Narey Review of Children's Residential Care

Residential Care in England: Report of Sir Martin Narey's Independent Review of Children's Residential Care
Completed
Sir Martin Narey · Published 4 July 2016 · Commissioned by DfE

Independent review of children's residential care in England commissioned by the Prime Minister, making 34 recommendations covering the role of residential care in the wider system, commissioning, delivery, regulation and inspection.

34recommendations 34Not Yet Responded

Recommendations

Recommendation 1
DfE
An early priority for the Department for Education must be to facilitate the improvement of local and regional commissioning skills. Simultaneously, DfE must require local authorities to come together into large consortia for the purpose of obtaining significant discounts from private and voluntary sector providers.
Recommendation 10
DfE, DCLG
The Department for Education, in liaison with the Department of Communities and Local Government, needs to examine the extent to which the current interpretation of planning law is leading to a proliferation of newer smaller homes, which will certainly be more expensive to commissioners, but which are not likely to be any more effective than slightly larger units. At the same time the Department should assess whether differences in the interpretation of material between planning authorities is distorting the location of new homes.
Recommendation 11
DfE
The Department for Education needs either to ensure local authorities come together to drive down the cost of secure placements to about that achieved by the YJB, or to commission secure welfare beds from the centre alongside the YJB.
Recommendation 12
DfE
Simultaneously, the Department needs to lead a debate with the sector about the role and purpose of secure accommodation and what it can achieve, in keeping exceptionally challenging children safe, and in protecting others.
Recommendation 13
DfE
The Department for Education need to consider how they might encourage alternative providers from the voluntary and private sector to enter the secure care market.
Recommendation 14
DfE
The extent of the use of single placements for children (including an assessment of the cost and effectiveness of such arrangements) as an alternative to using secure beds needs to be investigated by DfE.
Recommendation 15
DfE, Home Office
The Department for Education and the Home Office should urge police services and local authorities to replicate the south-east protocol, or to agree similar arrangements. And, where they are not already doing so, to apply a restorative justice approach in dealing with children's unacceptable behaviour.
Recommendation 16
DfE, Ofsted
The Department for Education, in consultation with Ofsted, needs to reconsider their guidance – taking account of recent Court judgements – to ensure that staff are able to keep children safe by preventing them leaving homes at time of danger, either by locking doors or using restraint, and that they can be confident in the legality of their doing so.
Recommendation 17
Home Office
The Home Office counting rules – quite properly designed so that crime is not under recorded - allow the police very little flexibility in dealing with crimes committed in homes. This is in contrast to schools where police discretion exists and is frequently used. I recommend that the Home Office should allow police forces similar discretion not to record all low-level crime by children living in homes.
Recommendation 18
Ofsted
I urge Ofsted to introduce arrangements which will mean that, save in exceptional circumstances, homes achieving a good or outstanding rating will be inspected only once a year.
Recommendation 19
Ofsted
I urge Ofsted to ensure that dialogue between homes and inspectors is the norm before, during and after inspection and that inspector performance assessment takes account of this requirement.
Recommendation 2
DfE
I recommend that the Department for Education urge local authorities and consortia, and all providers, to subscribe to Link Maker.
Recommendation 20
Ofsted
I urge the new Her Majesty's Chief Inspector of Education, Children's Services and Skills to review the practice of using one or two word judgements when inspecting children's homes. They can do a disservice to some thoughtful reporting.
Recommendation 21
Commissioners, Ofsted
Commissioners should abandon blanket policies that rule out placements in homes which, essentially, are satisfactory. And Ofsted should no longer encourage authorities only to place children in good or outstanding homes.
Recommendation 22
Ofsted
I urge Ofsted to clarify – very loudly – the reality that a requires improvement verdict means that a home is an adequate home.
Recommendation 23
Ofsted
I urge Ofsted to be more alive to the fact that a decision to place a child against the home manager's will, while best avoided, may sometimes be the right decision. They should be cautious about second-guessing such decisions.
Recommendation 24
Providers
Providers may want to consider whether it is appropriate for the manager necessarily to own what is essentially a veto on a placement. The Children's Homes Regulations state that the registered person must ensure that children are only admitted to a home if their needs are within the range catered for in the statement of purpose. In most instances, the manager is identified as the registered person. But the regulations allow either the manager or the provider to fulfil that role.
Recommendation 25
Ofsted
I urge Ofsted to re-visit their inspection framework and acknowledge that, exceptionally; the use of restraint on particularly challenging children might not reduce over time.
Recommendation 26
DfE, Ofsted
I recommend that the Department for Education discuss with Ofsted how arrangements for Regulation 44 visitors might be improved, including whether Ofsted should have the power to approve the appointment and/or require the replacement of such visitors.
Recommendation 27
Ministers/DfE
Although the intention in Scotland is to require staff in children's homes to be graduates (from 2018) I urge Ministers not to follow that example in England.
Recommendation 28
DfE
The Department for Education should ensure that where the diploma is delivered primarily online, and without group tutoring, that standards are not compromised.
Recommendation 29
Commissioners, DfE
Commissioners should look for evidence that providers offer continuing staff development, particularly through team-based training. And DfE should advise commissioners about the RESuLT programme and similar team approaches, which are likely to prove effective in developing staff.
Recommendation 3
DfE
I suggest that the Innovation Programme at the Department for Education might be used to ease entry to the English market for new or expanding voluntary sector providers.
Recommendation 30
DfE
DfE should consider how the expectation that homes should be managed by qualified social workers can be established.
Recommendation 31
DfE
I recommend that DfE move swiftly to ensure that as many social work students as possible spend some of their two hundred days placement experience in children's homes.
Recommendation 32
DfE
I recommend that the Department identify and promulgate best practice in recruitment to children's homes. That should include advice on how, as far as possible, employers can screen out those whose behaviour might fall short of the immense challenge that this work can present.
Recommendation 33
Government/DfE
Subject only to verifying my cost estimates through a number of Innovation Programme pilots, I urge the Government to commit to introducing Staying Close. And I recommend that that Ed Nixon and Ian Dickson from ECLCM should be invited to help officials in the Department for Education further to develop this reform, including advising on the selection and management of the pilots.
Recommendation 34
DfE
The Department for Education should establish a Residential Care Leadership Board. It should report to the Minister for Children, be supported by officials from the Department, and comprise academics; providers from local authorities, the voluntary and the private sector; commissioners and other experts.
Recommendation 4
Providers, commissioners
I recommend that providers examine their staff attendance systems to ensure they are as effective as possible in meeting the needs of children. And commissioners, when placing children, should look closely at the numbers of staff on duty at key times of the day.
Recommendation 5
DfE
Assuming the evaluation of No Wrong Door is as positive as I would expect, the Department for Education should encourage other local authorities to study the hub approach and the potential for this to help children into foster care.
Recommendation 6
DfE
We must ensure we are recruiting and retaining the best possible foster carers, and with a sufficient number able to care for the most challenging children. And we need to pay foster carers well: their contribution is often heroic. But we have to ensure that the charges that local authorities pay providers are not unnecessarily inflated. Fostering is overdue a fundamental review and this should be a priority for the Department for Education.
Recommendation 7
Local authorities, consortia
I urge local authorities and consortia to be cautious about following any hard and fast rule about placement distance and to recognise that the right placement for a child is more important than location. They should no longer impose geographical restrictions on where homes must be located in order to be included in contracts.
Recommendation 8
Local planning authorities
I recommend that local planning authorities should review their Local Plans to include a clear statement of housing need for children in children's homes so providers understand whether or not additional homes are required.
Recommendation 9
Commissioners
Commissioners should not purchase beds in smaller homes because of an assumption that they are likely to be more effective. The evidence does not support that assumption and Ofsted have made it clear that they do not have a preference for smaller homes.