Responding to the Association of Directors of Children’s
Services’ interim report on pressures on children’s social care
faced by councils during 2019/20, Cllr , Chair of the
Local Government Association’s Children and Young People Board,
said:
“This report reinforces the significant budget
reductions councils have experienced and increasing numbers of
children needing urgent help. As the impact of the pandemic
becomes clear, councils expect to see a significant rise in
referrals to children’s social care and demand for wider
children’s support services.
“If we are to avoid families falling into
crisis and causing long-term damage to the prospects of children
and young people, we need to ensure councils have enough funding
to reinvest in the preventative and early-help services that
children, young people and families need, as soon as they need
it.
“The extra funding for adult and children’s
social care announced in the recent Spending Review is positive
but will not on its own be enough to tackle the significant
challenges facing children’s social care. Councils have been
forced to scale back or cut universal and early help services
altogether prior to the pandemic due to increasing demand for
urgent child protection work alongside long-term funding
reductions.
“With these pressures exacerbated by COVID-19,
significant additional funding for children’s social care will be
needed if we are to provide the support children, young people
and their families need, when they need it. As a starting point,
the £1.7 billion removed from the Early Intervention Grant since
2010 should be reinstated.”
Notes to
editors
-
The Early Intervention Grant has been reduced
by the Government from £2.8 billion in 2010/11 to £1.1 billion
in 2018/19, as outlined in LGA publication, ‘A child-centred
recovery’.