Dear Icetea
Welcome to the parents’ discussion board. Thank you for your post. My name is Suzie. I am Family Rights Group’s online adviser.
I am sorry to hear about your difficult family situation. I understand that it is worrying.
You explain that you have successfully cared for your 5 children, 4 of whom are autistic, for many years with limited support and are a dedicated and capable parent. Your previous experience with children’s services was not positive. I am sorry to hear that it made you feel bad, that you did not feel helped while you were doing all you could for your children.
You describe how children’s services have become involved again and that unfortunately the initial interaction with the social worker was poor. Because of this and your previous negative experience, you were initially reluctant to engage with the proposed assessment.
I hope it will be helpful to explain a bit more about why children’s services want to assess the situation and to offer suggestions as to what you can do to help you work in partnership with them to keep your children safe and well, which is what you want to do.
Your new partner’s probation officer had made a referral to children’s services as your partner has a conviction for domestic abuse against a previous partner. You describe how he assaulted her and pinned her to the floor by the throat. Her children witnessed this. Your partner’s ex and her children were both harmed in this incident. The children are legally classed as victims of
domestic abuse where they see, hear or experience the effects of the domestic abuse of their mother. They may have also suffered
significant harm because of witnessing this.
It is good to hear that your partner is complying with the terms of his probation and that he told his probation office that he was in a relationship with you.
Although you explain that your partner has no previous criminal history and regrets his violence, the severity of the offence for which he received a criminal conviction mean that children’s services are worried that he may be abusive again in his new relationship with you and that this would harm your children. So, they want to assess what safeguards are in place to keep the children safe and to make sure that you know what the level of risk is. They are the lead agency and so play a key role in supporting parents to make safe decisions for their children.
You may find it helpful to read this
summary of how children’s services’ work which sets out the processes and principles they must follow when working with families to promote children’s welfare and keep children safe.
They have decided to do an
assessment and, I believe, have asked you to agree to this. You have
parental responsibility so they need your consent to the assessment. However, children’s services would not need your consent if they were doing a
child protection investigation when they have a legal duty to investigate.
You can find out more about what a voluntary child in need assessment involves
here. It must be completed within 45 working days (but can be completed sooner).
There are steps you can take to make sure that you are as informed as possible about the process and that the social worker keeps you properly updated.
You can email the social worker to:
• Clarify that your children are your main priority and that you understand that the children’s safety is their focus too.
• Ask the social worker to confirm in writing the type of assessment that they propose and to provide you with information about the process.
• Confirm what steps you are taking to safeguard the children; this could be ensuring that the children have no contact with your partner during this assessment. And that you will carefully consider the social worker’s recommendations when the assessment is complete.
• Let them know if you are doing any specialist programmes or engaging with a
domestic abuse agency – this can help provide a reflective and informative space, even if you have not experienced abuse.
• Ask the social worker to confirm that they will keep you fully updated as they do their assessment – this includes sharing positive feedback with you but also keeping you fully informed and discussing any new or escalating concerns with you.
• Let them know if your partner is already doing a domestic abuse perpetrator’s course as part of his probation requirements. If not, he could agree to do so and can find out more about the programmes available to him from
Respect.
We have guides below to help mothers working with social workers including when they are involved due to concerns about domestic abuse:
A guide to working with a social worker and
Information for mothers involved with children’s services because of domestic abuse.
I can see that you have already decided to do all you can to keep your family safe and to demonstrate this to children’ services. If you would like to discuss your situation further or need more advice during the assessment, please call the confidential freephone advice line to speak to an experienced adviser. Or post back on this forum, send an
advice enquiry form or get live online advice via
webchat, on Mondays and Thursday between 2 and 4 pm.
I hope this is helpful.
Best wishes
Suzie