By Jamie Waller, Local Democracy Reporter
Services for children in care “remain the weakest area” of Nottingham’s inadequate children’s services, inspectors have found.
The watchdog gave Nottingham City Council’s children’s services the lowest possible rating in 2022, with some young people left at risk of harm.
A fresh monitoring visit last month also found while there had been improvements in other areas, children in care services were still lagging behind.
Social workers for young people change too often and there are inconsistent levels of care plans and supervision, a letter published by Ofsted today (May 15) says.
However, recent staffing increases and extra funding offer hope standards can improve.
“Support to children in this part of the service has not seen the improvements evident in other service areas,” His Majesty’s Inspector Margaret Burke says in her letter.
“In this part of the service, many children experience too many changes of social workers and do not get the support they and their carers need at the time they most need it.”
Ofsted also found assessments weren’t always updated on time.
“Important life decisions are made about children without being informed by an up-to-date assessment or clear long-term plan,” the letter says.
Due to a shortage in suitable foster homes, some children are kept in “unsuitable family environments” longer than they should be.
Other children are placed in homes which aren’t fully registered with Ofsted, which the council says are given increased visits and scrutiny.
Some initial health assessments take days or weeks to complete when children are first taken into care.
More than half of staff posts are covered by agencies, although the number of permanent staff is gradually increasing thanks to investment.
The inspection found staff believe Nottingham City Council’s services are improving and were optimistic about the future.
“There is a recognition by leaders that despite whole-service developments across children’s services, the children in care service remains the weakest service area,” the letter says.
“Leaders acknowledge that there is much more to do to reach and sustain key service improvements for children in care.
“They have delivered improvements in other parts of the service and are confident that they now have many of the building blocks in place to do so for children in their care.”
The inspection acknowledges that the council is under “significant financial challenges”, with commissioners called in take over after it effectively declared bankruptcy last year.
The next monitoring inspection is due during the summer, and a full re-inspection is due in 2025.
Councillor Cheryl Barnard (Lab), Portfolio Holder for Children, Young People and Education, previously said: “We know there is still much work to be done and we continue to effect the positive change rightly expected by Ofsted to ensure all vulnerable children in Nottingham are well supported.
“Maintaining staffing levels remains challenging, not just locally but nationally, where the recruitment and retention of experienced social workers is difficult, and services rely heavily upon agency staffing.”