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England and Wales High Court (Family Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Family Division) Decisions >> A & S (Children) v Lancashire County Council [2012] EWHC 1689 (Fam) (21 June 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2012/1689.html Cite as: [2012] EWHC 1689 (Fam) |
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FAMILY DIVISION
B e f o r e :
____________________
A and S (Children) | ||
and | ||
Lancashire County Council |
____________________
Malcolm Sharpe and Patrick Gilmore (instructed by LCC Legal Services) for LCC
Jane Cross QC and Kathryn Korol (instructed by Birchall Blackburn) for the IRO
Shirley Pollard (Marsh & Co) for A's Special Guardians
Edward Clifford (Cliffords) for A's Children's Guardian
Representation in S's proceedings
Anthony Hayden QC and Lorraine Cavanagh (instructed by the Official Solicitor) for S in the Human Rights Act proceedings
Malcolm Sharpe and Patrick Gilmore (instructed by LCC Legal Services) for LCC
Jane Cross QC and Kathryn Korol (instructed by Birchall Blackburn) for the IRO
Edward Clifford (Cliffords) for S's Children's Guardian
Hearing dates: 26 to 29 March 2012
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Peter Jackson:
Summary | PART 1 |
The boys' story | PART 2 |
Introduction | 5 |
Overview | 15 |
Detailed history | 18 |
The effect on the children | 103 |
Human Rights Act infringements | 113 |
Declarations | 124 |
LCC's explanation | 127 |
The IRO's explanation | 133 |
Wider issues | PART 3 |
Statutory orphans | 147 |
Respite care | 166 |
Independent Reviewing Officers | |
Order |
(2) They were removed by social services in February 1998.(3) In March 1998, within a month of their removal, their father died of an overdose.
(4) Their mother was later convicted of wilful neglect and had limited contact over the next two or three years.
(5) Care orders were promptly made in October 1998 and the boys were placed with a paternal aunt, Aunt D, a single woman with six children of her own and little support. The placement broke down after a year and the children re-entered foster care.
(6) Although it was by now clear that at the time there was no available placement within the birth family, another year passed before LCC applied to free the boys for adoption in November 2000. Freeing orders were made in March 2001, ending the boys' membership of their birth family. By this time A was 5¾ and S 3½.
(7) All contact with the boys' extensive birth family then stopped. The mother did not take up farewell contact. The boys had farewell contact with their older half-brother in May 2002 and their older brother in August 2002.
(8) For nine months in 2001/2002, the boys were placed with abusive foster carers, Mr and Mrs H, from whom they were removed after the police became involved.
(9) In December 2002, the boys' mother, who had at one point agreed to the plan for adoption, applied to revoke the freeing orders, but she withdrew her application in March 2003 in the face of opposition from LCC and the Children's Guardian.
(10) In July 2002, they were placed with foster carers, Mr and Mrs B, where they remained until February 2008 and achieved some stability.
(11) No adoptive family was ever found and in March 2004 LCC formally abandoned the plan for adoption. However, it never applied to revoke the freeing orders, meaning that in the ten years since the making of the order, the boys had no natural person with parental responsibility for them. Children in this position are sometimes described as 'statutory orphans'.
(12) The placement with Mr and Mrs B ended in February 2008, when Mrs B assaulted A with a belt. The boys were then removed and Mrs B later pleaded guilty to assault and was placed under a supervision order.
(13) In July 2008, the boys, who were then aged 13 and 11, moved to live with Mr and Mrs SG. A and S were by now deeply distressed and disturbed and showed formidably challenging and sometimes violent behaviour.
(14) In June 2010, S's behaviour became too much for the SGs to manage, and at their request he did not return from a period in respite care. In October 2010 he was placed in a children's home, and in February 2011 he moved to his current children's home.
(15) By May 2011, the relationship between LCC and the SGs had been fractious for some time. Following a discussion with A, but not with the SGs, who had by then been looking after him for almost 3 years, LCC decided to move A to a children's home. At the same time, LCC removed another foster child who had been living with the SGs, which further unsettled A.
(16) A (now 16) then went to a solicitor for advice on how LCC could be stopped from moving him. She negotiated an agreement that he would not be unilaterally moved and proposed that LCC should apply to revoke the freeing order. When it did not do that, A himself applied to the High Court. LCC then issued a revocation application in respect of S.
(17) In the 12 years between 1999 and 2011, each boy was the subject of some 35 Looked After Children ('LAC') reviews – also referred to as Children Looked After ('CLA') reviews. Between September 2006 and March 2011, the IRO (Mr H) chaired 16 such reviews.
(18) The boys have had major placements, emergency placements, temporary placements, respite placements and respite for respite placements
(19) In summary, A (16) has had no fewer than 12 main placements during his lifetime, of which 7 lasted for less than a year and 5 lasted for between a year and 5½ years. During this time, he has been placed in respite care 36 times, with 19 different respite carers. In one 18 month period beginning when he was 10, he went to 8 different respite carers. A has moved backwards and forwards between placements of all kinds no less than 77 times in his 16 years of life.
(20) S (14) has had no fewer than 16 main placements during his lifetime (12 with A and 4 without him). Of these, 10 lasted for less than a year and 6 lasted for between a year and 5½ years. During this time, he has been placed in respite care 40 times, with at least 22 different respite carers. Like A, in one 18 month period beginning when he was 9, he went to 8 different respite carers. Overall, S has moved backwards and forwards between placements of all kinds no less than 96 times in his 14 years of life.
(21) According to a LAC review record, in October 2001, when A was just 6, his understanding of a mother and father was that "they change".
N (22) S1 (17) A (16) S (14)
The aunt's position
Return to foster care
The placement with Mr and Mrs H
The placement with Mr and Mrs B
The search for adopters
Abandonment of the adoption plan
Another transitional placement
Placement with the SGs
"By July 2008 when A and S moved to the [SGs], the stress and accumulated anxiety of another placement move (either their 16th and 14th main placement or with respite included, their 41st and 39th) was little short of trying to ask the [SGs] as foster carers to manage a runaway express train into a siding without a collision.S was almost 11 years old and A 13 years old. They were bigger, hormonally imbalanced and unused to the very different new style of carers they now found themselves with. They would still have unresolved feelings about the abrupt loss of their former home with [the Bs]. The [SGs] had little real information as to the boys' history of disrupted placements and there was a new Social Worker… who had not met the boys before."
A and S separate
"In my opinion, S's ability to learn, concentrate and respond to tasks was considerably hampered by his anxiety and stress from not knowing if his children's home was to close. When I saw him at [the home], both he and staff were anxious about the impact the closure may have on him and the other small group of children affected."
Matters come to a head
The boys' mother is contacted
"In my opinion, the delay in notifying their mother and paternal aunt who had cared for them, notwithstanding the freeing order status, ought to have led to the IRO recommending notification be given to all the previous birth family that the children were now fostered and would not be adopted. If the consequences are now a shock for A and S in finding a mother who is presentable and remorseful about letting them down, this is entirely a result of the Local Authority not having planned and considered the implications of the boys' altered status on their duty to inform the birth family of the change of plan."
"S and A are profoundly damaged by their particular childhood journey through the care system, symbolised in their Freeing Order status remaining in place all of 10 years later; a relic of the optimism and good intentions which surrounded the early adoption plans."
Psychological assessment of A
"'These frequent moves and experiences of rejection (all moves will have been experienced as rejection even when through no fault of his own) will have had a compounding effect on his emotional regulation problems, adding each time to angry feelings inside him which he could not understand and the feeling of being unacceptable, unwanted and an outsider belonging nowhere.A says he had had lots of happy times with [Mr and Mrs B] and did not understand why [Mrs B] had hurt him and his brother. He was too afraid to return. This was a highly traumatic event and this sudden, painful and frightening [reaction] from an adult he trusted must have had a profound effect. How could he trust feeling secure or trust a carer again?
It is not possible to disentangle all these adverse experiences in A's life and attribute his difficulties specifically to any one of them or to any particular period in his life.
We would say that the following will have had the most deleterious effects on A and his development. While we rank these below, this is somewhat artificial as there are so many interactions between events and one event will have compounded another.
(a) Probable neglect in his first year/18 months of life;
(b) The three changes of carers following his reception into Care in 1988;
(c) The instability of the placement and period of respite care in 1999;
(d) The physical abuse in February 2008;
(e) Other care transitions – the sheer multiplicity of these.
"Nevertheless, my reading of the social work records is A has been less traumatised than his brother and a considerable feature of this has been the survival of his current placement and the separation from S. A has been able to feel he can trust [the SGs], whereas S has experienced another profound loss and further moves. The separation has enabled A to have more time to be looked after without the relentless competition and rivalry which has featured throughout A and S's childhood."
Psychological assessment of S
"S is an extremely 'damaged' child... also 'damaged' by the numerous changes of placement and carers… He is highly impulsive with little control over his emotions. He thus experiences explosive outbursts of anger during which he can be highly aggressive towards property and toward others... The absence of a secure primary attachment has not equipped him with the necessary resources to manage his heightened emotions. When frustrated he reacts like a toddler, throwing a temper tantrum and hitting out at everything round him. S therefore needs to be cared for by highly experienced professional carers in a highly controlled environment with set routines and clear expectations of behaviour."
"S presents as a quite damaged boy. Unlike his brother, A, there are major problems in:i. Superficial emotionality;
ii. Lack of ability to connect with his feelings;
iii. Poor emotional regulation;
iv. Impulsivity;
v. Poor social and communication skills and ability to make and sustain relationships;
vi. Major problems in his relationships with his peers (he gets on better with adults);
vii. Low levels of considerateness and ability to identify with others;
viii. Sustaining attention and focus and remaining calm and on task;
ix. Distractibility.
He has a sense of being picked on and sees all of his problems as being caused by others. This refers to current problems as there is a surprising lack of anger or blame in relation to the many adverse and horrible things he has experienced.
… There is an absence of identity beyond that conferred by others and an absence of a cohesive personality structure.
In my opinion, S's early experiences and experiences throughout his childhood account for… :
i. His huge relationship problems;
ii. His very poor emotional regulation; temper control problems;
iii. His limitations in experiencing and responding to emotion and emotional cues – emotional shallowness and lack of reciprocity. This can be called emotional illiteracy.
An important factor is that everything went wrong in his life at a critical time – around 7 months of age (if there were even a more positive time prior to that). This time (around 8-18 months) is the critical time for developing attachment and patterns of attachment. In fact, this period saw the 'loss' of his mother and 3 further moves in quick succession. This has probably been disastrous for him.
… To my mind he presents… as someone who never developed any form of attachment when young rather than that he developed a disorganised pattern."
In relation to any act (or proposed act) of a public authority which the court finds is (or would be) unlawful, it may grant such relief or remedy, or make such order, within its powers as it considers just and appropriate.
Article 8
"D asked about direct contact with S and A. I advised D that at this time indirect contact would be more appropriate to begin to build up a relationship with S and A should they want this as it has been several years since S and A have had any direct contact with their birth family".
(1) At the LAC Review on 13 September 2005, S and A were asked who they would like to see more of. S said "S1 and N" (his brothers, not seen for three years). A said "Santa (more than at Christmas), S1, N, Aunty C, Mum".(2) During the LAC Review on 8 March 2006, A and S specifically asked to be allowed to see their brothers, and the social worker agreed to discuss whether direct contact could take place with their Aunt C, who was then looking after S1. There is no record of this being followed up.
(3) In October 2008, S filled out his LAC consultation form saying he would like to see "all of my family" and expressing dissatisfaction with his arrangements as he wanted to see his "mum and brothers". At the same review A indicated he too would like to see his mother, brothers and Aunt C.
Article 6
(1) M consulted as a matter of right (as opposed to at the discretion of LCC) in advance of every Looked After Child Review;(2) M informed of the conclusion and/or recommendations at the conclusion of every LAC Review and no later than 14 days thereafter;
(3) M being alerted to the need to make a further application to revoke the Freeing Orders, having read the recommendation at every LAC Review since March 2004 that the order should be (but had not been) revoked on an application by LCC;
(4) The protection and scrutiny of a having a Children's Guardian appointed for them, and legal representation appointed to act on their behalf, during an application to revoke their Freeing Orders;
(5) Scrutiny by the court of an application to refuse contact with family members under s.34(4).
Article 3
(1) Failed to provide A and S with a proper opportunity of securing a permanent adoptive placement and a settled and secure home life. (Art. 8)(2) Failed to seek revocation of the orders freeing A and S for adoption, made on the 19 March 2001 pursuant to Section 18(1) Adoption Act 1976, which effectively deprived them of:
(a) The protection afforded to children under the Children Act 1989;(b) Contact with their mother and/or other members of their family;(c) Access to the Court and the procedural protection of a Guardian.(Arts. 6 & 8)(3) Permitted A and S to be subjected to degrading treatment and physical assault and failed adequately to protect their physical and sexual safety and their psychological health (Arts. 3 and 8).
(4) Failed to provide accurate information concerning A and S's legal status to the Independent Reviewing Officers. (Art. 8)
(5) Failed to ensure that there were sufficient procedures in place to give effect to the recommendations of the Looked After Child Reviews. (Art 8.)
(6) Failed to promote the rights of A and S to independent legal advice. (Art. 6)
(7) Specifically, failed to act as the 'responsible body' to enable A and S to pursue any potential claims for criminal injuries compensation, tortious liability and/or breach of Human Rights arising from their treatment by their mother, or by the Hs or by Mrs B. (Art. 6)
(8) Failed to identify that A and S's Human Rights had been and were being infringed. (Arts. 6 & 8)(9) Failed to take effective action to ensure that LCC acted upon the recommendations of Looked After Child Reviews. (Art. 8)
(10) Failed to refer the circumstances of A and S to CAFCASS Legal. (Art. 8)
1. It is the role of the Social Workers within any case to safeguard the children in need and in matters such as with A and S, looked after children. A and S remained on freeing orders despite the change of care plan in 2004. An application was not forthcoming to revoke the freeing orders and in error inaccurate information was provided to the review process. There has been no question that A and S should not have been taken into the care of the Local Authority; the key question within these proceedings has been to determine why they remained on a freeing order for such a period of time. With the abolition of freeing orders this is a situation which should not occur in the future.2. The Social Workers and the IRO must work together in the reviewing of a looked after child's care plan and such a plan should be subjected to regular critical scrutiny to ensure that the child's legal rights are upheld.
"The one thing I want to do today is apologise unreservedly to both the boys in court. I clearly got it wrong… The one thing about this whole situation that has troubled me the most is the denial of the opportunity to mum to come back into this case. It troubles me deeply. Again, I would seek to apologise to the boys for that."
(1) Not monitoring the social work response to and the compliance with his recommendations and advice from the LAC reviews (for example recommendations about contact, revoking the freeing order, applying to the Criminal Injuries Compensation Authority).(2) Not identifying who would implement the Review recommendations or the timescale within which they would be implemented.
(3) Not checking that the key social worker had recourse to his own manager and if appropriate, the Legal Department, in order to implement review recommendations.
(4) Not verifying information provided by social workers.
(5) Not addressing and resolving the repeated failures by the social workers to implement the recommendations.
(6) Not referring the cases to CAFCASS Legal.
(7) Allowing A and S to be in adoptive limbo and thereby deprived of the legal rights that care orders would have provided to them and to their family members on their behalf.
(8) Not promoting the rights of A and S to independent legal advice and advocacy by identifying an appropriate individual or resource to give them legal advice and support.
(9) Not promoting the rights of A and S to have the best chance of a settled and secure home throughout their childhood.
(1) A case load of more than three times the good practice guidance at times;(2) Inadequate training in general and legal principles;
(3) The absence of access to legal advice;
(4) Inadequate supervision and monitoring or appraisal by managers;
(5) Missing social work reports in advance of the review from time to time;
(6) A tick-box system, driven by mandatory performance indicators, creating the illusion of action without any evidence of the quality of the achievement.
6.9.06 I went through the electronic files of both boys in advance of the Reviews. Issues identified were clarification and promotion of contact if no freeing was in place, legal status, the progress of a CICA claim. The tick box indicated that significant/relevant people had been invited. I did not explore this further. I was told that life story books had been done and I did not explore this further. I checked statutory visits were up to date. I checked that the social worker had completed her part of the LAC review pro forma. |
22.2.07 I did not follow up the freeing because I was under the mistaken impression that a care order was in place, and this was recorded. I did not verify this independently. I considered the need for an Independent Visitor and rejected this because it was unnecessary at this time. I note that these Reviews contain only my recommendations and not a developed narrative. This reflects pressure of work. There is no record of the Mother having been consulted or invited but the tick box suggests that relevant people had been consulted. I should have established the precise position in respect of the Mother. |
17.5.08 I now note that it is relevant that the review documents are inconsistent about whether the Mother was consulted or invited. I reverted to the need for legal advice on a care order but did not emphasise this. I think that this was because I appreciated the heavy social work case loads and pressures and accepted that the social worker was prioritising other issues in the case. I considered that she was acting in good faith and with the children's best interests in mind. |
31.8.10 This Review was the first to be held at the home of Mr and Mrs [SG] and was led by the attendance of Dr B, Consultant Child and Adolescent Psychiatrist and his advice upon the work to be provided for both boys. S had threatened to kill himself. All other issues were secondary and only discussed briefly. |
9.7.09 S's health again required the presence of Dr B and his input dominated the Review discussions. The issue of whether the boys should be left behind when Mr and Mrs [SG] went on holiday was also prominent. The ongoing issues of legal status and contact were therefore relegated and addressed only in brief. |
16.12.09 I had returned to work after a period of ill health and hospitalisation. My manager was on long term sick leave and I was "promoted" temporarily to position of senior IRO. My work load more than doubled. I was undertaking supervision of six IROs as well as running my own caseload. I was also responsible for "children missing from care intervention meetings" in Lancashire. Consequently, my time and my attention to detail in these reviews was limited. The significant behavioural problems displayed by both boys in placement were the priority. S had declined input from CAMHS and this was a matter of concern. The school was struggling to manage S's behaviour. It was noted that the Mother had not responded to indirect contact and this reduced the immediacy and lowered the profile of this issue. In that context I did not prioritise the legal status issues. |
31.3.10 Welfare concerns persisted and I had increased the frequency of my personal contact with A and S. I took them out individually, and together, with their social worker, in addition to speaking with them prior to and during reviews. My focus was on welfare issues, and I was concerned about A who needed psychological input and emotional support and who was rejecting CAMHS. I was also concerned about the stability of the placement for both boys together and reflected the potential uncertainty of their care arrangements. Again, in that context, the problems relating to inclusion of the Mother, promotion of contact, (as opposed to noting its current level), and legal status were overshadowed. |
22.7.10 At this point S's placement with Mr and Mrs [SG] had broken down and this Review was convened to address his situation. I had seen S outside his new placement and was anxious about the impact of his separation from A and his placement in a home which was geographically distant and distinct from the … area. He was isolated. I was satisfied that the Mother was aware of the changes in the lives of the children but I accepted without question that a s34(4) order was in place and in any event I did not consider the permissive nature or legal validity or relevance of such an order. This reflects my ignorance of the law. |
20.9.10 I accepted the social worker's reassurances and apologies in relation to failure to progress legal status because I knew that she was well motivated, committed, but overworked. I had reported her failures to her Manager on several occasions and had received further reassurances that the legal position would be addressed. I did not take this further, to my manager, or to CAFCASS Legal, because I believed that the issue would be addressed eventually. |
Context
Management
18. The IRO was directly accountable to the Senior IRO. There were four successive senior IROs in post during the period of my involvement.
Supervision
19. In theory my supervision was six weekly. However I was rarely supervised and the quality of supervision was poor. It was not structured or consistent. There was no spot sampling - the onus was on me to raise cases with my Manager if I felt I had reason to do so20. There were occasions when I wanted supervision but it was not available. When supervision was not available but was required I would discuss the problem with other IROs informally.
21. I did not receive adequate monitoring. I believe that this was due to:
(i) lack of time on the part of the Senior IRO(ii) lack of time on my part(iii) priority given to other matters eg a child's review(iv) administration eg writing notes of visits, of meetings(v) long distance travel to some reviews which were generally held in a child's placement, and in this case travel to Northumberland was required(vi) a case load carrying around 200 cases as IRO in 2006, c145 in 2008 and reducing to c120 in 2011(vii) a system that was initially addressing CP and LAC reviews together until early 2006 - this sometimes resulted in back to back CP and LAC meetings/reviews all day. It was not uncommon for this to happen on a daily basis in any given week.(viii) In late 2009 I had a three month period when I was standing in as Senior IRO during which I was trying to review and supervise the case loads of six other IROs as well as my own.Caseloads and Priorities
22. When the 2004 Regulations came into force, extra IROs were recruited and some reduction in case load numbers was achieved.
23. However, a workload of 200 cases per IRO remained and was completely unmanageable. We were "fire fighting" issues eg placement, contact, education, health, on the ground. Later in 2006, the level of cases per IRO remained at around 200.
24. In 2008, case loads had reduced to approximately 145 per IRO, but the duties were still unmanageable because in reality it resulted in a reduction of only 3 meetings per week per IRO. Given the obvious constraints of time, crisis management had to become our priority. This was compounded by the demands of a number of cases with long distance placements where travel alone to one review may take a day out of the weekly work schedule.
25. As recently as this month [sc. March 2012], we have been allocated a further 164 children to review as a result of the implementation of provisions relating to children with disabilities.
26. It is relevant to note that the inclusion of children on remand in the LAC group is imminent and will on current estimates increase the IRO workload by another 90 children per year.
27. A realistic workload which would have permitted productive proactive work is about 100 cases.
Complexity
28. It is artificial and misleading to evaluate the position solely by reference to numbers of cases. Complexity of case is a key consideration in evaluating the problems encountered within the system.
29. A and S's cases presented a number of elements which qualified them as complex cases:
- two children with wholly different, complex and sometimes competing needs
- educational issues. School representatives and support networks had to be incorporated in review and planning processes
- the chronic and at times acute emotional needs of the children
- competing priorities within the case itself eg. the issue of abuse in placement took priority over, and eclipsed the legal issues
- sexualised behaviour and associated issues in placement
Personal Problems
30. I had a period of ill health starting in 2006/2007 which worsened in 2008 and 2009 and culminated in emergency surgery. I did not take sick leave, except for two weeks after my operation, but carried on working. In hindsight my efficiency and my working capacity were impaired.
31. I routinely had to use weekends and evenings to write up case reviews and confer with colleagues. This was common to others in my role.
Training and Support
32. The training which I received immediately following my appointment as IRO was minimal. It involved sitting in with an experienced IRO for one day in order to observe their practice.
33. I was not trained for the role of Review Chair and did not receive guidance in the investigative aspects of the review process - eg challenge of factual assertions, policy decisions. I developed my own approach as I progressed. I did not receive appraisal or feedback through which to evaluate my performance.
34. I was aware that new Regulations came into force in 2004. They were not implemented in Lancashire in practice until 2007/2008; the Guidance on starred recommendations was issued in Lancashire in 2007.
35. Historically, the local authority did not fund legal training for IROs.
36. No legal advice was available to me. The local authority's legal department considered that there was a conflict between the IRO team and the local authority.
37. Historically the local authority approach to the role of the IRO was cautious. The position of the IRO was not as readily respected or accepted within the local authority as it is now, and sometimes there was a perceived lack of trust between the social work and IRO teams.
38. At times, the role of IRO was an isolated one.
Information provision to Review
39. There was a failure to integrate and analyse the information presented to Review.
40. Social work input was via the ISSIS system which in practice limited the scope and provision of information to the review in cases where the social worker had not completed the relevant document on the system. The LAC Review document was a pro forma on the ISSIS system which both social worker and IRO completed. The social work element was supposed to be signed by the social worker alone and not by their Senior, prior to the Review. I would sign off the whole document when I had completed my section of it after the Review. Sometimes the social worker would not have completed the paperwork prior to the Review. In that event, I would have to speak to the social worker just before and during the Review to establish the current position.
41. The tick box system which operates to measure performance and compliance can suggest that more has been achieved than is actually the case. The system is driven by statutory performance indicators which are mandatory. A task can be ticked as achieved without evidence of evaluation of the quality of the achievement.
I think the primary problem was lack of available time. In my respect, I would make the recommendation and I wasn't robust enough in following it up. That was mainly due to the position that the IROs are in of effectively having to fire-fight the situation. Until the IRO service is properly resourced, that situation will not change. I am very pleased to be able to say that, even as late as yesterday, because of the pressure that I have brought to bear on senior management since my appointment, I was given permission to advertise for four further IROs. That will bring the case load to around the 100 mark, which I am seeking. Even that case load of 100 is still somewhat above the level recommended in the IRO handbook.
Q: How many overall?A. The actual IRO team would rise to above 17, 18.
Q: When you say historically the Local Authority did not provide legal training for IROs, had you had any legal training at all?A. No, my Lord. If I can just add, that is something I'm going to put in place, the legal training, but the other comment that, if I may, I have now put in place a sort of independent legal advice for the IRO which is, of course, a requirement from the IRO handbook but it was not previously available I have driven that forward so that we've now got that in place as well.
Q: Are the Local Authority legal department lawyers able to advise the IROs now?
A. The Local Authority legal department, my Lord, will not talk to the IRO team. They will not address or respond to any issues that the independent IRO raises. The only contact that there is between myself and the legal department is when I am complying with the regulation to let the legal department know who a new IRO is when a child is, say, for example, subject to a new interim care order. That's the only line of communication.
A. I think the Local Authority legal department are in a perfect position to give a reviewing officer advice. I sit on one of the adoption panels and I take legal advice from the Local Authority legal department who are represented on that panel, so there is a clear example of where the legal department can give legal advice to the IRO.
A. They have access to independent legal advice which I have set up with a firm of solicitors in Preston. Well, independent legal advice is very much in place, yes, and has been in place for about six months. Not very long.Q. In simple terms, you are using the independent legal advice that you have put in place to provide leverage to your own legal department to take action?
A. Yes… We do also use the CAFCASS advice line if there are more general questions and advice that we need.
Q. It must follow, must it not, that the IRO system at that stage, unmanageable in that way, was simply not fit for purpose?A. My Lord, as I have already commented, until the IRO service is resourced properly it cannot be fit for purpose. All we were simply doing with case loads of that size was running from one meeting to the next and never getting chance to draw breath. You were just effectively covering the very basics.
Q: That is a concession that you readily make, is it not?
A. Yes… If I am going to manage this team, my Lord, I want the IROs, as is my responsibility, to have a manageable and workable case load. Once I've got the case load down to 100 I am going to try my level best to keep them there on the basis that the work cannot be done effectively without reasonable case loads.
Q. You say that 100 is the upper limit that is recommended?
A. In my opinion, my Lord, yes.
Q. But there is also some support for that in the IRO Handbook?
A. The IRO handbook is very clear that it should be between 50 and 70 but I understood those case loads to have been based on one of the London boroughs rather than a shire county.
Q: Mr H, it does follow, on that analysis, that… you do consider the IRO service to be unfit for purpose as of today.
A. I consider there to be a lot of very good work being done because the IRO service has a team of very, very committed individuals. The work is only achieved by excessive working hours and that is something else that I am addressing, but, yes, I have to concede your point that, at the moment, with a case load of around the 120 mark, the IROs will struggle.
"In my opinion, it is only by considering the total accumulation of placements A and S have been sent to, is it possible to encompass the extent of the disruption to their lives in care. In my opinion the consequences of such moves and all of its effects on them has significantly contributed S and A's inability to trust – without which it is impossible to feel secure or to form safe attachments. A and S have been repeatedly let down and removed even from those who were for much of the time loving towards them that we can [hardly] begin to estimate the damage done."
"As far as I can discover, it has not been the intention of any one person in LCC's care or legal staff (excluding the above foster carers) to ever fail the boys or act negligently but the accumulative process of regulation, policy and procedure has in my opinion significantly affected them in their years in care. As in all such cases of children 'Lost in Care' it is rare to find any one person who is responsible"
Other children
Bolton Council
Cheshire East Council
Manchester City Council
Trafford Council
Wigan Council
Wirral Council
"Finally, in my view, there does seem to me to be a potentially wider issue arising from cases such as this, of the need for Local Authorities to be diligent in bringing changes of Placement Orders back to court under the Adoption and Children Act 2002… where Adoption orders are not pursued or an adoption fails."
"The use of respite care in general is commonly a default mechanism to protect the foster placement from breakdown. When respite care is consistent and reliable the effect on the child can be benign as going camping might be, but as we see with S and A it has, in my opinion, directly added to their by now hardened and institutional response to being moved about, with emotions perhaps more akin with the uncertainty and anxiety of travellers being put out on the road and finding new camps.Far from having a few transitions of placement over the years, both A and especially S have had a bewildering array of respite care. The behaviour described… illustrates how S in particular has sadly and dangerously learnt to see family life as a temporary facade where emotional warmth cannot be trusted and even those who say they care always end up throwing you out. This requires particularly bizarre mechanisms for self survival.
… There have been far more moves as opposed to placements and although these may be disregarded as "holidays" or "breaks" we need to be clear it was the foster carer who was having the break.
During their long placement [with the Bs between 2002 and 2008], A and S were placed with respite carers 24 times comprising of 13 different foster placements over the course of 5 years 8 months. The constructive view is that such placements offered A and S the weekend away or a break, but, in my opinion, the accumulative impact of so many moves was to fragment further their lack of feeling they belonged to anyone, compounding their insecurity and lack of well being.
As a result of the years of such bewildering changes of care, often required so as to maintain exhausted care placements, it becomes evident how the damaging outbursts of violent anger and frustration displayed by S and at other times A with the SG's had come about through the never knowingly intended consequences of corporate care on their emotions and behaviour."
Summary
(1) The number of children in local authority care has markedly increased.(2) The statutory response to the underperformance of specific duties by IROs has been to give them even more duties to perform.
(3) IROs now have more classes of children to oversee, as their caseload now includes children with disabilities and those on remand in the criminal justice system.
(4) There has been a revision in the statutory guidance.
(1) Enhanced status for IROs(2) Adequate training
(3) Manageable caseloads
(4) Effective management and support
(5) Access to legal advice
The IRO Service
"the work of IROs and their impact needs to be more clearly seen and understood."
The previous regime
The creation of IROs
'to keep the section 31A plan for the child under review and, if they are of the opinion that some change is required, to revise the plan, or make a new plan, accordingly.'
(a) Participate in the review of the case in question;(b) Monitor the performance of the authority's functions in respect of the review; and
(c) Refer the case to an officer of CAFCASS, if the person considers it appropriate to do so.
Early difficulties
Recent reforms
3.38 As the chair of the review, the IRO should ensure that the following issues are all addressed as part of each review process [Schedule 7]:
- the effect of any change in the child's circumstances since the last review;
- whether decisions taken at the last review have been successfully implemented and if not why not;
- the legal status of the child and whether it remains appropriate
- for example, where the child is looked after under section 20 of the 1989 Act, whether this status provides the basis for legal security for the child so that proper plans can be made to provide him/her with secure attachments that will meet his/her needs through to adulthood;
- whether the child's plan includes a plan for permanence within viable timescales that are meaningful for the child
- this must include plans for permanency from the second review onwards;
- the arrangements for contact in relation to the parents, siblings and other family members or significant others, whether these take into account the child's current wishes and feelings and whether any changes are needed to these arrangements;
- whether the placement is meeting the child's needs
- this should include consideration of the attachment between the child and those who are caring for him/her, how the local authority is ensuring that the placement provides the quality of care that the child needs and whether any change to the arrangements is necessary or likely to become necessary before the next review;
- the child's educational needs, progress and development and whether any actions need to be taken or are likely to become necessary before the next review, in order to ensure that the child's educational needs are met and not neglected (this should include consideration of the current PEP);
- the leisure activities in which the child is engaging and whether these are meeting the child's needs and current expressed interests;
- the report of the most recent assessment of the child's health and whether any change to the arrangements for the child's health are necessary or likely to become necessary before the next review, in order to ensure that the child's health needs are met and not neglected;
- the identity needs of the child, how these are being met;
- whether the arrangement to provide advice, support and assistance to the child continues to be appropriate and understood by the child;
- whether any arrangements need to be made for the time when the child will no longer be looked after, so that the child will be properly prepared and ready to make this significant move;
- whether the child's social worker has taken steps to establish the child's wishes and feelings, that the care plan has taken these into consideration and that the care plan demonstrates this;
- whether the child is being visited by the social worker at the minimum statutory intervals and when the child requests a visit; and
- that plans and decisions to advance the overall planning for the child's care have been taken and acted upon in a timely way.
3.39 The IRO is responsible for setting any remedial timescales if actions have not been taken and there is a risk of drift in the delivery of a plan that will meet the child's needs and planned outcomes within the child's timescale.
Specific issues
Status
Training
Caseloads
"… a caseload of 50-70 looked after children for a full time equivalent IRO, would represent good practice in the delivery of a quality service, including the full range of functions set out in this handbook. This range should reflect the diversity and complexity of the cases across different local authorities."
Legal advice for the IRO
"Each local authority should have a system in place that provides its IRO with access to independent legal advice. The reason for this is that the IRO works within a complex legal framework, with a number of other professionals and adults who have access to their own legal advice. The IRO may feel isolated and vulnerable in this position. It is essential that the IRO too can access independent legal advice, in addition to seeking advice and support from the IRO manager. In the past some local authorities have been of the view that CAFCASS duty lawyers provide this service. However, CAFCASS duty lawyers can only provide guidance, not legal advice. Other local authorities have considered it sufficient for an IRO to seek advice from its own legal department. This is clearly not independent."
Advocacy for children and promoting access to independent legal advice
3.14 When meeting with the child before every review, the IRO is responsible for making sure that the child understands how an advocate could help and his/her entitlement to one. Advocacy is an option available to children whenever they want such support and not just when they want to make a formal complaint. Some children will feel sufficiently confident or articulate to contribute or participate in the review process without additional help. Others may prefer the support of an advocate. This could be a formal appointment from a specialist organisation or might be an adult already in the child's social network.3.15 Every child has the right to be supported by an advocate. The local authority must have a system in place to provide written, age appropriate information to each looked after child about the function and availability of an advocate and how to request one.
CAFCASS referrals
Other issues
CASES NO: BB11Z00478/ LA00A00033/34
IN THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
FAMILY DIVISION
Liverpool Civil and Family Court
ON THE 21ST JUNE 2012
UPON HEARING leading and junior counsel for A and S (through the Official Solicitor), counsel for the Local Authority and leading and junior counsel for the Independent Reviewing officer and solicitors for the Children's Guardian and the Special Guardians.
IT IS DECLARED THAT:
(1) Failed to provide A and S with a proper opportunity of securing a permanent adoptive placement and a settled and secure home life. (Art. 8)
(2) Failed to seek revocation of the orders freeing A and S for adoption, made on the 19 March 2001 pursuant to Section 18(1) Adoption Act 1976, which effectively deprived them of:
(a) The protection afforded to children under the Children Act 1989;
(b) Contact with their mother and/or other members of their family;
(c) Access to the Court and the procedural protection of a Guardian.
(Arts. 6 & 8)
(3) Permitted A and S to be subjected to degrading treatment and physical assault and failed adequately to protect their physical and sexual safety and their psychological health (Arts. 3 and 8).
(4) Failed to provide accurate information concerning A and S's legal status to the Independent Reviewing Officers. (Art. 8)
(5) Failed to ensure that there were sufficient procedures in place to give effect to the recommendations of the Looked After Child Reviews. (Art 8.)
(6) Failed to promote the rights of A and S to independent legal advice. (Art. 6)
(7) Specifically, failed to act as the 'responsible body' to enable A and S to pursue any potential claims for criminal injuries compensation, tortious liability and/or breach of Human Rights arising from their treatment by their mother, or by the Hs or by Mrs B. (Art. 6)
(1) Failed to identify that A and S's Human Rights had been and were being infringed. (Arts. 6 & 8)
(2) Failed to take effective action to ensure that LCC acted upon the recommendations of Looked After Child Reviews. (Art. 8)
(3) Failed to refer the circumstances of A and S to CAFCASS Legal. (Art. 8)
AND IT IS ORDERED THAT: