Official Report 182KB pdf
Item 3 on the agenda is to decide whether the committee should conduct an inquiry into adoption and fostering, what the remit of such an inquiry should be and whether an adviser should be appointed.
The issue is important. I have read the SPICe paper, which is comprehensive. In the light of the findings of the report that you have just referred to, convener, we might begin by prioritising areas that we want to address. The proposed inquiry should be a priority for the committee, and an adviser would help us to carry out that work. I would like us to begin the process as soon as possible.
What status do the recommendations in "Learning with Care" have? Will local authorities be required to implement all of them or do the recommendations not have that force?
The minister has asked each local authority to indicate by 31 March how it intends to implement the recommendations. It might be useful for the committee to write to the minister, asking what action he is taking on the report, what status the recommendations have and what action he can take if they are not implemented by local authorities.
That would be useful. It was interesting to read how many inquiries and investigations are under way under the broad heading of adoption, fostering and looked-after children. It would be useful to get some help in pulling those reports together to find out where the gaps are. I was especially pleased that the University of York is going to undertake research into the support that is or is not available to young people who are leaving care. The lack of such support has been a recurring theme in some of the evidence that we have received from organisations representing young people.
A major report needs to be put together on looked-after and adopted children. A consistent theme in what prospective adoptive parents have said to me has been the inconsistencies in the time scale, assessment interviews and employment rights. Last week I dealt with a case in my surgery involving someone who in usual maternity circumstances would have had leave with payment. That does not happen in the case of some folk who are adoptive parents; they are denied it. Local authority standards are an issue; it would be helpful to examine those.
An adviser would help us to see the scope of the issue and to draw it together. I agree with everything that has been said. We should not hesitate to appoint an adviser.
I will make two suggestions. First, we should ask for a letter from the minister and we could ask him to come to the committee—after 31 March, when he has received the responses from local authorities—to give us an update on where we are on the learning with care agenda. Secondly, I suggest that we seek approval from the Parliamentary Bureau for the appointment of an adviser.
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