• Labour needs the will to solve social care crisis | Letters

    Labour needs the will to solve social care crisis | Letters
    A free adult social care system modelled on one already in operation in a London borough is achievable, according to Sally Powell and Stephen Burke. Plus a letter from John Ransford A royal commission on the future of social care (Editorial, 3 December) would be yet another example of how successive governments have kicked the care can further down the road. Older and disabled people, and their families, are desperate for the government to sort out the care crisis once and for all. With its larg
  • ‘Free and impartial’ addiction helplines paid secret commission by rehabs

    ‘Free and impartial’ addiction helplines paid secret commission by rehabs
    Advertising regulator reprimands services that claim to offer unbiased advice but then direct people to partner facilitiesHelplines that claim to offer “free” and “impartial” addiction support have been reprimanded by the advertising watchdog for hiding the fact they are paid thousands in commission by private rehabilitation clinics.Amid record drug death rates and high demand for services, one website is promising “free, impartial, expert” advice for those tr
  • Sara Sharif told social worker ‘they don’t hit me’ four years before her murder

    Sara Sharif told social worker ‘they don’t hit me’ four years before her murder
    When she was six, Sara complained that her mother hit her, but that her father and stepmother, who were convicted of her murder, didn’tSara Sharif told a social worker she felt safe living with her father and stepmother because “they don’t hit me”, four years before she died from their brutal campaign of torture.The schoolgirl’s haunting words are buried in hundreds of pages of private family court papers that were disclosed after an application by media organisatio
  • Breaking the social care reform logjam | Letters

    Breaking the social care reform logjam | Letters
    Cross-party buy-in is essential. This cannot be a government-only solution, writes Paul BurstowThe “deep reform” that social care needs (Editorial, 3 December) must break the cycle of short-term fixes and insufficient funding, which leaves the sector in a perpetual state of uncertainty – forever playing the role of Oliver Twist asking for more, yet lacking long-term security.A better-funded version of the current system won’t suffice to address the profound demographic, s
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  • These women lost their children because they were lesbians – why can’t the government say sorry? | Sophie Wilkinson

    These women lost their children because they were lesbians – why can’t the government say sorry? | Sophie Wilkinson
    As late as the 1990s, the law sided with fathers over custody on the basis of a woman’s sexuality. I detailed the scandal for Radio 4,and was shocked at the cruelty involvedI am more than just aware of the faint outlines of queer history – it is something I see in Technicolour. I immerse myself in lesbian books, films and art, and have written all sorts of articles about contemporary lesbianism. It is for this reason that I was shocked to learn only recently of the state having remov
  • Judge in Sara Sharif case warns of ‘dangers’ of automatic right to home school children

    Judge in Sara Sharif case warns of ‘dangers’ of automatic right to home school children
    Judge says killers home schooled Sara as a ‘ruse’ to hide evidence of 10-year-old’s repeated beatings A senior judge who jailed the killers of Sara Sharif has said the 10-year-old’s murder “starkly illustrates the dangers” of parents automatically being able to homeschool their children.Sara had twice been pulled out of school by her father, Urfan Sharif, and stepmother, Beinash Batool, as a “ruse adopted for wholly selfish purposes” to cover up ev
  • Home schooling laws to be tightened up after murder of Sara Sharif

    Home schooling laws to be tightened up after murder of Sara Sharif
    Ten-year-old was murdered by her father and stepmother after being taken out of school to be educated at homeMeasures to tighten up home schooling in England in the wake of 10-year-old Sara Sharif’s murder at the hands of her father and stepmother are to be unveiled in a bill before parliament on Tuesday.The children’s wellbeing and schools bill will enable the government to introduce registers to identify and keep track of children not in school, while parents seeking to educate the
  • Why do we keep failing abused children like Sara Sharif? | Letters

    Why do we keep failing abused children like Sara Sharif? | Letters
    Readers on the death of the 10-year-old girl at the hands of her father and stepmother and the grave weaknesses in the child protection system The death of Sara Sharif yet again highlights failures to properly assess risk and protect children (What were the missed chances to prevent Sara Sharif’s death?, 11 December). But what will we learn from it? How depressing to read the statement of the children’s commissioner for England, Rachel de Souza, which says: “We can have no more
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  • Sara Sharif’s grandfather vows to keep her siblings in Pakistan as vigil is held

    Sara Sharif’s grandfather vows to keep her siblings in Pakistan as vigil is held
    Muhammed Sharif goes to high court in Lahore and says ‘safest place’ for his other grandchildren is with himSara Sharif’s grandfather said he will fight to keep her siblings in Pakistan, calling it the “safest place for them”, as a vigil was held for the murdered 10-year-old in Surrey.Muhammad Sharif said he would appeal to the high court in Pakistan to stop Sara’s five siblings from being returned to the UK. Continue reading...
  • Sara Sharif’s grandfather vows to keep her siblings in Pakistan as vigil held for murdered girl

    Sara Sharif’s grandfather vows to keep her siblings in Pakistan as vigil held for murdered girl
    Hundreds pay respects to 10-year-old as Muhammed Sharif says ‘safest place’ for his other grandchildren is with himMoves to appeal after court upholds ban on naming judges who presided over Sara Sharif hearingsSara Sharif’s grandfather said he will fight to keep her siblings in Pakistan, calling it the “safest place for them”, as a vigil was held for the murdered 10-year-old in Surrey.Muhammad Sharif said he would appeal to the high court in Pakistan to stop Sara&rs
  • At last, a group of MPs intent on reforming our madly unfair council tax | Heather Stewart

    The system relies on valuations from 1991, when Gorbachev was in power, but has become politically untouchable“It’s a fairness thing. Just the idea that somebody sitting in a two-bedroom house in Hartlepool is paying more council tax than somebody who’s living in a mansion – it’s just offensive.”The Labour backbencher Jonathan Brash, Hartlepool’s MP, is on a mission to draw attention to an issue he jokingly calls “the third rail of British politics
  • Inexperienced social worker did not identify Sara Sharif’s father as posing any risk

    Inexperienced social worker did not identify Sara Sharif’s father as posing any risk
    The murdered girl had been allowed to live with her father, who had repeatedly attracted the attention of police and social workers• Moves to appeal after court upholds ban on naming judges who presided over Sara Sharif hearingsAn inexperienced social worker tasked by a local authority with assessing Sara Sharif’s parents did not identify her father as posing any risk despite noting safeguarding concerns.The social worker’s report, described as “very thorough”, was s
  • Down by the sea: poverty brings Blackpool life expectancy to UK low

    Resort town struggles with squalid housing, poor nutrition for children and now, statistics show, earlier deathsIt is a league table that no one wants to top. For the first time in 20 years, Blackpool, a once-glamorous seaside resort, this week overtook Glasgow to have the lowest average male life expectancy in the UK.Men born in Blackpool will now live until just after their 73rd birthday on average, according to the Office for National Statistics (ONS) study, six years less than the average in
  • Teresa Smith obituary

    Teresa Smith obituary
    My wife, Teresa Collingwood Smith, has died after a short illness, aged 82. Like her father, RG Collingwood, a philosopher and archaeologist, and her grandfather, WG Collingwood, an artist, writer and secretary to John Ruskin, Teresa is hard to pigeonhole. She was a successful Oxford academic, and also an experienced community organiser and activist with the ability to act as a catalyst for others.From an early age, Teresa, her mother Kate (nee Edwardes), and grandmother, lived with another fami
  • The Guardian view on social care: reformers must reclaim the initiative | Editorial

    Labour pledged ‘deep reform’ of this flawed and complex system. A royal commission could shape a consensusThe sooner the government brings forward social care proposals the better. The lack of further detail about a manifesto commitment to “deep reform” has been a disappointment of Labour’s first months in office. Assisted dying and palliative care are a largely separate issue, relating to the last six months of life rather than the long-term (and sometimes lifelong
  • Only proper funding can rescue social care | Letters

    Only proper funding can rescue social care | Letters
    Inadequate funding of adult social care in England has a harmful knock-on effect on the NHS, writes Laura DaviesThe Nuffield Trust’s warning that parts of the adult social care market in England could collapse is a stark reminder of the challenges facing the sector (Large parts of adult social care market in England face collapse, thinktank warns, 22 November).Recent national insurance and minimum wage increases, which the thinktank said could drive costs up by £2.8bn for private and
  • The Observer view on the disturbing prevalence of child sexual abuse in the home | Observer editorial

    The Observer view on the disturbing prevalence of child sexual abuse in the home | Observer editorial
    The idea of children being abused within their family is too upsetting for adults to contemplate. But we must‘I wanted them all to notice.” This is the title of a new report on protecting children from sexual abuse within the family, taken from an interview with a child who was sexually abused and failed by the agencies that should have protected them. The report by the Child Safeguarding Practice Review Panel (CSPRP) reviewed 136 cases of serious child sexual abuse from between 2018
  • Janie Thomas obituary

    My mother, Janie Thomas, a social worker and lecturer, who has died aged 95, became a leading light in the British Association of Social Workers (BASW), of which she was president from 1984 to 1986.She began her career in 1955 at St George’s hospital, central London, before working with children and families at the London county council (LCC) and then the borough of Tower Hamlets. In 1964 she switched into academia, lecturing in social work at the London School of Economics (LSE) for more
  • Safeguarding agencies ‘ignoring children abused by family members’ in England

    Safeguarding agencies ‘ignoring children abused by family members’ in England
    ‘Worrying evaporation’ in skills among professionals meant to protect victims of intrafamilial sexual abuse, report saysSafeguarding agencies are failing to listen to children who have been sexually abused by family members with devastating consequences, amid a “worrying evaporation” of skills among the professionals meant to protect them, a report has found.A review of the experiences of 193 children in England who were victims of sexual abuse by a family member found se
  • More foster carers in England leaving than signing up, says Ofsted report

    More foster carers in England leaving than signing up, says Ofsted report
    Children’s campaigners say ‘national crisis’ adds to trauma for vulnerable young people, amid huge fall in numbers fosteringThe number of foster carers in England has sunk to a 10-year low, prompting urgent calls for the recruitment of thousands more families, improved retention and moves to tackle a “national crisis” that is exacerbating trauma for the most vulnerable children in society.The latest figures produced by Ofsted show the number of foster carers fell fr
  • Large parts of adult social care market in England face collapse, thinktank warns

    Large parts of adult social care market in England face collapse, thinktank warns
    Sector will have extra £2.8bn cost burden from April due to tax and wage rises announced in budget, says Nuffield TrustLarge parts of England’s adult social care market face collapse as a result of tax and wage rises announced in the budget, with devastating consequences for vulnerable and older people who rely on care services, a leading thinktank has warned.The Nuffield Trust said that while the government has consistently spoken of its long term ambition to reform the social care
  • When social care is put in private hands | Letters

    When social care is put in private hands | Letters
    John Burton on the overhaul of children’s social care, and Janet Maitland on how chronic underfunding has tainted assessments of people’s needsAs someone who has worked in children’s homes since the 1960s and who is part of a community of people who have experience of generally good children’s homes, I don’t expect the government’s proposed reforms will have the desired effect (Overhaul of children’s social care in England will crack down on firms’
  • Public’s understanding of paedophiles has not improved, says charity boss

    Public’s understanding of paedophiles has not improved, says charity boss
    Rev Harry Nigh, who set up Circles in 1994 to support sex offenders, says it is easy for politicians to say ‘lock them up’Public understanding of paedophiles has not improved over the past 30 years, according to the founder of the pioneering charity Circles, which offers support to some of society’s most reviled offenders.While the Rev Harry Nigh says child protection must always be paramount, he stresses the importance of breaking the isolation and shame that often leads peopl
  • Keir Starmer says he wants ‘serious and pragmatic’ relationship with China – as it happened

    Keir Starmer says he wants ‘serious and pragmatic’ relationship with China – as it happened
    Prime minister says he wants to ‘be clear about issues we do not agree on’ after meeting Chinese president Xi Jinping at G20Keir Starmer has held his bilateral with Xi Jinping in Rio at the G20, offering to meet his counterpart, the Chinese premier Li Qiang, in Beijing or London at the earliest opportunity.But the PM also raised human rights issues with Xi, including the sanctions on parliamentarians and the persecution of Hong Kong and British citizen Jimmy Lai.A strong UK China rel
  • The Guardian view on children’s homes: cap profits and don’t stop there | Editorial

    Private sector reform is overdue, but councils need funding if young people are to have the chances they deserveCurbs on profiteering in the children’s social care sector cannot come soon enough. It is getting on for three years since the Competition and Markets Authority found that children’s home owners in England, Scotland and Wales were making excessive profits while carrying too much debt – exposing children and councils to unacceptable risks. Of all the failed experiments
  • Keir Starmer says he wants ‘serious and pragmatic’ relationship with China – UK politics live

    Keir Starmer says he wants ‘serious and pragmatic’ relationship with China – UK politics live
    Prime minister says he wants to ‘be clear about issues we do not agree on’ after meeting Chinese president Xi Jinping at G20Keir Starmer has held his bilateral with Xi Jinping in Rio at the G20, offering to meet his counterpart, the Chinese premier Li Qiang, in Beijing or London at the earliest opportunity.But the PM also raised human rights issues with Xi, including the sanctions on parliamentarians and the persecution of Hong Kong and British citizen Jimmy Lai.A strong UK China rel
  • Overhaul of children’s social care in England will crack down on firms’ profiteering

    Overhaul of children’s social care in England will crack down on firms’ profiteering
    Government says wide-ranging reforms will end ‘neglect’ in system that leaves young people behindLabour ready to show it is serious about changing children’s social careExcessive profiteering by unscrupulous private companies charging sky-high fees for substandard placements for vulnerable children will be clamped down on as part of a major overhaul of children’s social care in England.The government will on Monday outline a wide-ranging package of changes, which it promi
  • Labour ready to show it is serious about child social care reform

    Details are still lacking, but initial suggestion is that many of the MacAlister report’s findings will be enactedTwo years ago a government-commissioned report laid bare the crisis affecting children’s social care in England and called for an urgent multibillion-pound overhaul to reform a system that it said was spiralling out of control.The author of the report, Josh MacAlister, warned that a continued failure to tackle major problems in children’s services would lead to reco
  • ‘I’m not saying I’m not scarred. But scars do fade’: Baroness Lola Young on her childhood in care

    The crossbench peer grew up in care and went on to become an actor, an academic and one of the first black women in the House of Lords. Now she has written a memoir documenting her remarkable storyIn March 2012, Lola Young, who sits as a crossbench peer in the House of Lords, clambered on to the rush-hour bus that would take her from the children’s social care office in Islington, north London, to her home. In her arms was a box: a collection of papers she was so anxious to open she did it
  • Improving social care is a big task and these talks are a good place to start | Heather Stewart

    Productivity and quality in a sector that is its workforce will require even more money after national insurance risesKemi Badenoch’s second go at prime minister’s questions last Wednesday was judged a flop at Westminster but she did draw attention to one genuine issue: the impact of the national insurance rise for social care.It is 14 years since the Tories sank Andy Burnham’s plan for a “death tax” to fund social care. Over that time, as demand has continued to ri

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