£200 million to transform life chances of vulnerable young people

3 Apr 2016 12:24 AM

Education Secretary unveils new £200 million investment to overhaul services for the most vulnerable children and young people.

Hundreds of millions are being invested in a new programme to revolutionise support for the most vulnerable children and families across the country, backed by brand-new freedoms for town halls to provide life-changing services for troubled young people, Education Secretary Nicky Morgan has announced yesterday (3 April 2016).

Yesterday’s announcement comes just months after the Prime Minister delivered a keynote speech on transforming life chances for the most vulnerable in which he described the government’s children social care reforms as the “landmark reforms of the next 5 years”.

The government’s Children’s Social Care Innovation programme - a radical step-change to the way in which vulnerable families are supported, backed by funding totalling £200 million, will kick-start the most promising proposals for new ways of delivering vital help for troubled children and young people.

And government is calling on councils and charities to come forward with bids for innovative and creative ideas to improve life chances for young people in their local area - with successful schemes backed by a slice of £200 million.

Education Secretary Nicky Morgan said yesterday:

Every single child deserves the chance to fulfil their potential regardless of their background. Yet it remains a stark fact that we don’t yet have excellent children’s social services everywhere. And when our most vulnerable children and families don’t receive the support they need, it can literally be a matter of life and death.

Where there is failure, we can no longer sit by and watch. We know children flourish when they are supported by leaders who have been given the freedom to translate their expertise, passion and drive into providing life-changing support. And that’s why today we’re inviting charities and councils to come forward with their most creative ideas to transform the lives of those most in need, because no ambition can be too great when it comes to transforming children’s life chances. We’ve already seen how local services are ready to innovate and come up with new ideas to tackle entrenched problems.

The new investment follows the first round of the innovation programme - announced in summer 2014 - which has funded over 50 inspiring and imaginative programmes across the country, backed by £100 million. Schemes funded to date include:

Yesterday’s announcement also coincides with a new call from the Education Secretary to cities across the country, urging them to take the power back from Whitehall through ‘devolution deals’, so they have the freedom to deliver the kind of game-changing, innovative services that are right for vulnerable children and families in their area.

Devolution deals are a special agreement between central and local government which give regions greater control over decisions that affect their area - from business and employment to economic opportunities and growth.

Ministers now want to see every single devolution deal expanded to include children’s services - putting cities back behind the wheel in providing the tailored support that will make a real difference to vulnerable families locally. Regions such as Greater Manchester are already leading the way - looking at how services for vulnerable young people can be better delivered across the region in a way that makes sense for them, free from Whitehall bureaucracy.

Children and Families Minister Edward Timpson, who spent 10 years as a family barrister and whose own family fostered over 90 children, said:

I know from my time at the Bar and my experience of fostering that when it comes to supporting our most vulnerable young people there isn’t a one-size-fits-all approach.

That’s why we are calling on councils and professionals to continue digging deep, thinking radically and doing whatever it takes to find new and better ways of delivering for our most vulnerable children.

Ashley*, a young mum who has received life-changing support from Pause - 1 of the many schemes backed by innovation programme funding - said:

Without Pause, I would not be here now. I’ve never had anyone on my side - someone who isn’t going to hurt me, harm me or let me down. I could have kept on having kids or I could have ended it all. Or both. But Pause has helped me realise that I do have value. I do have potential.

And as part of the government’s long-term plan to overhaul children’s social work and ensure professionals have the knowledge and skills they need to change lives, ministers have yesterday announced a further expansion of an important collaboration between universities and councils to ensure a steady stream of high-calibre social workers to the frontline.

The government’s Social Work Teaching Partnerships initiative matches universities with councils to delivery gold-standard training for social workers - raising standards and supporting local authorities in recruiting and retaining the best social workers and giving them greater control over the hiring of frontline professionals.

Greater Manchester, north-west Midlands, south-east London and south Yorkshire are all leading the way in trailblazing this exciting initiative - and yesterday ministers have announced a new funding round to encourage other universities and councils to join forces in extending the reach of excellent social work across the country.

The government has also yesterday announced new measures to improve the life chances of the most vulnerable children who are cared for in secure children’s homes.

As part of an ongoing drive to ensure these children get the support they need, secure homes will be able to bid for new funding to make sure staff get the specialist training they need to support the children in their care. A new unit run by Hampshire county council will work with local authorities to ensure children who need this kind of care can access it more quickly, and action will be set in train to strengthen mental health support available for children in secure homes.

Notes to editors

  1. Read more about the Children’s Social Care Innovation programme and details of how organisations can bid for the new round of funding.
  2. Read the letter from the Children and Families Minister on secure children’s homes.
  3. *Ashley’s name has been changed to protect identity.

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