Issue - meetings

Regional Adoption Agency - Adoption East Midlands

Meeting: 26/09/2019 - Children and Young People Scrutiny Committee (Item 14)

14 Regional Adoption Agency - Adoption East Midlands pdf icon PDF 195 KB

Additional documents:

Minutes:

Councillor Cheryl Barnard, Portfolio Holder for Children and Young People, presented a report on the creation of the new East Midlands Regional Adoption Agency (RAA). The following points were discussed:

 

(a)  the Department for Education published ‘Adoption – A Vision for Change’ in March 2016 with the aim to join up individual, smaller adoption agencies around the country into larger, combined agencies with shared resources, to provide more options for children and adopters. Since 4 April 2019, Nottingham City Council has joined with Derby City Council, Nottinghamshire County Council and Derbyshire County Council to form an East Midlands RAA. The RAA is designed to prepare both children and adopting families for the adoption process, and to ensure that all placements made (including fostering, fostering to adopt, and adoption) are both timely and sustainable. The RAA is in its early stages, but it is working well with partners to ensure that the process for the children in care is effective and efficient;

 

(b)  the transfer of staff from the member authorities to Nottinghamshire County Council has gone well and personnel are integrating into the new working arrangements – though they remain in close contact with all of the member authorities. Clear governance arrangements are in place, though there have been some teething IT issues in setting up the integrated systems. There is on-going liaison with the other East Midlands authorities, which are working towards establishing a RAA in early 2020;

 

(c)  a grant from Government was made to help develop and establish the RAAs. The RAA is then funded from the member authorities’ individual budgets, with funding pooled in some areas. The creation of the RAA has resulted in a reduction in the duplication of services and enabled opportunities for savings and reinvestment, with the improved coordination of the effective deployment of scarce resources;

 

(d)  18 matches have been made as of 23 September 2019, with one further awaiting confirmation from the Agency Decision Maker. Of these, two were sibling groups and two were relinquished babies. The RAA as a whole takes the lead on preparing those carrying out the fostering or adoption, with the Council leading on working with the children to be fostered or adopted;

 

(e)  the Council has around 625 children in its care and assesses the needs of all of them very carefully, with Adoption Orders given for children when this represents the best outcome – whatever the age of the child. In some cases, a Special Guardianship Order is used. There are up to 100 children in the adoption process at any given point and 38-47 children are adopted each year. The average time from the making of the Adoption Order by the Courts to the date of actual placement with a family is 234 days, currently, so there is still potential for improvement;

 

(f)  a permanent placement is always the preferred outcome and all potential matches are reviewed by an independent panel and are authorised by an external person. The rate of disruption to  ...  view the full minutes text for item 14