Fassit
Forced Fast-Track Adoption
(Filed 5 September 2005) by
Charles Pragnell
Response to the letter by Felicity Collier Chief Executive of the
British Association for Adoption and Fostering to Members of Parliament –
22 August 2005.
Press
Release 22 August 2005 Felicity Collier
- Chief Executive BAAF - British
Association for Adoption & Fostering Collier
says - "The recent media campaign appears to have joined forces with a
pressure group, FASSIT (Families Anti Social Services Inquiry Team), which
makes appalling allegations." BAAF Press
Release
'Fassit'
on Radio
Europe to half-a-million Brits

23/08/05
Full Radio Broadcast
from
Fassit
click here
MP3
Fassit Support Spokesperson
Adele is invited on 'Radio Europe
Spain' to take
part in her
second public debate on the role of the Social Services with
Felicity Collier -
Chief executive
of the charity the British Association for Adoption and Fostering.
(Link
to the recording
Listen Again on R.E.M. fm - Radio Europe Mediterraneo - 104.8 fm Costa del
Sol)
NOTE: ...
I look forward to the next round!
'Fassit'
are also featured in the Daily Mail
* LOSE YOUR
CHILDREN FOR BEING TOO POOR
*
By James Chapman – Political Correspondent
Daily Mail
(Filed: 22 August 2005)

After
social workers say parents are “not clever enough” to have a family, a new
scandal
Social workers faced new accusations of “child
snatching” last night over youngsters taken into care because of poverty.
Campaigners and MP’s were appalled by official figures giving low family
income as the main reason in 100 cases.
The revelation deepened the row over the “unjust”
removal of youngsters by social services departments. They have already
been accused of unfairly targeting parents deemed “not clever enough”.
Tory spokesman Theresa May, who is calling for an
inquiry into adoption policies, said the state should help lift a family out
of poverty rather than breaking it up.
Despite the large number of cases, there was no official
explanation last night. The Education Department could not say in what
circumstances a child would be removed because of family poverty and the
secrecy surrounding family courts means individual cases cannot be reported.
Campaigners say that setting performance targets for the
number of adoptions councils should achieve has created a “market” in
vulnerable children.
Only some 3,000 children are adopted each year and the
Government has tried to streamline the process. Tony Blair wanted a 40
percent increase over a five year period ending this year.
Official statistics show that there were 61,000 children
in care in the year to March 2004 – an increase of 20 percent since Labour
came to power.
Of those 38,200 were in care because of abuse or
neglect, 6,100 because of “family dysfunction”, 4,900 because of absent
parents and 4,200 because their family was in “acute stress”.
Another 3,500 were removed due to parents’ illness or
disability, 2,400 because they suffered disability themselves and 1,700
because of socially unacceptable behaviour”.
But the main reason in the cases of 110 children was
given as “low income”. Mrs May said she was concerned that children should
be taken into care – even temporarily – because of low income. She said “In
the 21st century, no child should be taken from their parents
simply because of income.
“In a civilised society, with the fourth largest
economy, we have a right to expect better than this.
“At the General Election, the Prime Minister boasted
about the numbers of children the Government have taken out of poverty, so
why is this still happening?
The pressure group Families Anti Social Services Inquiry
Team, set up to help parents fight removals of children called the situation
“a national scandal”.
Its spokesman said “To take people’s children away
because they are poor is absolutely shocking. Social workers shouldn’t be
equating poverty with abuse or neglect. These people are people on very low
incomes who may feed their children. That doesn’t mean the children are not
loved.
“Surely the state should be stepping in to help, rather
than taking the children away. That should always be the last resort.”
The group insists that, despite Government denials,
there are incentives for local authorities to take children into care and
have them adopted quickly.
It says several councils have been awarded “beacon
status” for increasing the number of adoptions, often attracting extra
Government funding in the process.
The spokesman said “The Government has created an
industry where the commodities are children. Local authorities get financial
rewards for meeting targets because it affects their star ratings. “They
are being praised for cutting the time it takes between children being
brought into care and being adopted.
“Tony Blair has said he wants a 40% increase in adoption
numbers. But the terrible effect is that children are being procured for
adoption and then rushed through the system”.
FASSIT says vulnerable families have been left
with less and less time to fight to get their children back before the
process is completed.
Felicity Collier, chief executive of the British
Association for Adoption and Fostering said “I don’t know why social workers
may have ticked a box giving low income as a reason. There’s absolutely no
way that a court will make a decision to take a child compulsorily from
their family on that basis.
“It only happens when a child is suffering and will
continue to suffer significant harm”. It may be that a parent has asked for
a child to be looked after because they don’t have any money. It may be
that you have a family that doesn’t have money because they continually
gamble it or spend it, and no matter how much extra money you give them to
help, its not spent on the children”
She said claims that social workers had incentives to
take children into care were “rubbish”.
The Education Department said: “The decision to remove
a child from parents is not made lightly. It’s nothing to do with targets.
It’s about getting children out of a situation that’s not stable and into
loving families wherever possible. Responsibility for taking these
difficult decisions rests with the courts. All involved work is on the
basis that the welfare of the child is paramount. Wherever possible, local
authorities support parents to care for their children in the family
context.”
In her call for an inquiry, Mrs May warned that the
prospects for children taken into care were “appalling”
She said “Children in care are vastly more likely to
take drugs, become pregnant or commit crime. Over a quarter of people in
our prisons and as many as a third of people sleeping rough on our streets,
were in care as a child. No-one would accept this for their own children.
“Surely it is better for us to help the parents of
vulnerable children, through support and advice, so that their children are
not taken into care in the first place”.
DAILY MAIL COMMENT
Poor Care
The Mail has revealed over recent weeks that children
are being taken into care because their parents are deemed “not clever
enough” to bring them up – that is alarming enough.
Now it appears that more than 100 children have been
taken into care because their parents’ income is too low.
If that is the sole reason for the child’s removal
(rather than the poverty being caused by drug or alcohol abuse for example),
it is indefensible.
This country’s generous welfare system is designed to
ensure that families are never so poor that they cannot feed and house
themselves.
And poverty cannot be equated with neglect. Some of the
poorest families can be the most loving.
The decision by a family court to have a child taken
into care is never an easy one. The interests of the child must always be
paramount.
But there is a growing suspicion that children are being
taken from their parents unnecessarily to help local authorities meet the
Government’s aim of increasing adoptions by 40 percent.
That surely would represent the most grotesque outcome
yet of New Labour’s obsession with targets.