10 Children's Services Improvement Programme: Update Report PDF 400 KB
Minutes:
The
Deputy Mayor and Executive Member for Children's Services and the Executive
Director of Children’s Services submitted a report for the Executive’s
consideration. The purpose of the report was to provide information on the
progress made against the Children’s Services Improvement Plan, with particular
reference to the findings of Ofsted’s Monitoring Visit on 29/30 March 2022.
Ofsted
had undertaken a Monitoring Visit to Children’s Services on 29/30 March
focusing on matching, placement and decision-making for children in care and
planning and achieving permanence (forever homes) for children. The letter
reporting Ofsted’s findings, which were generally very positive, was published
on 6 May 2022. A brief overview of Ofsted’s findings was detailed in the main
body of the submitted report.
The
most significant risks to continued improvement and delivering against the
Children’s Services Improvement Plan were:
·
The challenge of
recruiting permanent experienced social work staff. Currently, 26% of social
work staff were agency workers with the resulting additional staffing costs.
However, 52% of those staff members had been working in Middlesbrough for over
one year. That in itself brought some stability into the workforce and
mitigated against changes of social workers for children.
·
Maintaining the pace of
improvement despite financial constraints, for example continuing to fund the
Practice Leads and colleagues from Audit to Excellence.
Ofsted
was due to return for the next Monitoring Visit in July 2022. It was envisaged
that the visit would focus on the Council’s Early Help Service, the
Multi-Agency Children’s Hub (MACH) and the Assessment Service.
OPTIONS
It was not appropriate to retain the status quo, as
Children’s Services would not have been meeting the needs of Middlesbrough’s
most vulnerable children.
ORDERED
1. That the progress made
to improve outcomes for Middlesbrough’s vulnerable children, as set out in our
Children’s Services Improvement plan 2020/2023, be noted.
2. That the effect of the
work on Children’s Services’ mission, namely ‘Our Mission to Show Middlesbrough
Children that they Matter’, be noted.
REASON
Although a decision was not required, if Children’s
Services did not make the required improvements as set out in the Children’s
Services Improvement Plan, at pace, the Council would not improve life chances
for Middlesbrough’s vulnerable children and increase its Ofsted judgement from
its current ‘Inadequate’ status.