Wednesday, 15 April 2015

The same old story

Every year I say the same thing to myself – surely it can’t keep going on like this. But it does. Since 2010 the number of care applications in England recorded by CAFCASS has gone up and up. In March 2015 it was the highest figure ever (1,066). That’s a whopping 16% increase compared since March 2014. 



Care applications received

2010-11
2011-12
2012-13
2013-14
2014-15
Apr
692
681
757
919
805
May
686
836
984
983
873
Jun
774
862
809
853
880
Jul
848
873
996
877
1,020
Aug
777
891
987
828
901
Sep
759
844
879
843
910
Oct
731
862
957
978
1,007
Nov
826
880
958
825
888
Dec
689
814
864
815
927
Jan
698
921
976
889
891
Feb
826
892
1,006
891
959
Mar
897
899
937
919
1,066
Total
9,203
10,255
11,110
10,620
11,127


[Source: https://www.cafcass.gov.uk/news/2015/april/march-2015-care-demand-statistics.aspx]

Meeting that kind of extra demand obviously puts a great strain on services. More and more court time is required. Professionals have to devote more time to more and more cases coming before the courts. There is a need for more and more foster placements, residential care places and adoptions. More and more resources are required to meet children’s everyday needs and their needs for special resources.

I’m sure that most if not all of these children need to be subjects of care proceedings. I’m also sure that they need the best possible service from local authorities, other agencies and the courts. But I’m not clear how they can continue to receive that when there are chronic shortages of children’s social workers, pressurised departments and the prospect of more and more cuts.