Agenda and minutes

You Matter to Us- Corporate Parenting Board - Tuesday 14th September, 2021 2.00 pm

Venue: Virtual meeting

Contact: Susie Blood 

Items
No. Item

21/8

Declarations of Interest

To receive any declarations of interest.

Minutes:

There were no declarations of interest received at this point in the meeting.

21/9

Minutes- Corporate Parenting Board- 20 July 2021 and action plan pdf icon PDF 264 KB

Additional documents:

Minutes:

The minutes from the Corporate Parenting Board meeting and action plan held on 20 July 2021 were read and accepted as a true record.

21/10

Chair of Corporate Parenting Board- Verbal Update

The Chair of Corporate Parenting will provide a verbal update to the Board regarding key discussions since the last Board meeting.

Minutes:

The Chair provided a verbal update to the Board in relation to officers she has met over the past month; these included:

 

·        Debra Cochran; Community Support Officer - Homelessness

·        Chris Joynes, Thirteen group, who had agreed to join the Board

·        Charlotte Nicol, Culture, who would provide an update to the Board in the near future regarding how young people and care leavers would be involved in the cultural programme.

 

AGREED- that the update be noted.

21/11

Covid 19 Update

The Director of Children’s Services will provide a verbal update to the Board.

Minutes:

The Director of Children’s Services provided a verbal update in respect to Covid 19.

 

The Director advised that within social care there had been no issues with staffing. Staff were looking forward to a gradual return to the office.

 

1 young person had tested positive to covid in a children’s home, however this had been managed following government guidelines.

 

In terms of schools, there had been no specific issues and it was now the responsibility of the parents to ensure young people carry out lateral flow tests who attend secondary schools. In terms of attendance of our Looked after children; since returning in September, the attendance rate was 98%.

 

Following the presentation, members queries where lateral flow tests were sourced. In response, the Director advised that lateral flow tests are provided free by the Government and these are either sourced directly by the parents, who sent home by the schools.

 

The Director was thanked for her update.

 

Agreed- the update be noted.

21/12

Suspension of Council Procedure rule no.5- Order of business

Minutes:

AGREED - in accordance with Council Procedure Rule No. 5, the Chair agreed to vary the order of business to agenda item 6, 5, 7 and 8.

 

21/13

Review of the Permanence action plan pdf icon PDF 889 KB

The Head of Looked after Children and Corporate Parenting will provide a report to the Board.

Minutes:

The Head of Looked after children and corporate parenting Board provided the Board with regard to progress made again the Permenance action plan.

The Head of service firstly felt it was important to highlight the findings by Ofsted in November 2019:

·         Middlesbrough has a particularly high rate of children in care against national comparators, and this level was increasing.

·         Children were experiencing longstanding neglect come into care too late, and decisions for them to do so are made in response to a crisis

·         There were serious delays in achieving permanence for most children in care.

·         Early permanence was not prioritised for children in Middlesbrough, and there is a lack of parallel planning, which creates delay in achieving stability. There are missed opportunities to place children early for fostering for adoption

·         Children subject to care orders have lived at home for several years, without timely and purposeful review of whether the Care Order is still required.

·         Children experienced significant delay in securing permanence through adoption.

·         Too many changes in social workers also affect the quality of decision-making because new workers do not know children well enough to be confident about the plans that are proposed and agree to changes at short notice.

·         When children’s placements become fragile, there was a lack of coordinated support for both children and their carers to prevent disruption. Some children, including very young children, have experienced too many changes in placement before their permanent placement is identified.

·         Family arrangements were pursued sequentially, and for too long, when children cannot live at home.

·         There were delays in securing special guardianship orders for connected carers, although the support provided to many of these arrangements is good.

·         Insufficient attention was given to ensuring timely care planning, particularly for very young children.

·         Senior management panels and inconsistent legal advice provide insufficient scrutiny for understanding children’s experiences and to ensure that their needs were met in a timely way.

 

The Board learnt that the Council’s response was that the Corporate Parenting Strategy for Children and Young People in Middlesbrough was signed off and set out the Council’s vision for how the Council and our partners will support children and young people who are in our care, and our care leavers, to achieve the best possible outcomes in their lives. Transforming our approach to corporate parenting.

The Permanency Action Plan for Children and Young People was developed in consultation with partners and was built around the six permanency priorities set out in the Corporate Parenting Strategy.  The action plan defines how Children’s Social Care will achieve the vision.

The Permanency Action Plan would  be systematically reviewed and updated as actions are completed, towards achievement of the priority outcomes we have identified over the 3-year cycle of our plan.

The overall responsible Council officer for the Permanency Action Plan for Children and Young People is the Director of Children’s Services (DCS). For each of the six priority themes, a senior Council officer has been delegated by the DCS as the accountable lead for  ...  view the full minutes text for item 21/13

21/14

Participation of Children and Young people

The Head of Strategic services will provide an update to the Board.

Minutes:

The Chair welcomed Antonia Dixey, Chief Executive of Participation People to the meeting. The Participation People had been brought into the organisation to help strengthen the voice of young people, especially for our care experienced children and care leavers.

 

The Chief Executive wishes to share plans to get young people to quality assure the services and how they can help develop formal governance arrangements.

 

The Chief Executive shared the Middlesbrough Care Experienced Youthvoice Road map and what they hoped to achieve in the next few months.

 

OCTOBER 2021

The Chief Executive outlined that at present there are a small number of young people within the in house care councils and the care leavers’ forum and they are looking to grow these groups to ensure they flourish and are fun and engage young people. This would be a phased approach, by firstly asking the care leavers to develop a training programme which tells councilors what it is like to be a child in care in Middlesbrough. It was hoped that this would be delivered as part of care leavers week at the end of October.

 

In terms of the in house care councils, they want to ensure that the young people own their mandate to strengthen and improve in house services as well as having fun and bringing together young people e.g. having a craft day/ sports day/ making custard pie days.

 

The Chief Executive stated that as Corporate Parents, this journey was also their journey and their help was needed to help recruit young people to incase councils and the care leavers forum be also to make sure our services / forums are funky where they can have fun and help shape council services.

 

NOVEMBER 2021

 

In November it was ‘National Takeover’, and Participation people were recruiting 50 young people from people to take over Middlesbrough Children’s Services. This would not just be shadowing or sitting in a few meetings, but pro produce solutions to big business challenges and looking at our service journeys.

 

DECEMBER 2021

 

The Participation People will also be taking our young people away where they will create friendships and have fun.

 

The Chief Executive also outlined that they were looking at developing a mentor system of young people to adults (Reserve mentoring) and this will be offered by care leavers and in exchange we ask they get taught a life skill.

 

The Chief Executive also asked the Corporate Parenting Board if there were a business challenge that young people could assist with, and to help with formal governance arrangements. This would be left with the Board to consider.

 

The Chair thanked the Chief Executive for her presentation and would await further details of the roadmap as it developed over the next few months.

 

21/15

Future for Families - Update pdf icon PDF 1 MB

The Residential Care Manager will provide a presentation to the Board.

Minutes:

The Service Manager for Future for Families, attended the Board to provide an update on the service over the last 12 months and the wider system change for Middlesbrough.

 

The Service Manager outlined that following the Ofsted inspection, Future for families set about to changing culture, and did this by adopting and adapting the Provocations and Non Negotiables of No Wrong Door (service in North Yorkshire to which Future for families is adopted from). What this meant for Middlesbrough was we needed to think about was important to Middlesbrough and to use provocations and non negotiables to shape a new culture for Middlesbrough.

In the first 12 months, the Service Manager outlined that Future for Families

 

·         have received 163 referrals in 12 months

·         Worked with 91 young people and families which is 56% of all referrals

·         Currently working with 43 young people and their families

·         3 young people have returned home from residential placements to family

·         2 young people who have had high levels of support 3:1 in external residential were now supported within the hub on reduced staffing levels. 

Within Future for Families, they look to understand the child’s journey and this is done by the power of deep dive. Deep dive looks at all the key events in a young persons’ life and allow to listen to the young person and share their experiences through support from their workers. We look forward at their aspirations and lastly reflect and look at lessons learnt. Any outcomes are fed back to senior management. Deep dives look to change the way of thinking for professions involved and make an impact on practice. Over the past 12 months approx. 50 deep dive sessions have been completed.

 

The Board heard that Future for families has also looked at increasing safety for young people in Middlesbrough, by adapting and adopting RAISE- Risk, Analysis, Intervention, Solution, Evaluation. RAISE is a process from North Yorkshire which Middlesbrough has adapted to fit the young people of Middlesbrough.

The RAISE group looks at therapeutic measures to reduce risk for the young people. The service has also done RAISE for young people in the Risk Management group (RMG), Edge of Care or with a group, who may be involved in a worrying situations. The Raise process has also used with young people who may be involved/exploited in organised crime groups (OCG) and have supported with 15 missing plans for our most vulnerable young people , who are not under future for families.

The Service Manager further outlined that it was important to invest time to save time later, and this has been done by upskilling colleagues from across children’s social care.

 

Future for families have looked at the following over the last 12 months:

 

-          Referrals

-          The power of communications

-          Trauma informed practice

-          Future for families have done presentations on themselves to challanage their service, by asking, what are we? How can we help?

-          Deep dive process for newly qualifies social workers, this training has  ...  view the full minutes text for item 21/15

21/16

Performance against Corporate Parenting Strategy

The Analytics Manager will provide the Board with the performance scorecards.

Minutes:

The Director of Children’s Care was in attendance and provided the Board with information relating to the Corporate Parenting Board scorecard.

 

The Director advised that the scorecard was in place for the Corporate Parenting Board to see how our performance was progressing and have the opportunity to challenge anything where you saw wasn’t meeting target.

 

The main points to note were as follows:

 

DEMAND

 

·         There has been an 22.3% reduction in overall numbers of children looked after since August 2020

 

·         Since the height of 702 looked after children during September 2020, there has been a reduction of 157 looked after children.  

 

·         136 children and young people have ceased to be looked after in the last 6 months.

 

·         The number of children in Connected Carers placements has dropped from 210 in Sep 2020 to 112 July 2021 (47% reduction).

 

·         Since Jan 2021 there has been 54 Connected Carers placements commence and 114 cease.

·         The number of children placed with parents has dropped from 99 in September 2020 to 58 in August 2021 (41% reduction).

 

·         Since Jan 2021 there has been 17 Placement with Parents commence and 51 cease.

 

·         There is an increased number of children in Fostering to Adopt placements.

 

·         In September 2020 the data evidences that for every child ceasing to be looked after, 1.9 children started to become looked after.  This means that more children were becoming looked after than ceasing and the looked after population continued to increase. 

 

·         There has been a month on month reduction in this throughout the year until March 2021 when improvements resulted in less children becoming looked after than those ceasing.

 

·         This progress has continued.  In June 2021 for every child ceasing to be looked after 0.6 children became looked after.  This has remained static for the last 3 months. 

 

Permanency

 

Placements with Parents – the most recent forecasting model demonstrates a reduction in the number of children subject to care proceedings and placed with a parent. 

In September 2020 there were 99 children living at home and subject to a Care Order.  This has reduced to 59 children in September 2021.  This is 40.4% reduction. 

 

SGOs/CAO- In July 2020 there was a height of 212 children cared for by family or friends in connected carer placements.  This has reduced through improvement work to support children to achieve permanence.  In August 2021 this reduced to 122 children.  (42.4% reduction).  75 Special Guardianship Orders have been granted in the last 12 months.  

This has been achieved through increased management oversight within Legal Gateway Panel, Permanency Monitoring Group, an investment in a commissioned service and a drive on performance management.

 

·         There is a 56% increase of number of adoption orders in the year 20/21 (25) compared to 2019/2020 (16).  

·         In this year to date 13 Adoption Orders have been secured. There are currently a further 33 children progressing to adoption with Placement Orders.

 

·         The local authority is on track to increase the number of children subject to adoption orders significantly in this financial year. 

·         The  ...  view the full minutes text for item 21/16

21/17

Corporate Reference Group

The Chief Executive and Director of Children’s Services will provide a presentation to the Board.

Minutes:

The Director of Children’s Services provided a presentation in terms of the Corporate Reference Group. She advised that Board that:

·         The Corporate Reference Group (CRG) was established following the Inadequate Ofsted judgement of Children’s Services to provide a whole council approach to supporting and delivering against our improvement programme.

·         The group is made up of representation of all directorates and operates at a Director and Head of Service Level, whilst being chaired by the Chief Executive.

·         The group took some time to move from a general information sharing session to one with focused intentions. 

·         It was agreed that the group would focus on;  How the group can support and strengthen the improvement outcomes identified by Ofsted in January 2020, ultimately strengthening the delivery of the Children’s Service Improvement Programme; developing and delivering against a wider ambition for all children of Middlesbrough.

The Director advised that the group has moved from information sharing to more focused workstreams:

 

Work Stream 1 – Holistic delivery of the Children’s Services Improvement Plan

    • All directorates have reviewed the original Ofsted outcomes and provided contributions to strengthen delivery against them. These contributions now form part of an internal delivery plan which is monitored monthly through the Corporate Reference Group.

Work Stream 2 – Wider ambition for all children of Middlesbrough

    • We have internally reviewed our Middlesbrough Children Matter (MCM) priorities with the aim of making these more child friendly. The children’s strategy will be informed by our existing MCM vision, mission and brand.
    • We have commissioned Participation People who will support us in undertaking a town-wide Children and Young People’s consultation to ensure our priorities are reflective of their views.
    • The model we will be using to undertake the consultation is a Young Researcher model. This will see us recruit and train 25 young researchers who will be responsible for undertaking the consultation, analysing the data, and co-producing the strategy.
    • Draft material has been developed for our Young Researcher recruitment campaign.

 

The Director finally outlined that next steps of the group:

  • Submit a report to Executive to gain political buy in to the approach.
  • Co-produce our strategy with children and young people.
  • Development of supporting delivery plan and governance structures.
  • Communicate the strategy across the town.
  • Work with partners and businesses to gain collaborative buy in to the delivery of the agreed priorities.
  • Continue to work with our young researchers to hold Middlesbrough Council and partners to account for delivery against the agreed commitments. 

The Director was thanked for her presentation.

 

AGREED- That the update be noted.

 

21/18

Any other urgent items which in the opinion of the Chair, may be considered.

Any other urgent items which in the opinion of the Chair, may be considered.

Minutes:

No items.