Family

Children will pay the price if social workers are excluded from being expert family court witnesses

04 May 2010

Child playingIndependent social workers are concerned that planned cuts to their fees will result to a deepening of the recruitment crisis in the profession and will cause children and families to suffer due to a lack of expert advice.  

The independent social work bodies, BASW, Nagalro, ISWA and WillisPalmer, met senior civil servants last week from the Ministry of Justice, Legal Services Commission and the Department for Children, Schools and Families to set out their objections to plans to cut fees by 40-50%.

Judith Timms, Nagalro policy consultant said: "Our very real fear is that independent social work experience will be lost to the courts at a time when children and families desperately need it and courts themselves are under great pressure."

Civil servants agreed to the meeting in response to pressure from social workers who were dismayed at the lack of knowledge within the MoJ about what independent social workers do. At a forum held on 25 March social workers expressed bewilderment as to why they had been singled out when fees for other experts were still under review.

At last week's meeting the representative agencies told civil servants that the loss of independent social workers' expertise will increase costs elsewhere in the family justice system and leave children more vulnerable to poor assessments.

The agencies propose that any decision on fee-capping should await the outcome of the ongoing Family Justice Review to enable an evidence-based decision to be made. 

Nushra Mansuri from BASW said: "Devaluing social work flies in the face of the Social Work Task Force's aim of raising the status of the social work profession."

The group believes the government's consultation process was seriously flawed and did not meet the government's own criteria. The Legal Services Commission is unable to say how much money it currently spends on independent social workers in family court cases, nor how much money they expect to save.

Phil King from ISWA said: "Without independent social workers courts will turn to more expensive experts like psychologists to fill the gap so costs will rise. Civil servants do not seem to realise that social work expertise is in great demand. Independent social workers will go where their skills are better appreciated and rewarded."

Related News

News
8 Apr

News

Quarter of social workers handling 30 cases at once

2010-04-08 15:32:47 UTC

TUES 23/03/2010 - Almost a quarter of Social Workers are handling more than 30 cases at once and 47% have 20 or more cases at any one time according...

More Info »
News
1 Dec

News

Social Work Taskforce publish final report

2009-12-01 15:20:00 UTC

The Social Work Taskforce today published its final report on recommendations to transform social work and improve public understanding of social workers...

More Info »
News
11 Nov

News

LSC says it will not fund independent social workers

2009-11-11 17:16:00 UTC

The Legal Services Commission (LSC) has reminded practitioners that it will not fund independent social workers to act as guardians in public law children...

More Info »
News
16 Sep

News

New advertising campaign to recruit social workers

2009-09-16 09:53:00 UTC

The Children's Workforce Development Council (CWDC) has launched a high profile recruitment campaign to recruit social workers to support children and...

More Info »
News
1 Sep

News

New TV campaign to recruit 5000 social workers

2009-09-01 16:15:00 UTC

The Department for Children, Schools and Families (DCSF) and Oscar-nominated actress Samantha Morton today launched a television campaign to recruit...

More Info »
News
6 Aug

News

Social workers' morale 'hits rock bottom' after Baby P

2009-08-06 12:17:00 UTC

Unison, the union representing 40,000 social workers, has warned that morale has hit rock bottom as vacancies for social workers were standing at "a...

More Info »
News
21 May

News

Social work consultation

2007-05-21 09:52:00 UTC

The General Social Care Council (GSCC) is leading a consultation on Roles and tasks of social work in England. The project is being led by a team consisting...

More Info »

Related Products

Re-rooted_20lives_index_cover

Family

Re-rooted Lives

Prof Judith Trowell, Carola Thorpe

An important source of reference for all those involved in child protection work

£33.00

More Info »
Flj_index_cover

Family

Family Law

Elizabeth Walsh

News, updates and case reports covering every area of family law

£286.00

More Info »
Icon_red_mouse

Family

Family Law Journal Online

News, updates and case reports covering every area of family law and practice

More Info »

NEW Family Law Online

- A Snapshot

View a one minute video of the NEW Family Law Online features.

 - Video Tutorials

Get up-to-speed with how to browse and search on the NEW service.

Click 'More Info' below to view the narrated video demonstrations.

More Info »

Laptop_and_play_image