Staffordshire County council "committed to improving", after inspection report

Author: Adam FawcettPublished 13th Jan 2024

Staffordshire County Council say they are committed to improving children’s services after a critical inspection report.

The service was inspected by Ofsted over a period of a week in November

The regulator has now produced a report which has found that the service ‘requires improvement to be good’.

Mark Sutton, Staffordshire County Council’s Cabinet member for Children and Young People, said: “Child protection services in Staffordshire have been rated ‘good’ for a decade so this result is very disappointing.

“We accept the findings and I can assure everyone who will be concerned by this news that protecting vulnerable young people is a priority and we are committed to putting this right as quickly as possible.

“What gives me encouragement for the task ahead is that we have front line staff that we can be proud of; hard-working professionals who make a positive difference on a daily basis and we have already begun making the necessary changes to better support them in their work.”

Following its inspection in November 2023, Ofsted praised provision for the 1,345 children and young people in care.

However, it also criticised other aspects of the children’s social care service, including inconsistent oversight of cases, initial assessments taking too long to complete, and insufficient practical support for those leaving care.

Now the council says it's committing to a series of actions, including :

• stronger performance targets with more structured monitoring;

• a clearer escalation process for children and young people if they feel progress on issues isn’t fast enough;

• closer cooperation with health and housing providers;

• more sampling of work;

• better provision of broadband access for care leavers to support their first independent steps.

Staffordshire County Council is currently supporting 5,042 children, of which 1,345 are in care, and has seen its budget rise by 152 per cent since 2009.