The Care Planning Standard
Regulation 14
Regulation 5 – Engaging with the Wider System to Ensure Each Child’s Needs are Met
This chapter covers when a child or young person is making a planned move (i.e. one that is agreed within their Care Plan) and applies whether they are returning home or moving to another placement.
Placement Planning Meetings Procedure
Preparation for Leaving Care Procedure
This chapter was amended in June 2022 to add a link to the NYAS ‘My Things Matter’ Report – support and respect care-experienced children and their belongings when they move. (See Section 2, Arrangements for the Transfer or Discharge).
Children must remain in the home unless it no longer meets their assessed needs as set out in the Care Plan, or the home has been unable to deliver the services required to meet the child’s needs. The child must have a say in any decision to move from the home.
Except in an urgent situation (for example because of an immediate risk of serious harm to the child or to protect others from serious injury), any change of placement, should only take place following a Looked After Review chaired by the child’s Independent Reviewing Officer (IRO).
Where it appears that a child or young person would benefit from a transfer to another home / placement, the home’s manager should discuss this with the child’s social worker who will in turn raise it with the Independent Reviewing Officer. A planned placement move can only take place once approval from the placing authority has been received in writing.
Before any change of placement or move to another home is made the following people must be consulted and their views recorded:
The child’s social worker should notify/consult the child’s parents / carers.
(NOTE: If, in an emergency situation, the registered person has to move a child out of the home to other accommodation, the accommodation must be suitable and meet the child’s needs. The child’s social worker or line manager should be informed and, where the child is accommodated under S.20 (Children Act 1989), the parent must also be informed immediately by them. A Looked After Review should be convened as soon as possible after the emergency move has taken place. For more information on the procedure to be following when a child is moved in an emergency, please see Emergency Placement and Emergency Reviews Procedure).
A senior officer in the local authority must approve of any change of placement affecting a child in Key Stage 4, except in an emergency/where the placement is terminated because of an immediate risk of serious harm to the child or to protect others from serious injury.
Before approving the decision the local authority must ensure that:
There is an expectation that a young person’s education in Key Stage 4 should not be disrupted other than as a consequence of an emergency placement.
Other than in Key Stage 4, where the local authority proposes making any change to the child's placement that would have the effect of disrupting the arrangements made for education and training, they must ensure that other arrangements are made for education or training that meet the child's needs and are consistent with the PEP.
For a temporary move out of the home (e.g. in an emergency), it must be remembered that the child will remain under the current Care Plan and staff should make sure the child understands that expectations in relation to house rules, education etc. still apply.
Any decision to terminate a young person's placement and request that they are moved to another home must be approved by the designated senior manager.
Normally, young people will remain in the existing home for a minimum of 28 days after the decision to move has been reached to enable proper planning to take place. During this period staff must help the child to prepare for the move. In cases where children are returning home or moving to independent living this includes supporting the child / young person to develop emotional and mental resilience to cope without the home’s support.
Assuming the decision to move the child has been approved at the Looked After Review, the manager of the existing home should liaise with the manager in the new home and take all reasonable steps to ensure the young person's transfer is managed sensitively and that the move is a positive experience.
The young person and parents should be consulted and kept informed of all key decisions and arrangements in relation to the transfer. If possible, the young person and parents should undertake visits to the new home/Placement and should be provided with information such as the Statement of Purpose or Children’s Guide.
The existing manager should liaise with the following people to ensure that the child’s plans and records (see below) are completed or brought up to date before the young person moves:
The Plans or records that must be brought up to date or completed by the social worker or others, and made available for the new manager / carer, are:
Prior to the move, the existing and new home managers / carers must liaise with each other to ensure that all appropriate arrangements are made, for example:
For all transfers to another home or other placement, the existing home manager should ensure the following arrangements are made:
Important Note: where the young person will be moving to 'unregulated' accommodation (i.e. accommodation that is not regulated/inspected by OFSTED), or has a vacation placement if they are at college, the local authority must:
The registered person must notify, without delay, the local authority for the area in which the home is located of every admission of a child into the home and every discharge of a child from the home.
The notification must state:
The social worker should also notify the young person's parents and significant relatives or friends, and should liaise with the new home manager to arrange contact with the young person. NOTE: No contact may be permitted between the young person and their parents, relatives or friends unless agreed with the social worker and set out in the young person's Care Plan.
Derbyshire are committed to enabling young people who have left our care to stay in contact with key trusted adults if they wish.
Residential staff can do this in a range of ways such as welcoming young people when they come back to visit the children’s home they lived in or seeing them in their new home or community. Sometimes this is undertaken on a formal basis, such as time limited outreach support, and at other times more informally.
This contact needs to be undertaken safely and so should be agreed and recorded by the line manager of the staff concerned, and, depending on the age of the young person concerned: