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Permanence Planning Guidance

Scope of this chapter

This chapter outlines the options for permanence that are available for children who are Looked After.

Relevant Regulations

Children Act 1989

Adoption and Children Act 2002

Related guidance

Amendment

This chapter was updated in January 2020 in line with the Children and Social Work Act 2017 and revised statutory guidance. These changes relate to the status of ‘previously looked after children’. A previously Looked After Child is one who is no longer looked after in England and Wales because they are the subject of an Adoption, Special Guardianship or Child Arrangements Order which includes arrangements relating to with whom the child is to live, or when the child is to live with any person, or has been adopted from ‘state care’ outside England and Wales. Children subject to a Adoption, Special Guardianship or Child Arrangements Order are entitled to support from their school, through the designated teacher.

January 31, 2020

Permanence is the long term plan for the child’s upbringing and provides an underpinning framework for all social work with children and their families from family support through to adoption. It ensures a framework of emotional, physical and legal conditions that gives a child a sense of security, continuity, commitment,identity and belonging.

The objective of planning for permanence is to ensure that children have a secure, stable and loving family to support them through childhood and beyond and to give them a sense of security, continuity, commitment, identity and belonging. It is also important to remember that older children and young people also need to achieve permanence in their lives although they may not wish (for a variety of reasons) to be in a foster home or to be adopted. For example, they may prefer to live in a children’s home where they can also achieve a sense of security and belonging.

The question "how are the child's permanence needs being met?" must be at the core of everything we do.

Where it is necessary for a child to leave his or her family:

  • This should be for as short a time as needed to secure a safe, supported return home; or
  • If a child cannot return home, plans must be made for alternate permanent care. Family members and friends should always be considered in the first instance with the permanence secured through the appropriate legal order to meet the child's needs;
  • Where it is not in the child's best interests to live within the family network, it will usually be in the interests of the child for alternative permanent carers to be identified and the placement secured through adoption, long term foster care, Child Arrangement Orders or Special Guardianship Orders;
  • Residential group living is provided only when a need for this is identified within the Care Plan and when substitute family care is not appropriate;
  • For older children arranging for their independent living must be considered.

Where it is clear that families and children are unable to live together, planning must be swift and clear to identify permanent alternative settings.

Wherever possible, care should be provided locally unless clearly identified as inappropriate.

Contact with the family, Connected Person and extended family should be facilitated and built on (unless clearly identified as inappropriate).

The professionals involved will work in partnership with parents/families to meet the above objectives. The wishes and feelings of the child will be taken into account. The older and more mature the child, the greater the weight should be given to his or her wishes.

Whilst it is important, when undertaking permanence planning, to promote the child's links with his or her racial, cultural and religious heritage, this should not be allowed to introduce delay in achieving permanence for the child.  Note that due consideration no longer has to be given to a child’s religious persuasion, racial origin and cultural and linguistic background when matching a child and prospective adopters.

The options for permanence are:

The first stage within permanence planning is work with families and children in need to support them staying together. Staying at home offers the best chance of stability. Research shows that family preservation has a higher success rate than reunification. This of course has to be balanced against the risk of harm to the child.

If the assessment concludes that the child cannot safely remain at home, every effort must be made to secure placement with a Connected Person. This will be either as part of the plan to work towards a return home or - if a return home is clearly not in the child's best interests - as the preferred permanence option. It is very important to establish at an early stage which relatives or friends might be available to care for the child, to avoid the kind of delays that can happen during court proceedings where this work has not been done.

See Placement for Adoption for detailed procedures.

Adoption transfers Parental Responsibility for the child from the birth parents and others who had Parental Responsibility, including the Local Authority, permanently and solely to the adopter(s).

The child is deemed to be the child of the adopter(s) as if he or she had been born to them. The child's birth certificate is changed to an adoption certificate showing the adopter(s) to be the child's parent(s). A child who is not already a citizen of the UK acquires British citizenship if adopted in the UK by a citizen of the UK.

Research strongly supports adoption as a primary consideration and as a main factor contributing to the stability of children, especially for those under four years of age who cannot be reunified with their birth or extended family.

Adopters may be supported, including financially, by the Local Authority and will have the right to request an assessment for support services at any time after the Order is made. See Adoption Support Services for detailed procedures. A child subject to an Adoption Order will be entitled to additional education and Early Years support. This will be accessed through the designated teacher in the child’s school/Early Years setting. (For further information see Supporting the Education and Promoting the Achievement of Children with a Social Worker, Looked After and Previously Looked After Children Procedure).

Adoption has the following advantages as a Permanence Plan:

  1. Parental Responsibility is held exclusively by the carers;
  2. The child is no longer Looked After;
  3. No future legal challenge to overturn the Adoption Order is possible;
  4. The child is a permanent family member into adulthood;
  5. As a previously Looked After Child, the child is entitled to additional education support throughout their school career.

Adoption has the following disadvantages as a Permanence Plan:

  1. It involves a complete and permanent legal separation from the family of origin;
  2. There is no review process.

Family finding should begin as soon as adoption is under consideration, and before the Agency Decision Maker decides that the child should be placed for adoption or a Placement Order is made.

When adoption is a possibility for a child, every effort will be made to reduce the delay in order for permanence to be achieved as speedily as possible and in the child’s timescale. There are particular points at which delay can occur.

Preferred option decision:

  • The IRO will require sight of all viability assessments prior to a preferred option decision;
  • At a Looked After Child’s Review the IRO can make a decision of a parallel plan: being adoption if a placement with a relative cannot be found;
  • The IRO may then go on to make a preferred option decision without a further LAC review if when all the viability assessments have been seen by the IRO they are all negative. In this situation the IRO will make a case note to state that the preferred option is now adoption due to the viability assessments being negative;
  • If a viability assessment is positive then a LAC review will need to be convened.

Decision to lodge:

Carers cannot lodge until the child has lived with them for 10 weeks.

  • If the carers are foster carers this means they can lodge as soon as they have the ADM’s decision (as the child will have been there for 10 weeks by this point). This means that at the LAC review prior to the matching panel the IRO can agree that lodging can take place as soon as the ADMs decision has been made;
  • If the carers are not foster carers, a decision can be made at any LAC review that the carers could lodge after the child has lived with them for 10 weeks. This may be appropriate if a baby is placed with a sibling who has already been adopted and every indication is that this is a suitable placement.

IRO’s are asked to work carefully with adopters after matching and placement when there looks to be delay in the adopters lodging and to be sensitive as to the reasons for this - and to make every effort for a resolution to be found.

Permanent Fostering has the following advantages as a Permanence Plan

A positive planned decision for:

  • Some children who it is not expected to be able to return to live permanently with their parents, or within their kinship network, during their childhood and beyond;

    AND

  • Those children for whom exiting the care system into a permanent, stable family is neither appropriate nor achievable.

This will include:

An expectation that the child will remain with carers for the duration of childhood and beyond

A statement of recognition jointly signed by the Locality Manager, Service Manager Fostering, birth parent(s) and carers.

An option to take appropriate exploratory steps to allow the child to be known by the carer's surname.

N.B. Legal Services advice should be sought regarding applying the Children Act 1989 Section 33.7 which allows this to happen with written agreement of all parties holding parental responsibility or by leave of the court.

Statutory requirements for Reviewing Children Looked After will continue. Independent Reviewing Officers will use their judgment about managing these requirements in a child friendly and appropriate way for a permanent fostering placement.

Statutory requirements for visiting frequency by the child(ren)'s social worker will continue.

Permanent Fostering is not:

  • A substitute to permanence planning via adoption. Adoption must be the preferred option for those children who cannot be reunited with their birth families, and for whom adoption is appropriate and achievable within realistic timescales;
    Complex contact arrangements in themselves should not be a reason for abandoning an adoption plan, but frequency should be realistic to secure stability for the child through adoption;
  • Permanent fostering is not an option for children living with relatives (see Volume 2);
  • Permanent Fostering is not an option for children whose foster carers may be willing to adopt with financial help. From February 2004, there were additional financial incentives for foster carers adopting a foster child;
  • Permanent fostering is not an option for foster carers who wish to take out a Child Arrangement Order on the child/ren they foster. This includes:
    • A guaranteed level of Child Arrangement Order Allowance;
    • On-going contact with their Fostering Supervising social worker where required as a signposting support to other services;
    • On-going involvement in their local fostering support group if required.

Permanent Fostering is:

A positive planned decision for:

  • Some children who it is not expected to be able to return to live permanently with their parents, or within their kinship network, during their childhood and beyond;

    AND

  • Those children for whom exiting the care system into a permanent, stable family as in 3.6 is neither appropriate or achievable.

ELIGIBILITY

Examples of eligible children include:

  • Children who have had 1 or more adoption breakdowns and now have an established, or developing relationship with current foster carers which would benefit from Permanent Fostering Status.
    N.B. Alternative strategies for children to exit to care system as in 2.1.3 must be explored, recorded on file and documented in statutory Review Recommendations.
    Children who do not wish to be adopted and who are of an age and understanding to offer an informed rationale for their views.
  • Children whom the Adoption & Permanent Fostering Tracking Meetings identify as having waited for 2 years since Adoption Panel approved the Adoption Plan without a successful match being identified.
  • Disabled Children who currently have no permanent alternative to residential care, and where parents agree to this plan acknowledging that family care offers advantages for their children;
  • Children identified as being hard to place for adoption and therefore most likely to wait long periods for potential matches e.g. some black children, some sibling groups. Advertising for a 'permanent' placement for these children may produce both adoption and permanent fostering enquiries.
  • Children where there is no expectation that the plan will change or that the child will return to the family at some later date.

DECISION MAKING PROCESSES

  • The Statutory Looked After Review will be the forum where recommendations regarding a Permanent Fostering Plan will be formally agreed;
    Review reports should clearly document:
    • Prior options considered in permanence planning for the children (as in section 2) and the work undertaken so far;
    • Reasons that Permanent Fostering is the preferred plan;
    • Consultation undertaken with birth parents, kinship network, other key operational staff, and their views and feelings about the plan.
  • For Children with Existing Foster Carers;
    If the Review decision is that the placement be assessed as a Permanent Fostering arrangement, the child care social worker and supervising social worker for the carer(s) will provide matching reports and present these to the Fostering Panel within 8 weeks of the Review decision (see Appendix 1: Identifying Permanence Options);
  • For Children Requiring a Permanent Fostering Placement, but not with Appropriate Carers;
    If the Review decision is to identify a new placement for the children which would be approved as a Permanent Fostering Placement, the child care social worker will refer the child's details and matching requirements to the Team Manager, Fostering for advertising. All matches of children with Permanent Foster Carers will be approved by the Fostering Panel;
  • For Children Known to be Hard to Place for Adoption;
    • Where the preferred plan is permanence through adoption BUT the expectation is that the child(ren) will be hard to place, the Adoption Panel will decide whether a 'permanent family' be advertised/sought through adoption or fostering;
      Such children may be initially identified at Adoption & Permanent Fostering Tracking Meetings;
    • Enquirers to 'permanent family' advertisements will initially be assessed by the County Adoption Team, the relevant Fostering Team, and the child care social worker. On-going assessments will be undertaken by either the County Adoption Team or the Fostering Team, in partnership with the child's social worker. These assessments will be presented to either Fostering or Adoption Panel depending on approval status;
      If the child is to be placed in a permanent fostering placement, the child care social worker will briefly update the Adoption Panel;
    • Children with a permanent fostering plan will be monitored by the Adoption and Permanent Fostering tracking meetings.

PERMANENT FOSTERING STATUS

This will include:

  • An expectation that the child will remain with carers for the duration of childhood and beyond (as opposed to long term fostering where the expectation is of 2 years plus);
  • A statement of recognition jointly signed by the Locality Manager, Service Manager Fostering, birth parent(s) and carers. (See attached);
  • An option to take appropriate exploratory steps to allow the child to be known by the carer's surname.

N.B. Legal Services advice should be sought regarding applying the Children Act 1989 Section 33.7 which allows this to happen with written agreement of all parties holding Parental Responsibility or by leave of the court.

  • Delegation of some responsibilities:
    • Agreeing overnight stays;
    • Agreeing day school trips with the exception of high risk activities;
    • Making routine medical and dental appointments;
    • Agreeing with the child and school GCSE and other courses;
    • Arranging timing of contact in liaison with relevant birth family;
    • Assisting and promoting the child's career choices.
  • Some decisions cannot legally be delegated:
    • Consenting to general anaesthetic;
    • Changing the child's school;
    • Changing the child's name (see above);
    • Consenting to trips abroad;
    • Changing frequency of contact without consultation with the Department.
  • Statutory requirements for Reviewing Children Looked After will continue. Independent Reviewing Officers will use their judgment about managing these requirements in a child friendly and appropriate way for a permanent fostering placement;
  • Statutory requirements for visiting frequency by the child(ren)'s social worker will continue;
  • Breakdowns of permanent placements should always be followed by a disruption meeting.

See Appendix 1: Identifying Permanence Options.

See  Special Guardianship Procedure for the detailed procedures.

Special Guardianship addresses the needs of a significant group of children, who need a sense of stability and security within a placement away from their parents but not the absolute legal break with their birth family that is associated with adoption. It can also provide an alternative for achieving permanence in families where adoption, for cultural or religious reasons, is not an option.

The following persons may apply:

  1. Any guardian of the child;
  2. A Local Authority foster carer with whom the child has lived for 1 year immediately preceding the application;
  3. Anyone who is named in a Child Arrangement Order as a person with whom the child is to live;
  4. Anyone with whom the child has lived for 3 out of the last 5 years;
  5. Where the child is subject of a Care Order, any person who has the consent of the Local Authority;
  6. Anyone who has the consent of all those with Parental Responsibility for the child e.g. Anyone, including the child, who has the leave of the court to apply.

The parents of a child may not become the child's special guardians.

Special Guardianship Orders offer greater stability and security to a placement than Child Arrangement Orders in that - whilst they are revocable, there are restrictions on those who may apply to discharge the Order and the leave of the Court, if required, will only be granted where circumstances have changed since the Special Guardianship Order was made.

Special guardians will have Parental Responsibility for the child and although this will be shared with the child's parents, the special guardian will have the legal right to make all day to day arrangements for the child. The parents will still have to be consulted and their consent required to the child's change of name, adoption, placement abroad for more than 3 months and any other such fundamental issues.

A Special Guardianship Order made in relation to a child who is the subject of a Care Order will automatically discharge the Care Order and the Local Authority will no longer have Parental Responsibility.

Special guardians may be supported financially or otherwise by the Local Authority and, as with adoptive parents, will have the right to request an assessment for support services at any time after the Order is made.

Special Guardianship has the following advantages as a Permanence Plan:

  1. The carers have Parental Responsibility and clear authority to make decisions on day to day issues regarding the child's care;
  2. There is added legal security to the Order in that leave is required for parents to apply to discharge the Order and will only be granted if a change of circumstances can be established since the original Order was made;
  3. It maintains legal links to the birth family;
  4. The child will no longer be in care and there need be no social worker involvement unless this is identified as necessary, in which case an assessment of the need for support must be made by the relevant Local Authority;
  5. As a previously Looked After Child, the child is entitled to additional education support throughout their school career.

Special Guardianship has the following disadvantages as a Permanence Plan:

  1. The Order only lasts until the child is 18 and does not necessarily bring with it the same sense of belonging to the special guardian's family as an Adoption Order does;
  2. As the child is not a legal member of the family, if difficulties arise there may be less willingness to persevere and seek resolution;
  3. Although there are restrictions on applications to discharge the Order, such an application is possible and may be perceived as a threat to the child's stability;
  4. Although a parent requires leave to apply for a Child Arrangement Order, they can apply for any other Section 8 Order (i.e. Child Arrangements Order, Prohibited Steps Order or Specific Issues Order) as of right.

Child Arrangements Orders were introduced in April 2014 by the Children and Families Act 2014 (which amended section 8 Children Act 1989). They replace Contact Orders and Residence Orders.

A Child Arrangements Order is a court order regulating arrangements relating to any of the following:

  1. With whom a child is to live, spend time or otherwise have contact; and
  2. When a child is to live, spend time or otherwise have contact with any person.

The 'residence' aspects of a Child Arrangements Order (i.e. with whom a child is to live/when a child is to live with any person) can last until the child reaches 18 years unless discharged earlier by the Court or by the making of a Care Order.

The ‘contact’ aspects of a Child Arrangements Order (with whom and when a child is to spend time with or otherwise have contact with) cease to have effect when the child reaches 16 years, unless the court is satisfied that the circumstances of the case are exceptional.

A person named in the order as a person with whom the child is to live, will have Parental Responsibility for the child while the order remains in force. Where a person is named in the order as a person with whom the child is to spend time or otherwise have contact, but is not named in the order as a person with whom the child is to live, the court may provide in the order for that person to have Parental Responsibility for the child while the order remains in force.

Child Arrangements Orders are private law orders, and cannot be made in favour of a Local Authority. Where a child is the subject of a Care Order, there is a general duty on the Local Authority to promote contact between the child and the parents. A Child Arrangements Order can be made under section 34 of the Children Act 1989 requiring the Local Authority to allow the child to have contact with a named person.

A court which is considering making, varying or discharging a Child Arrangements Orders, including making any directions or conditions which may be attached to such an order, must have regard to the paramountcy principle, the ‘no order’ principle and the welfare checklist under the Children Act 1989. 

Interim Child Arrangements Orders can be made.

Where a child would otherwise have to be placed with strangers, a placement with family or friends/Connected Persons may be identified as a preferred option and the carers may be encouraged and supported to apply for a Child Arrangements Orders where this will be in the best interests of the child.

The holder of a Child Arrangements Order does not have the right to consent to the child's adoption nor to appoint a guardian; in addition, he/she may not change the child's name nor arrange for the child's emigration without the consent of all those with Parental Responsibility or the leave of the court.

Whilst support may continue for as long as the Child Arrangements Order remains in force, the aim will be to make arrangements which are self-sustaining in the long run.

As was the case with Contact and Residence Orders, any person can apply for a Child Arrangements Order. The following can apply for a Child Arrangements Order without needing the leave of the court. In addition, any person who is not automatically entitled to apply for a Child Arrangements Order may seek leave of the court to do so:

  • Any parent (whether or not they have Parental Responsibility for the child), guardian or special guardian of the child;
  • Any person named, in a Child Arrangements Order that is in force with respect to the child, as a person with whom the child is to live;
  • Any party to a marriage (whether or not subsisting) in relation to whom the child is a child of the family - this allows step-parents (including those in a civil partnership) and former step-parents who fulfil this criteria to apply as of right;
  • Any person with whom the child has lived for a period of at least 3 years - this period need not be continuous but must not have begun more than 5 years before, or ended more than 3 months before, the making of the application; or
  • Any person:
    • Who has the consent of each of the persons in named in a Child Arrangements Order as a person with whom the child is to live;
    • In any case where there is an existing order for care in force, has the consent of each person in who favour the order was made;
    • In any case where the child is in the care of a Local Authority, who has the consent of that authority;
    • In whose favour a Child Arrangements Order has been made in relation to the ‘contact’ aspects and who has been awarded Parental Responsibility by the court (i.e. they would be able to apply for a Child Arrangements Order in relation to the ‘residence’ aspects);
    • In any other case, has the consent of everyone with parental responsibility for the child.
  • A Local Authority foster parent is entitled to apply for a child arrangements order relating to whom the child is to live, and/or when the child is to live any person, if the child has lived with him for a period of at least one year immediately preceding the application;
  • A relative of a child is entitled to apply for a child arrangements order relating to whom the child is to live, and/or when the child is to live any person, if the child has lived with the relative for a period of at least one year immediately preceding the application. (A relative is a child's grandparent, brother, sister, uncle or aunt (by full or half blood), or by marriage or civil partnership).

A Child Arrangements Order specifying with whom the child is to live has the following advantages:

  1. It gives Parental Responsibility to the carer whilst maintaining the parents' Parental Responsibility;
  2. The child will no longer be Looked After and there need be no social work involvement, therefore, unless this is identified as necessary;
  3. There is no review process;
  4. The child will not be Looked After and so less stigma is attached to the placement;
  5. A child subject to a Child Arrangements Order will be entitled to additional education support throughout their school career.

A Child Arrangements Order has the following disadvantages:

  1. It is less secure than Adoption or Special Guardianship in that an application can be made to revoke the Order. However, the Court making the order can be asked to attach a condition refusing a parent's right to seek revocation without leave of the court;
  2. There is no formal continuing support to the family after the Order is made although in some instances, a Child Arrangements Order Allowance may be payable by the Local Authority;
  3. There is no professional reviewing of the arrangements after the Order unless a new application to court is made, for example by the parents for contact or revocation. (NB New applications to court may be expensive to defend, and the carers would have to bear the cost if not entitled to assistance with legal costs).

Please see the separate chapter Placements in Foster Care for details regarding the appropriate making of long-term foster placements.

For those children who remain Looked After an important route to permanence is long-term foster care. Where the permanence plan for the child is longer-term foster care this may be where the current short-term foster placement is assessed to meet the long term needs of the child for permanence or where a new placement is identified for a child as a result of an assessment and matching process.

This option has proved to be particularly useful for older children who retain strong links to their birth families and do not want or need the formality of adoption and where the carers wish for the continued involvement of the Local Authority.

Long-term fostering has the following advantages as a Permanence Plan:

  1. The Local Authority retains a role in negotiating between the foster carers and the birth family over issues such as contact;
  2. There is continuing social work support to the child and foster family in a placement that is regularly reviewed to ensure that the child's needs are met;
  3. It maintains legal links to the birth family who can still play a part in the decision making for the child.

Long-term fostering has the following disadvantages as a Permanence Plan:

  1. Lack of Parental Responsibility for the carers;
  2. Continuing social work involvement;
  3. Regular Looked After Reviews, which may be regarded as destabilising to the placement;
  4. Stigma attached to the child due to being in care;
  5. The child is not a legal member of the family. If difficulties arise there may be less willingness to persevere and seek resolution;
  6. Post care and/or post 18 the carers have no legal responsibility towards the young person.

Where a child is placed with long term carers, it is important that the child has access to the friends, family or community within which they were brought up and which form part of their identity and their long term support network. For these reasons children should be placed in local provision wherever possible.

Any decision to place a child away from his or her community should be based on the particular needs of the child, and considered within the context of a Permanence Plan. Where an alternative family placement is sought in the area of another Local Authority, the likely availability and cost of suitable local resources to support the placement must be explored. In the case of an adoptive placement, this will be required as part of the assessment of need for adoption support services (see Adoption Support Services Procedure), but should be carried out in relation to any permanent placement.

See Out of Area Placement Procedure

Assessments of a child's needs in relation to his or her Permanence Plan must:

  1. Focus on outcomes;
  2. Consider stability issues, including the child's and family's needs for long-term support and the child's needs for links, including contact, with his or her parents, siblings, and wider family network.

Social workers must ensure the child's Permanence Plan is clearly linked to previous assessments of the child's needs.

Appendix 1: Identifying Permanence Options presents a brief, research-based checklist of considerations about Adoption, Child Arrangement Orders, Special Guardianship Orders and Long-term Fostering.

In considering the child's needs, full consultation with family and community networks should be undertaken to establish the child's attachments and supports.

In all cases, the child's own wishes and feelings must be ascertained and taken into account.

By the time of the second Looked After Review, the child must have a Permanence Plan (incorporated into the Care Plan), to be presented for consideration at the review.

Where the Permanence Plan includes a Parallel Plan, the social worker must ensure that the parents are informed of the reasons why two plans are being made to meet the child's needs and prevent unnecessary delay.

The following practice guidance is not exhaustive. It is drawn from research and consultation with young people, parents, carers and practitioners.

Research points to:

  • The importance of clearly communicating to the family what needs to happen to enable the child to return home, and within what timescales;
  • The importance of exploring family ties and long term relationships with family, school and community;
  • The use of Family Group Conferences as an effective way of facilitating both the above.

The permanency planning process, informed by multi-agency contributions, will identify which permanence option is most likely to meet the needs of the individual child, taking account of their wishes and feelings.

Issues to consider:

  • The assessment process must ask how stability for this child will be achieved;
  • Long term stability means the sense of a permanent home with the same family or group of people, as part of the same community and culture, and with long-term continuity of relationships and identity;
  • Short or medium term stability or continuity will be important for children who are going to stay in care for a brief period before going home and for children who are going to need new permanent arrangements. The quality of a child's attachments and life will be detrimentally affected by uncertainties, separations from what /who is known and changes of school and placement;
  • Educational experiences, links with extended family, hobbies and friendships and support to carers, contribute to guarding against disruption and placement breakdown;
  • The importance of carefully listening to what children want from the placement, helping the relationship between carer and child to build, making thorough plans around contact with family, providing vigorous support during crisis times and taking a sufficiently flexible attitude to adoption by carers;
  • The older a child is, the less likely it is that the child will secure a permanent family through adoption;
  • The larger the family group of children, the harder it is to secure a single placement that will meet all the needs of all the children.

Social workers are encouraged to consider working to this model; working towards a child's return home whilst at the same time developing an alternative Permanence Plan, within strictly limited timescales.

Where children's cases are before the court in Care Proceedings, the Court require parallel planning to be reflected in the Care Plan - see also Statutory Guidance for Local Authorities and Public Law Outline.

In some applications for a Care Order, it becomes apparent that adoption is the preferred option should a care order be made at the final hearing. Serious delay can be caused if no preparatory work has been completed on the understanding that we have to wait until the final court hearing. However, because each child and family situation is different, guidance setting out the preferred approach has to take account of the need for flexibility.

Parallel Planning means that the Local Authority identifies the possible assessments and processes needed at the start of a case, or at some stage during the assessment, and pursues these simultaneously as far as possible.

In those cases where the facts of the case remain in dispute up to the final hearing, it may be difficult to do detailed preparatory work concerning possible adoptive placement prior to that hearing. However, it should normally be possible to explain, within the Care Plan, the principal steps that need to take place and within what timescale before an adoptive placement can be made. This would include those cases where it is necessary to timetable therapeutic work with the child in order to prepare the child for placement.

Even where the facts are not disputed and the preferred option in the Care Plan is adoption, it is essential that sufficient assessment has taken place for Children's Social Care Service to have decided against rehabilitation or placement with relatives. When adoption has been confirmed as the preferred option by the Local Authority, the following should always be addressed:

  • An adoption plan can only be made at a Looked After Review, with legal advice having been sought. The Review should include a Children's Services Team Manager perspective;
  • County Adoption Service must be notified within 7 days of the Review decision;
  • The Child and Family Assessment should be completed as far as possible, including obtaining relevant medical and other details from the parents, even though this may be difficult;
  • The Adoption Panel should consider the case, with a view to making a recommendation on whether an adoption plan is in the child's best interests, prior to the final care hearing;
  • An application for a Placement Order should be initiated alongside the Care Proceedings;
  • The Local Authority should have identified the key steps and timetable, including family finding and any necessary therapy, and issues of contact (for inclusion in the Care Plan) which would lead to an adoptive placement, if the court made a care order;
  • It is not appropriate for there to have been introductions between the child and any prospective adopters before the Care Order and the Placement Order have been granted;
  • The Care Plan should include a contingency plan for use in specified circumstances if the preferred option for adoption cannot be achieved.

Throughout care proceedings involving Parallel Planning processes, parents need to be communicated with in an open and honest manner, so they fully understand their rights and the reasons for whatever actions social workers are undertaking in respect of their children.

See also Early Permanence: Fostering for Adoption, Concurrent Planning and Temporary Approval as Foster Carers of Approved Prospective Adopters Procedure

Wherever it is in the best interests of each individual child, siblings should be placed together. Being able to live with brothers and sisters where they are also Looked After is an important protective factor for many Looked After children. Positive sibling relationships provide support both in childhood and adulthood and can be particularly valuable during changes in a young person’s life, such as leaving care.

A number of factors however, can militate against achieving the positive placement of brothers and sisters together – they may have entered care at different times and/or they may have very different needs related to past experiences, current emotional and behavioural development and age, especially where there are significant age differences. There may be practical difficulties in accommodating large sibling groups together. In some circumstances a child may have been abused by a brother or sister. An understanding of family functioning and family history, providing appropriate support to all parties, as well as listening to the wishes and feelings of children, are therefore key to informing these judgements.

There are often some practical steps that can be taken to overcome some of the more logistical reasons for being unable to place sibling groups together. Where siblings placed together in foster care may be separated when one turns 18, consideration should be given to whether Staying Put arrangements may be beneficial for all the children involved.

There will, however, always be circumstances in which it is not possible to place siblings together and children should be supported to understand why they cannot live with their siblings. In these circumstances where it is in the best interests of each individual child, sibling contact should be promoted and maintained.

If it is likely that brothers and sisters who are not able to be placed together at the start of a care episode will remain Looked After for the medium to long term, arrangements should be made as part of each child’s Care Plan which will enable brothers and sisters to live together, taking into account the other factors.

Where the plan is for adoption, in order to reduce delay, an early decision should be taken as to whether it is in the best interests of each child to be placed together or separately, and the impact on each child of that decision. The decision should be based on a balanced assessment of the individual needs of each child in the group, and the likely or possible consequences of each option on each child. Factors that may need to be considered will include: the nature of the sibling group (do the siblings know each other/ how are they related); whether the children have formed an attachment; the health needs of each child; and each child’s view (noting that a child’s views and perceptions will change over time).

Contact must always be for the benefit of the child, not the parents or other relatives.

It may serve one or all of the following functions:

  • To maintain a child's identity. Consolidating the new with the old;
  • To provide reassurance for the child;
  • To provide an on-going source of information for the child;
  • To give the child continuing permission to live with the adoptive family;
  • To minimise the sense of loss;
  • To assist with the process of tracing;
  • To give the adopters a secure sense of the right to parent. This will make the parenting task easier.

Direct contact will generally work best if all parties accept/agree to

  1. The plan for permanence;
  2. The parental role of the permanent carers;
  3. The benefit of contact;
  4. The adoptive parents being present.

Direct contact is not likely to be successful in situations where a parent:

  • Disagrees with the plan for permanence;
  • Does not accept the parental role of the permanent carer and their own minimal role with the child;
  • Has proved to be unreliable in their commitment to contact in the past;
  • Has not got a significant attachment with the child.

The wishes of the child to join a new family without direct contact, must be considered and given considerable weight at any age.

If direct contact is a part of the Permanence Plan, a formal agreement setting out how contact will take place, who with, where and how frequently must be negotiated before placement, and reviewed regularly throughout the child's life.

We do not all share the same sense of family - it means different things to different people. It helps when children are helped to understand to whom they are related, especially if they have complicated family trees including half-brothers or sisters living in different places. Identity is built on solid information.

Wherever possible, indirect contact between the child and his or her new family with people from the past should be facilitated;

  1. To leave open channels of communication in case more contact is in the child's interests in the future;
  2. To provide information (preferably two-way) to help the child maintain and enhance their identity and to provide the birth relative with some comfort in knowing of the child's progress.

Indirect contact must be negotiated prior to placement, and all parties should be asked to enter into an agreement with one another about the form and frequency that the contact will take. Renegotiations of the contact should only take place if the child's needs warrant it.

All parties to the agreement will need to accept that as the child becomes older and is informed more fully about the arrangements for indirect contact, the child will have a view regarding its continuation. No contact arrangements can be promised to remain unaltered during the child's childhood. Those involved need to accept that contact may cease if it is no longer in the child's interests. Alternatively, an older child may need to change to direct contact.

  • Communicating a Permanence Plan effectively involves setting it out clearly and concisely as part of the Care Plan, in a way that acts as a useful reference to all involved during the Review process;
  • Good quality Care Plans set out clear, concise statements about intended outcomes;
  • Make timescales clear.

For younger children unable to be returned home where adoption is the plan, a Care Order and Placement Order are likely to be necessary unless parents are clearly relinquishing the child and are in agreement with the plan and the placement choice

For children for whom adoption is not appropriate, each case will need to be considered on its merits. The decision between Special Guardianship Order, Child Arrangement Order and Long Term Fostering under a Care Order will depend on the individual needs of the child set alongside the advantages and disadvantages of each legal route.

Last Updated: January 12, 2024

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