21 July 2014

Will every young person in care get the chance to Stay Put?

News and events

A requirement for local funding authorities to support young people living with their foster carer until the age of 21 requires adequate funding to make it a success. Amanda Cumberland, from TACT, wrote about the new Staying Put duty in the Guardian. The Staying Put duty is a requirement for local authorities to support arrangements where young people continue to live with their foster carer up to the age of 21 and has been lauded as the most significant reform for children in care for a generation.

The scheme offers young people a more natural transition to adulthood and independence. It provides the kind of support that any reasonable parent would provide for their children. When the state makes a conscious decision to intervene in the life of a child it has an obligation to do everything possible to help them into successful adulthood.

For too long, young people leaving care faced an abrupt transition to independence that has been described as instant adulthood. The consequences are clear in the outcomes for care leavers. There is a lot of evidence that young people leaving care are more likely to be Neet (not in education, employment or training), to become young parents, to experience homelessness and mental health problems, and to have contact with the criminal justice system.

The age at which children leave care, the speed of transition and maintaining secure attachments all help to give young people a better chance of good adult outcomes. Staying Put helps to ensure that young people experience a transition to adulthood similar to their peers, within a supportive family environment.

However, there are a number of significant challenges to implementing these reforms. It is unclear whether £40m funding, spread over three years and to every local authority in England, will be enough to ensure that authorities can properly support every arrangement.

The costs to local authorities will depend on the number of young people who choose to stay put, how long they stay for and the level of financial support offered to the carer. Local authorities must pay carers an allowance to cover the costs of the young person continuing to live with them. But unlike foster care, there are no national standards about the minimum allowance that carers should receive, and they are unlikely to receive any fee element in recognition of the expertise they bring to supporting the young adult in moving to independence.

The good practice guidance launched on Tuesday notes that this loss of income is one of the biggest obstacles to foster carers being able to offer Staying Put, and encourages local authorities to ensure no young person misses out just because their carer cannot afford it.

As Staying Put rolls out across England, there is a need to gather robust evidence about the real costs, barriers and obstacles. Without adequate funding based on a comprehensive understanding of the costs there are disincentives to encouraging more young people to take advantage of the scheme.

The nature and extent of independent fostering agencies’ obligations in relation to Staying Put is also unclear. Local authority commissioning increasingly requires agencies to commit to offering the scheme. This is a positive step, and some local authorities plan to work in partnership with independent agencies throughout the arrangement.

However, many local authorities say they plan to make Staying Put arrangements directly with the carer and young person, without involving the agency that has supported them throughout the fostering placement. Foster carers and young people therefore face losing consistency in the support they have previously received unless independent agencies fund this through their surplus or charitable income – an issue many are grappling with.

Amid so much uncertainty, one thing is clear: local authorities and independent agencies must work constructively together to ensure that every young person who wants to stay put gets the chance, and that carers get the support they need.

Amanda Cumberland is policy and parliamentary adviser at TACT. See more at www.tact.org.uk

Source- Cumberland, A (2014) ‘Will every young person get the chance to Stay Put?’, The Guardian, 16 July [Online]. Available at: http://www.theguardian.com/social-care-network/2014/jul/16/young-people-care-staying-put