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Corporate Parenting is the term used to refer to our collective responsibility to ensure the best possible outcomes for the children in care, and the young people who have left our care.
Corporate Parents include elected members, officers of the Council and all employees, with support from stakeholders and our partners. It is our responsibility to ensure that our children and young people are safe, happy, well cared for and are given the opportunity to achieve their full potential.
Corporate Parents must be aspirational and provide a stable platform for young people not just to progress in life, but to be ambitious and to access new opportunities and experiences.
We have a responsibility to support them to gain the skills and confidence to lead independent lives, while ensuring they know they can call on help and support when they need it.
Children in care are among the most vulnerable children and young people in our county and experience some of the greatest challenges.
They require additional support to overcome the adverse childhood experiences that will contribute to poor life outcomes. We must provide them with the best possible services, including access to safe housing, education and work opportunities and to health services that meet the individual needs of each child in care and care leaver.
This strategy will:
The Children and Social Work Act (2017) outlines the seven key Corporate Parenting Principles, which underpin our collective responsibilities and duty to children in care and care leavers, these are:
This strategy also reinforces the responsibility of our partners, namely health services, the police, educational and housing services, to assist Dorset Council in delivering services to children and young people to enable them to reach adulthood safely and to live independent and happy lives.
This strategy has been co-produced with children and young people to ensure they have a meaningful voice and we have developed ways to share thoughts, feelings, opinions and ideas and, where necessary, complaints.
Each forum is open to any child or young person that has experience of being in care. The Children in Care Council and the Care Leavers Forum report back to children in care. They do this in a number of ways, including:
They also ask the Corporate Parenting Board to challenge young people on anything they want help with too!
The Dorset Care Satisfaction Survey is an annual survey sent out to children in care and young people to give feedback on their experiences of care. It is presented at the Corporate Parenting Board and published on the Dorset Council website.
In collaboration with children, young people and other professionals and stakeholders, we have developed a pledge to our children in care and to our care leavers. This sets out our priorities and commitment to them.
We asked them to tell us what was important to them.
They asked us to focus on eight things:
The promise is a commitment to children and young people by the Council so they know what help and support is available and what they can expect from their Corporate Parents. We will continue to talk to children and young people about the services we provide.
Overall, the aim of this strategy is to set out the key vision and priorities for the Corporate Parenting Board and to show how they will be worked towards to improve outcomes for children in care and care leavers.
We will work together with local authority partners, stakeholders and with our children in care and our care leavers to better understand: what is important to them, what is, or is not, working, where the gaps are in our service, what we do well and not so well, how we can improve what we do.
We want to work together to make Dorset a happy, healthy, safe and aspirational place to live.
Dorset Council is committed to working with children, young people and families to achieve the following:
At Dorset Council, we want to get it right for children and families first time.
We will do this by helping at an early stage, to meet need rather than manage threshold and to co-produce services with families. Their voices will co-design our services and drive their plans.
As a Corporate Parent, we will have high aspirations and be strong advocates for our children and young people. We want children in care and care leavers to be supported to develop the skills and resilience to prepare them for a successful adult life, and to deliver these services to the highest standard.
We will develop, review and improve relationships and plans with our stakeholders and partners to achieve our priorities.
This strategy forms part of a wider range of activity that supports a shared aim to improve provision for children in care and care leavers:
Our Values in Dorset Council are that we are:
For children in care this means:
Rates of children in Care in Dorset CIC per 10,000 population has steadily increased t0 above 70 between April 2019 July 2020.
This is against the context of a national average of 65, southwest average of 56 and statistical neighbour average of 55.
Given the pressure on public finances, commissioning services that drive this plan will be challenging.
However, Dorset Council and their partners will remain ambitious for their children in care and their care leavers and are committed to robust and effective provision to improve outcomes for the most vulnerable children. We have the core aim of equipping children and young people ‘for life’, and therefore, in the long term, reducing the ongoing costs of supporting care leavers in vulnerable adult populations.
We aim to do this by a combination of developing additional provision within Dorset and by taking steps to manage the children social care market better though our sufficiency strategy. In 2019, Dorset Council adopted a policy of committing to reduce the number of children in care, taking a rights-based approach, which develops services which support children to be able to grow up in a family setting.
Dorset has a combined strategy to establish placement sufficiency:
To be an effective Corporate Parent we have developed the following priorities/ambitions:
These priorities are closely tied in with the ‘golden thread’ running through the new Strategic Alliance Children, Young People and Families Strategy being developed this year. The overarching priority of the whole service is to deliver services at the ‘right time’, and to do ‘with’, not ‘to’, or ‘for’.
Early intervention is key to providing effective support to children and families. A whole system response with joined up provision can deliver good outcomes for all children and families to prevent the need for care.
It is our duty to listen to, to consider and to respond to the views, wishes and feelings of our children and young people. Not just when working through their own individual experiences, but to help shape the delivery of our services. They can tell us how we are doing, what would make a difference to them and what issues are most important.
We will:
Physical and psychological ill-health tends to be higher in children in care and care leavers and they may have difficulty accessing the services they need. This can be due to not being able to access or to attend appointments, or not wanting to talk about feelings or medical worries.
We will:
Good corporate parents set high aspirations and ambitions to that encourage individuality, confidence and personal development and growth. In order for children and young people to achieve good outcomes they must be given the opportunity to reach their full potential via stable, supportive and suitable education.
Young people will be supported in accessing placements that encourage development of their abilities, skills and knowledge and onto further or higher education or apprenticeships and training programmes.
We will:
When children enter our care, our focus will be on developing a clear and accessible pathway which is informed by the voice of the child or young person to ensure that their needs are met. All children need a permanent family arrangement wherever possible and to have it provided in a timely way.
If a return to the family home is not possible, we aim to ensure access to a range of high-quality care placements within 20 miles of their home postcode. We will also be pro-active in recruiting foster carers to increase provision to accommodate our children with specific needs.
We have a drive to recruit more local carers to keep local children placed in the county.
We will:
Our children and young people should be able to thrive across all areas of their lives whether home life, education, socially or work, and to build resilience through strong and trusted relationships going into adulthood. They should have opportunities to be part of the local community and to learn and grow.
Accommodation assistance to care leavers is a priority in Dorset; young people are competing with other vulnerable groups such as families with young children and in finding financially sustainable accommodation.
We will:
All council departments, members and officers and partner agencies have a responsibility to act together to support the local authority to be effective Corporate Parents to all children in care and to care leavers.
To do this, there needs to be a good structure in place so all are aware of their responsibilities and roles to ensure that the service development and delivery meets the needs of children in care and care leavers.
We will:
The Corporate Parenting Board (CPB) purpose is to ensure that the whole Council and partner agencies have a joint commitment to Corporate Parenting to achieve continuous improvement to services to enrich the lives and meet the specified aims and outcomes for children in care and care leavers.
Our progress against our priorities will be measured through a series of qualitative and quantitative measures, including data and performance analytics, reporting, feedback and challenge from the children and young people involved in the service. Examples of measures are provided below. Members and officers will report on progress against the strategy at the formal CPB meetings. The annual review of the strategy and its effectiveness will be evaluated and discussed within the CPB annual report.
Ultimately, we will measure our success on how we have made life better for the children and young people in our care – are they ‘better off’?
This is not an exhaustive list but gives an example of the types of data that will be collected.
This strategy was last reviewed in 2020.
The next expected review date is 2024.