Dorset named in top 5 areas for children in care being moved miles away from their homes

It's due to a lack of suitable foster places

Author: PA news and Maria Greenwood Published 25th Apr 2023

It's emerged children in care here in Dorset are being moved miles away from their homes, sometimes to places they have never even heard of.

A charity's warned that in extreme cases some have been placed 500 miles away because of a lack of suitable foster carers,

The Become organisation has put Dorset in the top five areas with the highest rates of distant placements.

They say children who are moved more than 20 miles from home are more likely to have lower wellbeing and experience emotional difficulties than children who are placed closer to home, the organisation said.

It said it recognises that for some children it is right for them to be moved away to a different area to ensure their safety, protect them from exploitation, or to move them closer to other family members.

But the charity warned that a lack of suitable places in their local area means more and more children are being moved far away when it is not in their best interests.

It is calling on the Government and local authorities to "commit to stop children being placed miles from home, to publish strategies to increase the supply of appropriate local options and to recognise and register the number of times children are moved inappropriately".

The charity's findings came from Freedom of Information requests to the Department for Education (DfE) and to 151 local authorities in England between October 2022 and February this year.

A total of 138 local authorities (91%) responded but the charity said many were unable to provide full responses to the information request, and some local authorities were not able to provide any information.

The top five areas with the highest rates of distant placements (more than 20 miles from home) were Cumbria, Lincolnshire, Dorset, Cambridgeshire and Somerset, while the five with the lowest rates were Salford, Bolton, North Tyneside, Stockton-on-Tees and Trafford, the report said.

Katharine Sacks-Jones, chief executive of Become, said: "We hear time and again from the young people we work with that they've been made to move - often without warning - to an area they don't know, far away from everything that matters to them.

"Being moved can disrupt a child's education, life outcomes, and relationships - including with brothers and sisters who might live miles away. Poor transport links can make it difficult or even impossible for a young person to get to school or college, see their friends or stay connected to their community. Young people tell us how lonely, isolated, and stigmatised it makes them feel.

"It's unacceptable that children are being moved away, not because it's the right decision for them, but because there are no suitable options closer. It cannot continue.

"There are 82,000 children in care, more than ever before, with numbers continuing to rise. Without urgent action this problem will continue to get worse. We need a national commitment and strategy to keep children close to the people and places that matter to them. All children in care deserve the love and stability they need to heal and thrive."

The Local Government Association said: "We know that too many children are placed further from home than we would like, a result of what the Competition and Markets Authority described as 'dysfunctional children's social care market'.

"As the CMA recognised, councils cannot fix the market alone. The Government has committed to trialling two Regional Care Cooperatives to try to improve the availability of local placements, along with support for all councils with commissioning.

"However this will take time to see results, and better commissioning will not address a fundamental lack of suitable homes. Councils need support to increase sufficiency of placements quickly, with capital and revenue funding and support to roll-out those things that we already know work when it comes to recruiting and retaining foster carers."

A DfE spokesperson said: "Every child deserves to live in a safe and stable home and local authorities have a responsibility to place children in an environment that is in their best interests, usually within 20 miles of their home.

"We are investing ÂŁ259 million to create more placements for children in high-quality and safe homes, while developing a new model for care placements to keep more children close to home networks."

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