logo
Flintshire Social Services to bring children's care in-house by 2030

Flintshire Social Services to bring children's care in-house by 2030

Leader Live5 days ago

The plans are the authority's response to Welsh Government's policy of eliminating profit from the care of looked-after children by 2030.
But a new report says that additional funding needs to be found for the council to achieve its target in time.
According to the report from Social Services Chief Officer Craig Macleod, to bring all children in care under the full responsibility of Flintshire County Council under its 'Care Closer to Home' strategy, the authority needs 30 additional residential care beds, three additional respite beds and fostering provision for an extra 52 children to bring all profit-making care services in-house.
Currently there are 270 children in the care system across Flintshire. Of those who have been put into care 86% are in the independent residential care while of those in foster care 41% are with independent fostering associations.
Under the Welsh Government plans, any independent organisations that operate 'for profit' will no longer be able to offer care services for looked after children from 2030. Organisations that invest all surpluses back into care will remain unaffected.
Flintshire's strategy is to invest more in family stability and support to reduce the number of children coming into the care and fostering system through early intervention.
Nevertheless, some children will still require the safety net of the care system and that is where significant investment is required.
'Having established effective systems to support children and families on the edge of care our intention is to now focus on reducing the number of children who are supported though out of county arrangements,' said Mr Macleod's report.
'Our approach is to develop arrangements that better meet the needs of the child, secure improved outcomes are more cost effective and reduce the overall number of residential provisions that the local authority would need to develop to shift from reliance on the 'for profit' market.
'We have an established project through a partnership with a local company that provides specialist intensive therapeutic support to children to enable them to safely step down from high cost residential and foster placements. The focus of the project is to take a child-focused approach to transition children and young people from residential care to a family-based setting where their assessed need determines this as being appropriate and is in their best interests.'
Flintshire currently has 50 children in residential care, mostly with independent providers. It's current in-house capacity is for just nine.
Adding new capacity, such as residential homes for small numbers of children with sleep-in staff requires funding however.
While Flintshire has set aside £2 million to develop in-house provision, it remains reliant on external funding to realise its ambitious vision.
'A revenue bid has been submitted by Welsh Government to seek funding from the Eliminating Profit and Radical Reform Grant Fund 2025/2026 -2027/2028.
'Whilst we await the outcome of the bid, if the children and young people standard spending assessment formula was applied we would expect to receive in the region of £760,000 in revenue for each of the next three years,' wrote Mr Macleod.
'A capital bid has also been prepared to the Housing with Care Fund and Integration and Rebalancing Capital Fund. In line with the funding requirements a business case has been developed and submitted to Welsh Government for consideration.
'Given our funding position our financial capacity to achieve this whole system change is limited. Additional funding is needed to deliver the eliminating profit agenda with the scale and pace necessary to comply with legislation and deliver a shared ambition to radically reform the current model to improve outcomes for children and young people.'
Councillors will review the proposals in the Joint Education, Youth and Culture and Social and Health Care Overview and Scrutiny Committee on Thursday.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

What Eluned Morgan's Welsh Labour needs to do to win the Senedd election
What Eluned Morgan's Welsh Labour needs to do to win the Senedd election

Wales Online

time18 hours ago

  • Wales Online

What Eluned Morgan's Welsh Labour needs to do to win the Senedd election

Our community members are treated to special offers, promotions and adverts from us and our partners. You can check out at any time. More info On Saturday night, some of Labour's biggest hitters were in a room listening to the findings of hours of polling and analysis about what the numbers show about Labour's electoral chances in 2026. The Welsh Election Study is a comprehensive piece of work that looks at voting patterns and results from the 2024 general election, and the results did not make comfortable listening for Labour but anyone who left that room thinking the words can be ignored would be wrong. The Welsh Government was not popular at the general election, people viewed it negatively, but Labour still did well, because the UK Government was less popular. On key metrics like education and the NHS, people think services have got worse, and it is the Welsh Government's fault. That is clearly a problem for Labour. People think their standard of living has got worse, but for that they blamed the UK Government mainly, but it still wasn't good news for the Welsh Government. That discontent is playing out in polls - more than now one - projecting the party which has had a longstanding record of success in Wales will get 18% of the vote at the Senedd election in just over 10 months time. Of course, it is more than just Labour policies, there are global matters at play, there is a tendency across the western world to turn away from established politics. Populist politicians and parties are doing well the world over. Wars, finances, the economic climate are all things out of Labour's control. But when this room of experts were asked to list the thing they think Labour needs to do, the message was fairly simple. Labour in Wales needs a clear set of simple messages and with a clear intended audience. That's not so hard, is it? Well, maybe. The background is this, UK Labour is targeting its attacks at Reform. But it's not really clear why when you look at who voted for Reform UK in 2024, thus giving us an insight who may do it in 2026. We know Reform is expected to do well in the election in May 2026 and it could end up as the biggest party, so too could Plaid Cymru. With the obvious disclaimers that the election is a long way away, far from the front of most peoples' minds, and that polling is just a snapshot in time, there is one thing crystal clear - no-one expects it to be Labour. And yet, Eluned Morgan keeps talking about Nigel Farage and the danger his party poses. The First Minister made that clear when she said they were a "real danger" to the NHS in Wales, workers rights, public services. However, it isn't (on the whole) Labour voters - the WES data shows - who are going to vote for them. UK Labour keeps targeting Reform policies too - despite the same being true in England too. Reform isn't taking swathes of Labour voters. The support Labour is losing is mainly, Plaid, but also Lib Dems and Greens. Reform is gaining support in Wales is coming from a combination of new voters (those who don't normally vote) and disaffected Conservatives. And yet it was Reform that Keir Starmer, Jo Stevens and Eluned Morgan mainly chose to target - although the latter two did mention Plaid Cymru too. The message from academic experts at the party event was to work out who they are focusing on. The other message that came from the event was that the messages need to be simple. The First Minister told BBC Wales' Sunday Supplement she "I am responsible for making sure the party has a clear sense of direction and purpose within Wales". She spoke on the radio that she was focusing on the "bread and butter issues". And yet, that is one of the biggest criticisms from her within the party - that there isn't clear direction. There are concerns she has far too many communications advisors, and not enough focusing on actual policy, resulting in a scattergun approach. When her party colleagues went to Llandudno, they heard her speech cover the bases you'd expect - well rehearsed pledges about waiting times and potholes - and she added in commitments to mental health and £5m to tidying up towns (albeit divisible by 22 local authorities) but there was also an eight minute segment about Artificial Intelligence committing money, resources, and now a pre-election pledge to something, quite frankly, something that many simply don't understand how Wales would ever have a stake in. There was widespread confusion why, in a central speech at a crucial time, the First Minister spent eight minutes of her speech talking about AI and committing £2.5m to the development of "excellence zone" in Wales. It was, more than one person said, typical of the chaotic approach at the top of Welsh Labour, with ideas switched between at the drop of a hat. No-one really saw that coming, and knows what it actually means in Wales, nor what £2.5m of funding can actually do to achieve. It is just pennies in a vast virtual ocean. She is facing repeating questions too about her influence on Keir Starmer's government. While Eluned Morgan kept telling journalists that Welsh Government pressure had helped force the welfare u-turn, but the pressure came from rebelling MPs. When Eluned Morgan's Welsh Government wrote a letter detailing the impact the welfare cuts will have on Wales, only five MPs signed it. So it's no surprise she faced questions what her role as Welsh Labour leader means in terms of the 27-strong bloc of MPs who represent Wales. Eluned Morgan says the next election is a "moment of reckoning". She isn't wrong. When we asked her if this focus on Nigel Farage risked glamorising the party too much sway in Wales she was clear, "there is nothing glamorous about Reform". The problem she has is convincing people there is something glamorous about Welsh Labour.

Brecon Beacons holiday lets to become homes as rates soar
Brecon Beacons holiday lets to become homes as rates soar

Powys County Times

time2 days ago

  • Powys County Times

Brecon Beacons holiday lets to become homes as rates soar

Holiday accommodation in a popular Powys visitor destination could be turned into affordable homes after Welsh Government policy saw its rates soar by £10,000 a year. An application by Mr and Mrs Hopkins would change the use of three holiday chalets and manager's accommodation off the A438 between Bronllys and Pont Ithel from short term holiday accommodation, into four permanent affordable dwellings. Of the four chalets three have two bedrooms and one has three bedrooms. Planning agent Samuel Organ of CO2 architects explained the proposal in a planning statement. Mr Organ said: 'The chalets at Beacons Edge have been let as short-term holiday accommodation for many years. 'However, recent changes to Welsh Government policy concerning the taxation of self-catering properties have significantly impacted the viability of such businesses. 'This application seeks a change of use from holiday accommodation to local needs housing." Mr Organ explains that an order came into force in 2023 stating that holiday properties must be available to be let for 252 days a year, and used for at least 182 days. Mr Organ said: 'To qualify for non-domestic rates, the chalets, despite active marketing, have only achieved a maximum of 156 letting days annually per unit, falling short of this threshold. 'As a result, the Valuation Office Agency removed the business from the non-domestic rating list on April 1, 2023, and the properties are now subject to domestic Council Tax. 'The annual Council Tax liability across the four units is now £10,433.88, a dramatic increase from the previous £372.99 a year in business rates, making the holiday letting model unviable.' Mr Organ continued: 'This application proposes to repurpose the chalets as permanent residential dwellings for local needs housing, thereby bringing them into productive and sustainable use.' While Beacons edge is outside a 'formally' defined settlement boundary Mr Organ stresses how close the site is to Bronllys and Pont Ithel. Mr Organ said: 'This makes the site an appropriate location for local needs housing, in line with both Powys LDP (Local Development Plan) policy and national guidance. 'The site's location near Talgarth, Bronllys, and Brecon all of which offer services, schools, and employment, this makes it ideally situated for households with a strong local connection. 'The applicant is willing to enter into a section 106 agreement to ensure these homes are retained for local needs.' This means that if the chalet become affordable homes they would be suited for 'young families, local workers and those wishing to downsize". Mr Organ said: 'The proposal represents a sustainable, low-impact solution that will deliver real community benefit and support rural vitality.' A decision on the application is expected by August 18.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store