
authority. The Group has therefore recommended that
children on a Permanence Order continue to be looked after
children.
8 This approach will ensure both the maximum use of
Permanence Orders - as carers need not be concerned about
losing support - and that children and carers receive the
help they need from the local authority.
10.6 The Group recognised that in some cases when a
Permanence Order is made the support needs of the child and
the carers might change. Reviews of the care plan might
need to be less frequent. The making of a Permanence Order
would therefore be a suitable opportunity to re-assess the
support needs of the family and to draw up a new care plan,
and agreement with the foster carers, reflecting those
needs.
10.7
The Group recommends that the support needs of the
child and the carer should be assessed on the making of a
Permanence Order for a child in foster care, and new plans
should be put in place to meet those needs.
Applications for s.11 orders for children who
are or were looked after.
10.8 The Group expects that s.11 of the 1995 Act, which
allows the court to make orders governing the residence and
contact arrangements for a child, will continue to be used
as a means of securing long-term arrangements for some
looked after children, even after the introduction of the
proposed Permanence Order. This course of action might be
attractive to carers and children who do not need the same
degree of continuing involvement and support of the local
authority, and it can be particularly appropriate when care
is being provided by relatives of the child.
10.9 The Group believes that this option should continue
to be available in appropriate cases. However, carers can
currently be deterred from pursuing this option as they
would, generally, lose their support from the local
authority and the child would cease to be looked after if
the order is granted.
10.10 The Group believes that when a s.11 order is
obtained by a carer in respect of a looked after child, the
local authority should have a duty to assess the support
needs of the child and the carers, and produce a plan for
support. This is similar to the Group's recommendation on
support after an adoption order.
9 The local authority should also have a duty to
review the plan at the request of the child or carer until
the child reaches 18. With these support arrangements, s.11
orders granted for looked after children would resemble the
Special Guardianship orders being introduced in England and
Wales.
10 Scotland would therefore benefit from two
possible arrangements for non-adoptive permanent placements
- Permanence Orders and s.11 orders - both of which would
offer support to the child and carers.
10.11
The Group recommends that, when a s.11 order has
been granted for the long-term security of a looked after
child, the local authority should assess and plan to meet
the support needs of the child and the carers.
Nationally agreed foster care
allowances
10.12 Local authorities and other agencies use a variety
of different ways to calculate and pay allowances and fees
to foster carers. While this reflects the discretion given
to local authorities to pay foster carers according to
local circumstances, such variation is seen as unjust to
foster carers and may affect the recruitment of foster
carers and therefore the service provided to children
needing care in the area. The Scottish Office guidance on
the 1995 Act says:
Whilst there will be some local variations, the costs of
fostering will not differ markedly across Scotland. It will
aid recruitment and retention, be more comprehensible and
fair to foster carers, and prevent competition emerging
between local authorities if … national agreements on rates
of payment are continued and, if possible, extended.
11
The Fostering Network's minimum recommended allowances,
which are used by the Inland Revenue for taxation of the
foster care work force, are widely accepted to reflect the
true costs of looking after children within the looked
after system.
10.13 The Group believes that the basic allowances for
foster carers should be the same across the country and
should reflect the true cost of bringing up a child. This
would assist in the recruitment and retention of foster
carers as well as being fair. Local authorities should
retain some discretion, for example over additional reward
payments for carers, to cater for local circumstances.
10.14
The Group recommends that a nationally agreed
scheme of adequate allowances should be introduced for
foster carers.
Restrictions on who may foster
10.15 Under current regulations, a same-sex couple
living together are not allowed to foster children.
12 The same provision effectively prohibits
fostering in households where there are two unrelated
adults of the same sex who are not in a same-sex
relationship. This has led to problems, for example when a
former foster child over 18 years old continues to live in
the household of a single foster carer of the same sex.
13
10.16 To a large extent, the consultation responses
agreed that this situation needs to be changed to allow
fostering by a single person or by two people, whatever
their sex or sexual orientation The responses also
indicated that the current provisions acted as a
disincentive for some people who might otherwise apply to
become foster carers, and might contravene the
ECHR as they discriminate against
same-sex couples.
10.17 The Group has considered the available research on
same-sex parenting and found that there is no reliable
research evidence that suggests that same-sex couples
should be excluded from adopting or fostering.
14
10.18 Changing the provisions to allow same-sex couples
to foster would bring the rules into line with current
fostering law and practice in England and Wales, where
assessment of potential foster carers is based on their
ability to offer care on a continuing basis for vulnerable
children. There are no definitions of who may and who may
not foster. Such a change would also remove the
difficulties over households containing two unrelated
adults of the same sex who are not in a relationship.
10.19
The Group recommends that the restriction on
fostering by adults of the same sex living in the same
household should be removed. This would ensure
that no potential foster carers are deterred from coming
forward to be assessed.
Emergency and immediate placements
10.20 The Group considered current provisions for
emergency and immediate placements into foster care.
15 An emergency placement is when the child needs
foster home urgently, for example a placement has broken
down at the weekend. The child is placed with an approved
foster carer.
16 An immediate placement is when it is in the
child's best interests to be placed with a relative or
friend, who is not an approved foster carer, and there are
good reasons why the child should not wait in another
placement while the carers are approved.
17
10.21 For emergency placements, local authorities can
place the child with the foster carers for up to 72 hours
without a foster placement agreement, which is required
before placement in all other cases, provided certain other
conditions are met.
18 The Group considered that this provision was not
as clear as it could be, in particular there was a cross
reference to the provisions on immediate placements.
Supported by the responses to consultation, the Group
recommends that the emergency placement provision should be
clarified and should be self-contained, without
cross-reference to other regulations.
10.22 For immediate placements, local authorities can
place the child with the relative or friend of the child,
for a period of up to six weeks, provided certain
conditions are met.
19 For the placement to continue the relative or
friend should be approved as a foster carer by the local
authority. Alternatively, a children's hearing can place a
child with a relative or friend with whom a child has been
placed under the immediate placement provisions.
20 The latter provision is discussed further
below.
10.23 There was agreement in the consultation responses
that the time limit of six weeks was not sufficient to
carry out a full assessment of the placement and the
carers, and should be extended to allow the assessment to
be carried out within a prescribed but realistic time
period. There was also agreement that, within a six week
period, there should be an interim assessment and approval
of the relatives or friends which is more rigorous than
that required under the current provisions. The initial
assessment should determine whether the child should stay
in the placement while the full assessment was being
carried out.
10.24
The Group recommends that immediate placements
should last for up to four months, subject to an interim
assessment and approval, during which time a full
assessment and approval should be carried out. The
provisions on immediate placements should also have minimal
cross reference to other regulations.
Placement recommendations by local authorities
to children's hearings
10.25 Children on supervision requirements can be placed
with carers either:
- if the carers are fully approved foster carers;
or
- if the local authority has carried out the
procedures for emergency or immediate placement with
the carers and thinks the placement is the best choice
for the children.
21
The latter provision allows longer term placements with
family and friends who have not been approved as foster
carers, and who either do not want to apply to be approved
or who the local authority does not wish to seek to approve
for whatever reason. It also allows placement with
prospective adopters who have not been approved as foster
carers (such people will have been approved as adopters).
22 These provisions therefore allow flexibility, and
they also allow a child to be put in a long-term placement
with carers who remain formally unapproved.
10.26 The consultation responses showed concern at the
lack of a systematic approach by local authorities to
assessing and approving carers in these circumstances,
particularly those who are related to the children. Some
detected unwillingness amongst local authorities to approve
relatives as foster carers, possibly to avoid becoming
liable to provide financial support. One response wanted
formal assessment processes for relative carers, while
another one said that more formality was not necessary if
good reports were available, but that "some agreed areas
for assessment of family and friends as carers would
help".
10.27 The Group recognised the value of flexibility in
the placements available to children's hearings. However,
there was also a need for a systematic approach to ensure
placements were suitable.
If the Group's recommendation on assessment in
immediate placements is implemented, no child should be
placed long-term by a children's hearing with carers who
have not been properly assessed.
Children looked after under s.25 of the 1995
Act
10.28 Under s.25 of the 1995 Act, local authorities must
provide accommodation for children residing in their area
who require accommodation because:
(a) no-one has parental responsibility for them;
(b) they are lost or abandoned; or
(c) the person who has been caring for them is prevented
from providing suitable accommodation or care.
23
A local authority may also provide accommodation for
any child within their area if they consider that to do so
would safeguard or promote the child's welfare.
24 A child provided with accommodation for more than
24 hours is a looked after child.
25
10.29 Questions can arise about whether a child has been
accommodated by a local authority under s.25, and should
therefore be treated as a looked after child.
26 For example, where a child is living with friends
or family, the child may be treated as looked after if the
placement was organised directly by the local authority (or
a voluntary organisation). However, if the placement was
arranged by a birth parent, even with the help and
agreement of the local authority, the child might not be
treated as looked after. This distinction has important
implications for the assessment and services the child will
receive.
10.30
To ensure consistency of approach across Scotland,
the Group recommends that clear guidance is issued by the
Scottish Executive to local authorities on the
circumstances in which children should be regarded as
accommodated under s.25.
Respite care provided under s.25 of the 1995
Act
10.31 A related issue concerns children and young people
needing respite care.
27 When a local authority provides respite care for
more than 24 hours, the legal grounds for providing the
care is normally regarded as s.25 of the 1995 Act, and the
child is considered to be looked after.
10.32 However, children who need respite care might not
have any other needs that would justify the local authority
looking after them. For these children, and their families,
being looked after can be overly intrusive and burdensome.
It can also be wasteful for the local authority.
10.33
The Group recommends that clear guidance is issued
by the Scottish Executive to local authorities on the use
of s.25 to provide respite care to children for periods of
more than 24 hours at a time.
10.34 The Group considered the monitoring arrangements
for children who are in consecutive periods of respite
care, amounting to continuous time in care away from home,
without this position being regularly reviewed. The Group
concluded that no specific system of monitoring was
necessary. Whether respite is provided by local authorities
or voluntary agencies, they can be expected to monitor use
of their resources and become aware if and when these
situations arise. However, both local authorities and
voluntary agencies need to keep information about the
services being provided to specific children and families,
to assure themselves, through assessment and ongoing
support, that respite care is required in each case and is
in children and families' best interests. The quality of
all respite care services should be monitored through the
approval and review processes for the carers who provide
them, such as inspection by the Care Commission.
Arrangements with voluntary
organisations
10.35 Arrangements may be made between local authorities
and voluntary organisations in relation to fostering for
looked after children.
28 The Group discussed what exactly voluntary
organisations could do, including arrangements for their
fostering panels.
29
10.36 Consultation responses indicated that voluntary
organisations should be able to carry out all appropriate
fostering functions under the regulations, and particularly
to be able to run their own fostering panels. This would
allow them to assess carers, approve them and carry out
their annual reviews. Fostering agencies are now to be
inspected by the Care Commission which should ensure that
they meet the necessary standards in their activities.
There also needs to be a wider definition of "foster carer"
in the regulations, to include those approved by voluntary
organisations.
10.37
The Group recommends that the regulations should
allow all fostering providers, whether local authorities or
voluntary organisations, to carry out their own assessment,
approval, reviewing and de-registration
processes.
Assessment of foster carers' new
partners
10.38 The assessment of foster carers' new partners is
largely an issue of good practice, as is the related
question of whether (and how many) checks are made on
regular overnight visitors to a foster carer's house. One
consultation response commented that there should be an
assessment of new partners which "should include all
statutory checks, a reflection on lifestyle changes,
commitment as a couple to the fostering task, and where
there might be children of the new relationship, their
place in the fostering family."
10.39
The Group recommends there should be clear guidance
from the Scottish Executive to local authorities
that:
- where a prospective foster carer acquires a
partner during the assessment process, the partner
should be jointly assessed; and
- where a foster carer acquires a partner after
approval, that approval is reviewed, including an
assessment of the partner, and the matter is taken back
to the fostering panel.
In support of this, the fostering regulations should
specify that such a review should be considered by the
fostering panel.
30
Checks on households which looked after
children are visiting
10.40 Across Scotland there is a wide variation in
practice on checks on households where looked after and
accommodated children propose to spend time, whether for
overnight stays or other sorts of stays that allow access
by adults and others to these children.
10.41 For looked after young people, this issue is a
crucial one because the need to have checks on friends and
their families before being allowed to stay with them is
seen as stigmatising in nature and a barrier to forming
normal peer group relations.
10.42 This comes out clearly from the Group's
consultation with young people, which found this was a
contentious and frequently highlighted issue.
31 Young people described how they found it
upsetting, difficult, restrictive and stigmatising. A
number of young people identified the impact which it had
on their friendships and their childhood experience:
I would just be going about with my friends and they
would ask me stay over. I would go home and ask and it
would be like, 'Well, not really, has that person had a
police check?'... It is really hard when you are wee. It
kind of takes away from your childhood. (Young man, 17
years)
10.43 A further complication is the practice some local
authorities have of carrying out checks on all adults and
young people who are in contact with all members of the
fostering household, including the birth children. This is
seen as burdensome and mitigates against the normal growth
and development of peer group associations for all the
children in the foster home. This is resented as intrusive
by all the children involved.
10.44 Consultation responses indicated that guidance on
this matter would be welcomed and that regulations were
unnecessary. In fact, the then Social Work Services
Inspectorate of the Scottish Executive undertook
consultation across Scotland about this issue, following
work with young people in the looked after and accommodated
system by the Fostering Network in Scotland. Draft Guidance
was issued for consultation in 2004.
10.45
The Group recommends that the issue of checks on
those in contact with looked after children should be dealt
with by the current consultation and guidance process being
carried out by the Scottish Executive.
Kinship care
10.46 This term is used for a wide range of arrangements
where children are cared for by relatives for considerable
periods, if not permanently. While many of these situations
are covered by the looked after system, the majority are
thought to be informal family arrangements with little or
no involvement with social work departments or other
support services. Some of the consultation comments
highlighted concerns about the lack of systems for
assessing family and friends as carers.
10.47 From these responses, the issues with kinship care
include:
- the growth and extent of kinship care across
Scotland;
- the support needs of kinship care;
- the underlying assumptions and value base of
kinship care;
- the need for a consistent realistic level of
support from social work and other agencies in kinship
care arrangements;
- the need for an agreed, consistent level of
financial support for kinship carers across
Scotland;
- the underlying status of and proposed developments
for kinship care.
In 2004, the then Social Work Services Inspectorate of
the Scottish Executive commissioned research into the
prevalence of kinship care across Scotland and associated
issues.
10.48
The Group recommends that the issues surrounding
kinship care should be examined following the current
research being carried out by the Scottish
Executive.
Private fostering
10.49 It is important to distinguish "private fostering"
from "public fostering". Public fostering is the provision
of fostering services to children who are looked after by
local authorities. This can be done by the local
authorities, or by organisations in the voluntary sector.
Public fostering is governed by statute, and detailed
guidance and regulation.
10.50 Private fostering, on the other hand, is where
parents make arrangements with people who are not close
relatives to care for their children.
32 If these arrangements last for more than 28 days
both parents and carers have a duty to report the
arrangement to the relevant local authority, who must
inspect and monitor the accommodation and other aspects of
the arrangements, although they do not assess and approve
the carers as such.
33 There is very little public awareness of these
legal requirements and local authorities themselves are
often unsure of their scope, although they will now be
inspected by the Care Commission to see how well they
perform this function.
34
10.51 The consensus of the responses to consultation on
private fostering was that the current system needed
reform, although the nature of that reform differed between
respondents. There was support for some form of
registration and/or assessment of arrangements and/or
carers, but no consensus on how this would be done, or
whether the tasks should be carried out by local
authorities or the Care Commission.
10.52 This is a complex issue, and there is limited
information about a number of areas, including:
- what is the practice of individual local
authorities?
- which private fostering arrangements are notified
and which are not?
- what, if any, information is available to the
public, either nationally or locally?
- what are the views of the users of private
fostering services, children, birth families and/or
carers, who are or may be involved in private
fostering?
Some of this information will become available as the
Care Commission starts its work of inspection and
registration, but the Group concluded that private
fostering needs more investigation and discussion than is
possible within its timeframe.
The Group recommends that a Working Party should be
set up to carry forward further consideration and
discussion on private fostering.
Recommendations of Chapter 10 - fostering
issues
74. The support needs of the child and the
carer should be assessed on the making of a Permanence
Order for a child in foster care, and new plans should
be put in place to meet those needs. (10.7)
75. When a s.11 order has been granted for the
long-term security of a looked after child, the local
authority should assess and plan to meet the support
needs of the child and the carers. (10.11)
76. A nationally agreed scheme of adequate
allowances should be introduced for foster carers.
(10.14)
77. The restriction on fostering by adults of
the same sex living in the same household should be
removed. (10.19)
78. The emergency placement provision should be
clarified and should be self-contained, without
cross-reference to other regulations. (10.21)
79. Immediate placements should last for up to
four months, subject to an interim assessment and
approval, during which time a full assessment and
approval should be carried out. If this recommendation
on assessment in immediate placements is implemented,
no child should be placed long-term by a children's
hearing with carers who have not been properly
assessed. (10.24 and 10.27)
80. Clear guidance should be issued by the
Scottish Executive to local authorities on the
circumstances in which children should be regarded as
accommodated under s.25 and the use of s.25 for respite
care. (10.30 and 10.33)
81. The regulations should allow all fostering
providers, whether local authorities or voluntary
organisations, to carry out their own assessment,
approval, reviewing and de-registration processes.
(10.37)
82. There should be clear guidance from the
Scottish Executive to local authorities on the
procedures when a prospective foster carer acquires a
new partner during or after the assessment process.
(10.39)
83. The issue of checks on those in contact
with looked after children should be dealt with by the
current consultation and guidance process being carried
out by the Scottish Executive. (10.45)
84. The issues surrounding kinship care should
be examined following the current research being
carried out by the Scottish Executive. (10.48)
85. A Working Party should be set up to carry
forward further investigation and discussion on private
fostering. (10.52)
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