The main piece of legislation governing child protection is the 1989 Children Act. The Act was passed in the wake of the Cleveland scandal, in which allegations of sexual abuse by two consultant paediatricians at one hospital led to 121 children being removed from their homes. The Act clearly states that there should be “minimum intervention in family life” and that a court order should be made only if “it can be shown that this is better for the child than not making an order”.
Yet some parts of the country seem to have strayed a long way from that. This year, the education watchdog Ofsted became the regulator for Cafcass, the Children and Family Court Advisory and Support Service that provides guardians ad litem for children in care cases. Ofsted’s first two reports so far have been devastating. “Inspectors could not find evidence,” Ofsted says, “about how service managers satisfy themselves that family court advisers are reaching sound conclusions in order to make the right recommendations to courts about children’s lives”. It found that “most reports contain recommendations to the court that fail to take account of a key principle of the Children Act that there should be minimum state intervention in family life”. There is much more in similar vein. The hapless state of Cafcass is failing both children of innocent parents and children who are genuinely at risk.
Cafcass is one safeguard in the system that is manifestly failing. Another safeguard is that local authorities cannot remove children without a court order. But the manner in which these court orders are sought means that they are rarely refused (the Government has been unable to give me a single example of a refusal). Parents are not always informed that an order is even being sought, so are not able to defend themselves. Even if they are there, the momentum is unstoppable.
Bill Bache, the indefatigable solicitor who acted for Sally Clark, explained it to me this way. “Court proceedings are initiated within a day or two. The local authority knows the ropes. Most parents, including the brightest and most articulate, are often too distressed and shocked to think straight. They may well turn up unrepresented. The local authority makes its case, often in lurid terms, stressing that the children are in acute danger and they are requesting an immediate interim care order. There is no time sensibly to evaluate the evidence, therefore, no doubt wishing to be safe rather than sorry, the court grants the order. Suddenly the children are gone.”
It is impossible to describe the shock, the isolation, that parents feel once their child is gone. Even educated people who can afford a good lawyer struggle to think straight. They feel alone against the system. Judges rely on reports by experts, social workers and guardians, many of whom are used to working together. This can produce a fatal lack of objectivity. I have spoken to some exemplary social workers and judges in the past few years. It is not my intention to demonise them all. But we must be able to spot whether the same individuals are reaching erroneous conclusions over and over again. At the moment any expert, social worker or judge who makes mistakes, goes beyond their brief or is on a crusade against parents is virtually immune from scrutiny. They do not expect that their evidence or their judgments will ever be made public. Remember that Professor Roy Meadow was only uncovered because he gave misleading evidence in the criminal courts, which are open. If family courts remain closed we will never be able to feel sure that justice is being done.
Over the next few days I hope to paint a more detailed picture of the pieces of the secret state, offer some explanations as to why mistakes are made, and to outline some solutions. The Times’ interest is more than theoretical: we will continue to challenge various injunctions in the courts. But we also need your help by asking you to write to your MP. We will not give up. Because to sever a child from its family without due cause is licensed state oppression of the worst kind. It is, in fact, child abuse.
Family justice
Why the Government must act
Privacy laws are designed to protect at-risk children. Yet these same laws are cited to prevent local authority childcare professionals, expert witnesses and guardians from being subjected to scrutiny for decisions that can tear families apart.
The system claims that the welfare of children is paramount. But the only way to make the welfare of children paramount is to make childcare professionals properly accountable for their decisions.
The press is allowed to report the workings of the criminal courts, even in rape cases, where victim identities are kept confidential. Yet it is denied access to the family courts that make decisions with far-reaching consequences. In 2005 the Constitutional Affairs Select Committee advised that more transparency was needed and that family courts should be opened to the press in all but exceptional circumstances.
The Government consulted on the proposals, recognising that public confidence was plummeting. But it lost its nerve. The Ministry for Justice has yet to publish the results of a second consultation, which ended last October.
Eight months later the Government cannot even say when it will respond to the consultation.
Comments
2 responses to “Family justice: the secret state that steals our children”
Smacking is child abuse
Smacking is child abuse says Mother of all Mothers Ms Sue Bradford (Greens), NZ’s 2nd female PM Miss Clark(Labour), Childrens Commissioner Cindy Kiro, Jim Anderton.
United Future Peter Dunne’s DONE dictating as Gordon Copeland and Larry Baldock (Kiwi Party) listened to 8 out of 10 Kiwis, dropping Dunne.
Dobbing parents in for using a smack to protect or correct children results in prosecuted parents but John Key plus all in the National Party except Katherine Rich promise to reject the May 2007 antismacking law immediately a parent’s jailed for a smack. Presently Police waste time investigating each reported smack so historic Section 59 must be restored; it’s reasonable and worked, thanks to Sheryl Savill’s Petition for a Referendum submitted to Parliament 23rd June with 390,000 signatures.
Believing a Smack is actually Abuse are organisations Barnadoes NZ, Plunket (only God knows why this Labour Government slashed funding to Plunket Nurse home visits which recognized at-risk babies instantly), Save the Children, Unicef, National Network Stopping Violence Services, EPOCH NZ, National Collective of Independent Women’s Refuges.
Christine Rankin (For the Sake of our Children Trust) and Simon Barnett (presently TV Host of Stars In Their Eyes) both know (stated publicly on TV3 Campbell Live smacking debate 2/4/07) that employees in these organisations don’t agree that a stinging smack should be a crime, so speaking smacking and bashing in the same breath is disgusting.
Maxim Institute’s Bruce Logan’s positive story on legal smackers in France, Chris Carter’s article in the monthly Investigate Magazine puts smacking in perspective.
Britain’s headline news rejects antismacking law so Bishop Brian Tamaki, Richard Lewis (Family Party) John Tamahere & Lyndsay Perigo (Radio Live), Rodney Hide & Heather Roy (Act Party) Bob McCoskrie (Familyfirst) speak similar language.
Enough is enough truth will prevail as Men and Woman attack laws that harm Mums and Dad regardless of the PC Brigade’s beliefs – binning Bradford’s Bill.
Thanks !