Title: National Commissioning and Contracting Training Conference
1National Commissioning and Contracting Training
Conference
- 2nd and 3rd October 2008
- Tendering for Foster Care
- Involving Young People in the Process
Workshop Facilitators Howard Smith, Placement
Planning Manager, North Yorkshire Email
howard.smith_at_northyorks.gov.uk Jonny Hoyle,
Chair A National Voice Email
Jonathon.Hoyle_at_northyorks.gov.uk
2Child Placement
Trends in child placement 2001 - 2005
3Independent Fostering Agencies Spend
4IFA Market Share March 2006
5Children Looked After by locality 2005-2006
6Age bandings of children in IFAs
7Hard to place children and young people
- Remand fostering
- Placements for Disabled Children, and in
particular, so that they can remain within their
special schools - Mother and baby assessment and support services
- Placements for CYP whose adoption has broken
down - Sibling groups
- Teenagers with sexualised and potentially
predatory behaviours - Teenagers with emotional behavioural difficulties
as an alternative to residential care
8Evaluation Team
- Fostering Manager
- Safeguarding and Assessment Manager
- CYPS Contracts Officer
- Senior Corporate Procurement Adviser
- Placement Planning Manager
- Finance Lead
9Pre-qualifying questionnaire
- Organisational Structure
- Finance
- Insurance
- Equalities
- Health and Safety
- Quality and technical ability
- Sustainable development
- General
10Managing the Market
- Reduce our supplier base
- Set the Councils terms and conditions
- Shape provision to meet need
- Create efficiencies
- Fix prices and set inflation
- Systematic monitoring
11Evaluation Criteria
- 70 quality (including 5 determined by young
people) - 30 price
12Quality and Recruitment
- Systems for maintaining and improving quality
- Compliance with policy and procedures
- Foster carer recruitment and vetting process
- Strategy for carer retention
- Process for vetting and recruiting support staff
13The Fostering Service
- Ratio of supervising Social Worker to carers
- Supervision and review arrangements
- Non supervising Social Worker support to carers
- Out of hours support
- Average total monthly support to carers
- Foster carers professional development
- Amount of respite provided without additional
charge - Maximum distance of travel for supervising
Social Worker - Fostering fees related to training undertaken
- Investment in training staff and carers
- Disruption procedure
- Capacity to provide educational support
14Foster Carers
- Availability during school hours
- Proximity to urban areas of North Yorkshire
- Training undertaken
- Ability to drive a vehicle
- Length of experience
- Number and duration of placements
- Percentage of disruptions
- Number of exemptions
15Equality and Diversity
You accept a placement referral for a young
woman who is a lesbian. How do you ensure that
no aspect of your organisation would discriminate
against her on the grounds of her sexuality?
16Price
- Comparison of indicative prices submitted
- Reduction for sibling groups
- Reduction for long term placements
- Reduction for volume of business
- Cost of additional services
17Young Peoples AssessmentQuestion 1
The placement is a considerable distance from a
childs home area, what commitment is there from
your organisation to ensure that the child can
maintain important links with his or her family,
friends, community and possibly school?
18Young Peoples AssessmentResponses to Question 1
- We have carers who stay overnight in hotels to
facilitate contact - Birth families have had holidays with carers and
children - Our carers are trained to understand the
importance of maintaining contact with
significant people - Prior to placement the issue of contact and
transport is discussed and key decisions made.
19Young Peoples AssessmentQuestion 2
The first few days in a new placement can be very
daunting for children and young people. What
arrangements, facilities and equipment would your
organisation put into the placement to ensure the
child or young person feels welcome, and is also
able to set the pace of integrating with his or
her new family placement?
20Young Peoples AssessmentResponses to Question 2
- We provide a welcome to the family booklet
- Pre placement visits
- We hope our Young Persons Council will consider
how we can improve in this area - During training foster carers are asked to
consider being taken to an alternative home with
no time to prepare for this or take any personal
belongings
21Young Peoples AssessmentQuestion 3
What would be your organisations policy about
ensuring that children and young people eat a
healthy diet?
22Young Peoples AssessmentResponses to Question 3
- Discussed at monthly carers formal supervision
- Carers are trained by a nutritionist
- Link workers visit at meal times
- The need to compromise whilst encouraging good
habits.
23Young Peoples AssessmentQuestion 4
In most families it is normal for older children
and young people to be able to make a snack, or
to help themselves to a drink. What sort of
guidance would your organisation give out to
carers to ensure that children and young people
have reasonable access to snacks and drinks?
24Young Peoples AssessmentResponses to Question 4
- Carers to be aware of young persons level of
development and capacity to be safe in the
kitchen - Expect young people to treated as a family
member - Carers are encouraged not to buy too much junk
food - All carers to be expected to allow children and
young people access to the kitchen to help
themselves to a snack or a drink depending on
the age of the child.
25Young Peoples AssessmentQuestion 5
Our experience of foster carers has been a mix of
both positive and negative. We are particularly
interested in how carers within your organisation
would demonstrate the same sort of commitment to
children and young people as they would to their
own children. As an example, we wondered if both
carers work what arrangements would be put into
place if a foster child suddenly became ill at
school and needed to remain at home for 2 or 3
weeks whilst they recovered?
26Young Peoples AssessmentResponses to Question 5
- Our agency seeks carers where one partner is not
working so that they are able to care for a child
who is not at school and needs to be home for any
reason - References are sought from employers to help
ensure that appropriate consultation in respect
of flexible working has taken place - As part of the preparation training, assessments
and induction, foster carers complete case
studies and are given clear guidance on the
importance of welcoming a foster child to make
them feel part of their household. - The carers are advised that the agency would
expect at least one carer to remain at home to
facilitate any unforeseen circumstances such as
long periods of sickness, along with other
situations. - Recently the agency had carers who commuted 230
mile round trip on six separate occasions to help
assist a young person to undertake his GCSEs.
27Young Peoples AssessmentQuestion 6
Children and young people who spend long periods
in care often dont have, or lose their records
of child and adolescent development when compared
with children and young people who grow up within
their own families. How will carers from your
organisation make sure that foster children have
a good record of their past?
28Young Peoples AssessmentResponses to Question 6
- Each young person is provided with a camera and a
scrapbook to retain any information that they
feel is important to them. - We keep all the young persons past information
in a safe and secure place (a memory box) for
when they are older. - Some children do not want memory boxes
- Our lifestory work includes history of genetic
illnesses within the family.
29Evaluation SummaryYoung Peoples Assessment
30Evaluation Summary
31Evaluation Summary