Wellbeing of Children in Care Threatened By Cuts, Charity Warns

News

The survey, CUTS - the view from foster carers (England):  the impact of austerity measures on fostered children and the families that care for them, carried out in February 2016, highlighted the negative impact of local authority budget cuts in a number of areas, including practical and financial support for foster carers, children’s access to their social workers and other services, especially mental health services.  

The results show that:

•    Two-thirds of foster carers (70 per cent) reported that their allowances had been negatively impacted by local authority cuts. This includes allowances being frozen for a number of years, while the cost of living increased, and hence dropping in real terms. Some reported that they were now required to pay for things that had previously been covered by an additional allowance, such as mileage and replacing equipment and breakages. As a result they have less money to spend on the care of their fostered children or have to spend out of their own pockets;

•    Over two thirds (69 per cent) of foster carers felt that cuts were reducing access to their child’s social worker, and the quality of this service, and three out of five (60 per cent) felt that support from their supervising social worker was adversely affected;​

•    Two thirds (67 per cent) felt that cuts had impacted negatively upon their and their fostered child’s access to other services, including respite care and vital mental health services;

•    Nearly three quarters (73 per cent) said that cuts have had a negative impact on the fees they receive for fostering.

Kevin Williams, chief executive of The Fostering Network, said: “We are extremely concerned that so many foster carers feel that recent cuts are having a negative impact on their fostered children’s access to the support and services that they so vitally need. The wellbeing of thousands of fostered children is under threat. 

“This is worrying enough in itself. But equally worrying is the drop in the support – both practical and financial – being offered to foster carers to enable them to provide stable and loving homes to these children. 

“The Fostering Network has fought long and hard to ensure that all foster carers even receive an allowance to cover the costs of looking after the children in their care. To think that this progress is in danger of being eroded and that foster carers will be forced to subsidise the care of these children or that children will go without is truly shocking.

“With a steady rise in the number of children coming into care, and the recent cuts in local authority budgets, the results of this survey are a call to action for Government to recognise both their role as corporate parents of children in care and the vital part that foster care plays in giving these children loving homes and the best chance of a successful life. We therefore urge them to fund local authorities to ensure that foster carers are fully supported to take on the task they devote their lives to doing and for which there is an increasing demand.

“It’s basic economics – invest in our children when they need it most, and they will pay you back for decades and generations to come.”

A foster carer who responded to the survey said: “We have fostered for over 25 years and cared for well over 300 young people and the service has never been in a worse position to deliver young people with a good care service.”

On the subject of access to social workers, a foster carer said: “My monthly visits have been cut to once every two months with a telephone call in between, and the timing of visits seem rushed and you can't explain your needs in the time given. They have too many cases to look after.”

Another responder discussing training said: “For 18 months there was no training officer to save money. Poor training offered. Now there is a person in post, but at reduced salary. As foster carers we have provided our own at a cost to ourselves. 

“Mental health issues are prevalent in our children, but access (to services) is only usually forthcoming after either a serious incident or placement breakdown, which in turn makes things more traumatic and ultimately more expensive too!”

​Download the full report, or a summary of the report.