Slowdown hits prevention work
By Lauren Higgs and Alison Bennett Thursday, 20 November 2008
Social and economic crises could threaten preventive work with children, experts have warned.
High-profile concerns about youth crime and child protection may also divert funding from services.
Judith Smyth, the director of the Department for Children, Schools and Families' commissioning support programme for local authorities, claimed preventive services could be "starved of resources".
Speaking at the Children's Services Network conference, Every Child Matters Five Years On, she said: "We have to go back to common sense and say surely a stitch in time saves nine. Outcomes for children who do need high-level services are not that good, so we have to rethink preventive services."
Smyth also said she feared the aftermath of the Baby P case would divert funding from preventive services, due to a knee-jerk emphasis on emergency child protection.
Service providers are already encountering belt-tightening in local authorities. Dr Chris Hanvey, director of operations at Barnardo's, said: "Local authorities are keen to renew contracts for children's services, but they are not so keen on building in the inflationary increase."
He said cutting preventive services would be short-sighted but admitted there is uncertainty about funding in the current economic climate. "Preventive services are a bit like training budgets - easy to cut," he said.
Maggie Jones, chief executive of the National Council of Voluntary Child Care Organisations, said charity chief executives are concerned about whether or not councils will renew contracts for services. "There is quite a lot of worry about what happens when contracts run out because lots of services are based on one- or three-year contracts," she said.
However, she claimed the full effect of the economic downturn would not be felt until local authorities allocate spending for next financial year, which starts in April 2009.
Funding attached to preventive work in the Youth Crime Action Plan has also been called into question.
Of the £100m allocated to reducing youth crime, around £19m is yet to be earmarked and more than 80 local authorities are still in the dark about how much cash they will receive from the £22m allocated for preventive work.
A spokesman for the Department for Children, Schools and Families said that outstanding funding would be allocated shortly, but could not confirm a date.
Latest stories from CYP Now
Related Articles
Would you like to post a comment?
Additional Information
Latest jobs Jobs web feed
- Contract and Performance Manager Woking YMCA £27,000 per annum pro rata, Woking with travel across Surrey
- Senior Practitioner 1625 Independent People Qualified: £26,276 - £28,636, Bristol and surrounding area
- 3 Project Workers (Mental Health, Accommodation, Learning and Work) 1625 Independent People Various £21,519 and £27,852, Bristol and surrounding area
- Macmillan Family Worker Jigsaw4U Band 5 A4C, Guildford + travel across Surrey
- Senior Macmillan Project Co-ordinator Jigsaw4U Salary scale band 6A4C, Guilford + travel across surrey
Most read
- BBC social work film prompts calls for early police support
- Young people laud benefits of mentor experience
- YMCA hostel closure to leave 250 young people without housing
- Government urged to address disparate uptake of free childcare
- Social workers lack time to work with children
- Adoption service inspections not tough enough, Ofsted concedes
Most commented
- BBC social work film prompts calls for early police support
- Political parties urged to back loan scheme for childcare
- Government urged to address disparate uptake of free childcare
- Participation in Practice: Young skaters triumphant in bid to build improved park
- Youth involvement in HealthWatch must be mandatory, say sector bodies
- Met Police outlines strategy to combat gang crime




