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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 >> London Borough of Wandsworth v W [2014] EWHC 3682 (Fam) (3 July 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2014/3682.html Cite as: [2014] EWHC 3682 (Fam) |
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FAMILY COURT
B e f o r e :
(In Private)
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LONDON BOROUGH OF WANDSWORTH | Applicant | |
- and - | ||
W | Respondent |
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MR. R. POWELL appeared on behalf of the Respondent.
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Crown Copyright ©
MRS. JUSTICE KING:
"While the mother has maintained abstinence from drugs and alcohol during her period in custody, there is a high risk of her relapsing into drug and alcohol issues when she returns to the community such that J is likely to suffer significant harm."
Background
The mother's daughter: K
"She is very well motivated towards her treatment and very open to any suggestions regarding K. She has been medication free since 28 December 2009 and has coped with this very well."
"The only concern at present would be post-Trevi and where the mother would live and clean support networks and friendships. This is being addressed during her stay at Trevi House."
"The mother is very motivated to remain drug-free and to be a good enough parent to K. She has good insight into her underlying issues. She has voiced that loneliness, boredom and depression could be triggers and difficult for her when she leaves Trevi House, but is using her remaining time here to work on strategies and build support to deal with these emotions."
"Since K's birth, I have been completely abstinent and I am committed to being drug-free and being able to show that I am able to look after her. I recognise that I need help to remain drug-free. I fell in love with K as soon as she was born and cannot believe that I did anything during my pregnancy that might have caused harm to her. I am determined to do right for her from now on."
The current situation
(i) this time, she wishes to be clean for herself. Previously, she was trying to be clean for K or for her mother or for probation but not for herself.
(ii) she had been brought up short by the maternal grandmother is disgusted at the offences which had led to the present sentence of imprisonment. This, she told the court, had resulted in a breach as between her and her mother for a period of eight months which both distressed her and made her reconsider her life choices.
(iii) she is now 41 years of age and wishes "to be done with drugs". She wishes to bring up J and to be a support to her mother and K.
(iv) Drugs are freely available in prison and even when it looked at as if J would remain in foster care the mother told the court she had resisted substance abuse and, has therefore been clean for a year.
"Her history from her early childhood onwards is consistent with the sort of adverse experience and significant emotional distress in childhood which may lead to problems in personality development in adolescence and into adulthood. In my opinion, her description of frequent disturbed moods not amounting to the diagnosis of mood disorder as such and her regulation of these with substance misuse, her pattern of unstable and at times abusive intimate relationships, her substance misuse over her entire adult life and her repetitive deliberate self-harm, at least in part, as a means of regulating tension/mood difficulties, are all consistent with a diagnosis of borderline or emotionally unstable personality disorder."
"So far as her personality disorder is concerned, she has as mentioned before previously been assessed within psychological therapy services in the community and offered intensive psychotherapy, but did not take up that offer. In my opinion and since her substance misuse is intimately bound up with those personality difficulties, she should seek further psychological assessment for long-term intensive psychotherapy … long-term intensive periods of psychotherapy lasting usually 18 months to two years. There would be some period of time to wait for assessment and in most areas a period of time spent on the waiting list which might itself be of 6 to 12 months' duration. Of those who successfully complete this intensive programme of psychotherapy, around one third have derived substantial benefit."
Analysis
(1) That she went to one of the houses run by the Free Women's Project. Whilst not abandoning that alternative, Mr. Powell accepts that its absence of drug testing, of psychotherapy or the fact that the houses in which the residents live have no staff on the premises would mean that it would be unlikely to be regarded as an appropriate option for J.
(2) An adjournment so that social services could look at providing what Mr. Powell would regard as appropriate support and services, allowing J to remain with his mother.
(3) That the court should look to make a supervision order expressing the view that the local authority should identify a mother and baby unit or an alternative facility which could protect J during the period when the mother is accessing psychotherapy.
(a) she has a good attachment with J. He is happy and healthy in her care. The guardian not only gave the mother full credit for this but referred specifically to her "nurturing qualities".
(b) The mother has not abused substances since she has been in prison.
(c) The mother is motivated to stay off drugs. She seems to have more self-confidence and self-esteem then she did when the guardian saw her with K.
(d) The mother says that what is different this time is that, rather than wishing to come off drugs for other people, she wishes to do it for herself;
(e) All concerned in this case would wish to keep J with his mother if it could be achieved without a risk that, having taken into account all the evidence, is regarded as unacceptable for J.
"I am an addict. I would like a second opinion. I don't think I need psychotherapy. I have had counselling and it is hard. I don't know if it is different from psychotherapy. I am struggling to get my head round personality disorder, but I will engage with anything this time. I'm doing it for myself."
(a) There is no need for any assessment of her parenting skills. It is accepted by all that she would undoubtedly do well in a safe, secure environment of any form of residential unit, be it open prison, mother and baby unit or drug therapy or the Free Women's Prison Project. The difficulty is when she moves into the community.
(b) Although Mr. Powell criticises the local authority for not identifying such a placement, no such proposal was made to them and in any event, what would be needed would be somewhere offering an extended period of time - many, many months - to enable referral for the psychotherapy to take place. It is unlikely to happen before the mother is released on tag in September 2014.
(c) In the unlikely event that such an establishment could be identified, sufficient work would need to be done for it to be felt that the mother had made enough progress to be able to withstand the stresses and rigours of the outside world even before embarking on the necessary further 12 months' abstinence in the community.
(a) It tells the court that this mother has an addiction to drugs/alcohol since her mid-teens. She is now 41 and to date, despite at least four residential placements in order to rehabilitate her, she has been unable to become abstinent. Her addiction is therefore long-term and intractable.
(b) When a court sees an attachment such as the mother has with J, it inevitably wants to find a way of giving J a chance to stay with his mother. In this case, a court has already done exactly that with K when, despite her history to that date, she was sent to Trevi House for over six months and an expensive and detailed package of support was put in place in the community. Yet, only three weeks after she left Trevi House, she had relapsed. The mother tells the court that this time her motivation is different. Last time she was doing it for K, this time for herself.
Timescales
"The social workers may be placed under inappropriate time constraints such that they will have insufficient opportunity to distinguish between those families beset by objective adversity which, with suitable support, are likely to be able to make the necessary changes within J's timescale and those families for whom requisite change is unlikely."
50 I accept that proposition and indeed it seems likely that K was placed with the mother, the social workers having concluded that this was a mother "beset by objective adversity and who, with suitable support, could make the necessary changes".
51
The expert instructed in these proceedings does not regard the requisite changes as likely but in any event, conscious of the type of risk identified by Mr. Lloyd-Jones in his article I have considered the circumstances in which timescales for J could be extended in his best interests. In Re. S (A Child), 2014, EWCC, B44 Fam. consideration was given to drug addiction cases where a parent is receiving intervention with a view to overcoming problems with substance abuse. The President said - and I quote from para.38:
"Viewed from a judicial perspective, a vital component of the FDAC approach has to be a robust and realistic appraisal at the outset what is possible within J's timescale and an equally robust and realistic ongoing appraisal throughout of whether what is needed is indeed being achieved not within J's timescale. These appraisals must be evidence-based with a solid foundation, not driven by sentiment or a hope that something may turn up. Typically, three questions will have to be addressed. First, is there some solid, evidence-based reason to believe that the parent is committed to making the necessary changes? If so, secondly, is there some solid, evidence-based reason to believe that the parent will be able to maintain that commitment? If so, thirdly, is there some solid, evidence-based reason to believe that the parent will be able to make the necessary changes within J's timescale?"
(1) Is there some solid, evidence-based reason to believe that the parent is committed to making the necessary changes? The mother is on one level, although she was also to K and she is ambivalent in relation to psychotherapy for her personality disorder.
(2) Is there some solid, evidence-based reason to believe that the parent will be able to maintain that commitment? The evidence is that it is highly unlikely that the mother would be able to maintain that commitment in the community.
(3) Is there some solid, evidence-based reason to believe that the parent will be able to make the necessary changes within J's timescale? For the reasons set out above, I do not think there is.
Conclusion: