Introduction
This strategy relates to young people who are preparing to leave care between the ages of 16 and 17, or who have left care and are between the ages of 16 and 25.
Legislation and policy that has influenced our work with young people, our ambition for care leavers and the development of this strategy include:
- Children Act (1989) Housing Act (1996)
- Children Leaving Care Act (2000)
- Mental Health Act (2007)
- Children and Young Person Act (2008)
- Care Leavers Strategy (2013)
- Working together to Safeguard Children (2018)
- Tackling Child Sexual Exploitation (2013)
- the Children and Families Act (2014)
- Care Act (2014)
- Future in mind promoting, protecting and improving our children and young people’s mental health and wellbeing (2015)
- Care Leavers Transition to Adulthood - National Audit Office (2015)
- Keep on Caring – Supporting young people from Care to Independence (2016)
- Ending Gang Violence and Exploitation (2016)
- In Care, Out of Trouble (2016)
- Children and Social Work Act (2017)
- Rough Sleeping Strategy
- Pan Dorset Protocol to Reduce Criminalisation of Children and Young People in Care
- The National Implementation Advisor for Care Leavers published his first annual report into the care leavers’ landscape in December 2018
Historically, many of our Care Leavers are children who have come into our care and have remained in care for longer. As a result of this we are now seeing an increasing number of young people with care leaver entitlements, and we expect these numbers to grow as responsibilities for care leavers were amended in the Children and Social Work Act 2017, extending corporate parenting responsibilities to all local authorities, and extending support to the age of 25.
Young people leaving care are one of the most vulnerable groups in our society. Research and shows they face greater health problems, lower education attainment than their peers and higher levels of unemployment. In common with other leaving care services, we know that many young people struggle to access support for emotional wellbeing and mental health. Through New Belongings the Care Leavers Team are listening to young people and working with the CCG and the Child in Care Health Service to provide a more responsive and earlier interventions to promote wellbeing and positive emotional health.
Dorset Council Care Leavers Team is currently supporting over 540 children in care and care leavers. This Care Leaver Strategy sets out the importance of providing care leavers with access to the same level of care and support that other young people get from their parent, holding in mind our corporate parenting objectives to ensure services are “good enough for my child’.
Our Dorset Children Thrive model, launched in September 2020, brings together many services and supports for children and families into six integrated locality teams across Dorset, supported by a central team of specialist services. Dorset’s Care Leavers Team sits within central services and from September 2020 the service has extended to become a 16+ service, with personal advisers supporting 16 and 17-year-old children in care alongside their locality and permanence team Social Workers.
Dorset’s 6 priorities for children inform and shape both this strategy and Dorset’s Local Offer to care leavers:
- Better start in life.
- Young and thriving.
- Good care provision.
- The best education for all.
- Delivering locally.
- Best place to live .