Welcome to the May 2016 edition of the St Andrew`s Children`s
Transcription
Welcome to the May 2016 edition of the St Andrew`s Children`s
Reflections Reflec 14 Newsletter of the St Andrew’s Children’s Society May 2016 Welcome to the May 2016 edition of the St Andrew’s Children’s Society newsletter, Reflections14. We say a fond farewell to Sue du Porto, retiring after 23 years with the Society. In this issue… Events Diary p2 Meeting The Princess Royal p2 Calling all SafeBase™ Graduates! p2 We are calling all SafeBase families for a get-together on 22nd June. Loretta McKechnie obituary p3 The Top Ten Tips for Christmas proved popular - so here are tips for the summer holidays. Four Nations Partnership p4 What’s in a name? p5 Our Chair makes an appeal for new Trustees and also launches our survey into the name of the Society – have your say. Top 10 Holiday Tips p6 Sue du Porto A Q & A interview p7 Our Director reports on the Four Nations Partnership and he pays tribute to a very special lady. Trustees Appeal - We need you! p8 STOP PRESS: Award of £40,500 pa for three years from the Scottish Government Early Intervention Fund from April 2016. This is to enable us to develop our services. www.standrews-children.org.uk [email protected] 7 John’s Place, Edinburgh EH6 7EL St Andrew’s Children’s Society West Lodge, Greenwell Road, Aberdeen AB12 3AX T: 0131 454 3370 Scottish Charity No. SC005754 T: 01224 878158 Events Diary April-May Parent and Toddler Theraplay® Group – Aberdeen Please contact your social worker if you would like to attend. Wed 11 May, 9am-4pm Lifestory Work Training For more info call the office on 0131 454 3370. Sat 14 May Adoption Activity Day 16-29 May Foster Care Fortnight Tue 31 May, 5.30-7pm News Lunch with The Princess Royal On 2nd December last year, we were guests of the Royal Caledonian Ball Trust at a lunchtime reception in the presence of Her Royal Highness The Princess Royal. Sunshine Girls Group Photo credit: © Chris Watt www.chriswatt.com June (date tbc) Single Adopters Support Group Sat 4 June, 10am Dads Group – Bo’ness Fire Station Tour Meeting in conjunction with Scottish Adoption, Barnardo’s, East Lothian Council & Adoption UK. Wed 8 June, 7.30-9.30pm Male Adopters Group Mon 13 June Adoption Exchange Day – Musselburgh Tue 14 June, 7-9pm Adopters Support Group Tue 28 June, 5.30-7pm Sunshine Girls Group Sat 2 July, 10-11.30am Dads Group Meeting in conjunction with Scottish Adoption, Barnardos, East Lothian Council & Adoption UK. Details tbc. Rita Grant, Adoption Services Manager, Nuala McLusky, one of our SafeBase parents and Dan Docwra, Fundraiser were among 150 guests from Scottish charities supported by the Royal Caledonian Ball Trust, of which Princess Anne is patron, over the past year. The Society’s SafeBase project has been a beneficiary on two occasions. July (date tbc) Storytelling Session – Edinburgh Photo credit: © Chris Watt www.chriswatt.com August Preparation Groups – Edinburgh Thu 4 August Sunshine Girls Group Summer Outing Sat 6 August Dads Group Meeting in conjunction with Scottish Adoption, Barnardos, East Lothian Council & Adoption UK. Details tbc. Tue 27 September, 5.30-7pm Sunshine Girls Group October Parent and Toddler Theraplay® Group – Edinburgh Please contact your social worker if you would like to attend. Sat 1 October Dads Group Meeting in conjunction with Scottish Adoption, Barnardos, East Lothian Council & Adoption UK. Details tbc. Tue 4 October, 7-9pm Adopters Support Group 2 Reflections14 www.standrews-children.org.uk Visit our website or find us on Facebook (search SACS Adopt), for all our latest news. Loretta McKechnie: Mother, Grandmother, Great Grandmother, Foster Carer and Friend to so many. Born 11th May 1946 Died 18th March 2016 It is with great sadness, following Loretta’s recent death, that I would like to formally recognise the immense contribution Loretta McKechnie has made to the lives of so many children over the 24 years of her foster care career. She and Ronnie started their fostering career with Lothian Regional Council in 1988 and following local government reorganisation continued with Midlothian Council in the 1990s. They transferred to the Society in 2000 where they cared for 7 young people on our behalf. They showed particular skill in caring for adolescents. Ronnie was the organiser and excelled at the practical and Loretta had a warmth and intuition about feelings and emotions that meant that she could connect with young people. I have the utmost respect for the work she has done to improve the life chances of the over 30 children she and Ronnie cared for. Loretta had a remarkable rapport with the young people that came into her home and enjoyed the challenges as well as the rewards that these young people presented. I worked with Loretta and Ronnie, as their Liaison Social Worker for most of their career apart for the period of about 5 years when I left Midlothian Council for the Society. I have always enjoyed a close, professional working relationship with them and over the years I believe developed a friendship based on the mutual goal of giving children who have not enjoyed happy family lives the chance to experience a safe and supportive family environment for as long as they needed it. She was always a strong advocate for the children in her care and this made her sometimes a formidable person to deal with. My view is that she always listened to others but was determined that what she felt was best for a child should be the goal to achieve. There were at least at least 5 previously fostered young people at her funeral on 4th April 2016 and I spoke to one man, now in his late 30s, who said that he would miss knowing that Loretta was on the end of a phone if he really needed to talk through a problem he was facing. Loretta was all about family and she shared a special closeness with all her children, grandchildren and great grandchildren who were daily visitors to her home. She had many health challenges through much of her adult life and she faced them with courage and determination with Ronnie by her side every step of the way during their 52 year marriage. She will be sadly missed by everyone whose life she touched but will be fondly remembered for her listening ear, compassion and humour. Stephen Small, director & friend Calling SafeBase Graduates from 2011 to 2015! For all of the parents who attended SafeBase over the past five years – we are having a call back day on Wednesday 22nd June 2016, from 10am to 2.30pm (coffee and registration from 9.30am). The day will give you the opportunity to see faces familiar and new, and to revisit some of the SafeBase material with a Theraplay™ emphasis. We also plan to have an input from a narrative storytelling expert, which will be both enjoyable and informative. It would be great to see as many of you who can make it. Please can you let us know if you can come by 13th May, so that we can cater for refreshments and lunch. Rita, Marie, Angie, Sylvia and Ruth. Reflections14 3 Four Nations Partnership Research & Collaboration 2013–2016 The study, ‘A Child’s Journey to Permanence through Adoption Across the Four UK Nations’, emerged from Four Nations Partnership. This close working partnership of four voluntary adoption agencies consists of the St Andrew’s Children’s Society in Scotland, CCS Adoption in England, St David’s Children Society in Wales, and Family Care Society in Northern Ireland. Funding from the Department for Education in England was received to commission the research. The aim of the research was to analyse the characteristics of children placed by four voluntary adoption agencies across the four UK nations linked to the timeliness of permanency outcomes. The Consortium for Voluntary Adoption Agencies, (CVAA), viewed the collaboration of the four agencies as a learning opportunity and proposed the research. Characteristics of children placed by nation (averages) Sample Average CCS Adoption St David’s Children Society St Andrew’s Children’s Society Family Care England Wales Scotland N Ireland No. of children 30 44 25 9 108 Age on entry to care 1 yr 10 mths 1 yr 5 mths 6 mths 1 yr 10 mths 1 yr 4 mths 2 yrs 2 mths 10 mths 1 yr 2 mths 11 mths 1 yr 10 mths 2 wks 1 yr 6 mths* 2 yrs 2 wks 1 yr 8 mths 3 yrs 4 mths 2 yrs 3 yrs 10 mths 2 wks 3 yrs 64 36 48 52 55 45 55 45 86.5 9 88 12 89 11 88 10 Av. length of time from: Entry into care and 7 mths 2 wks adoption decision Entry into care and 1 yr 6 mths start of placement Av. age of child on 3 yrs 4 mths placement with adopters Gender of child placed % M F 46 54 Ethnicity of child placed % White British 90 Non-White British 10 *NB: 8 children were direct placements. 4 Reflections14 Data about all the 108 children placed for adoption by the four agencies between 1st April 2013 and 31st March 2014 was compared in terms of age, ethnicity, sibling status, complexity of needs, against the time taken to reach different stages within the care and adoption process. The main finding were as follows: • The sample of children from the Society was just under a quarter of the total in the sample. • The Society placed children who were, on average, 10 months younger on entry to care than anywhere else in the UK. • The length of time from entry into care to a decision being made that the child should be adopted was a month less than the UK average and was only beaten in timeliness by England where there has been a national focus on cutting timescales. • Perhaps most surprisingly, children in Scotland were placed with adopters a whole year sooner than the UK average and the quickest of all the nations. This may somewhat be explained by the widespread practice of placing children with adopters before a permanency order has been made which does not happen routinely in any other legal jurisdiction in the UK. • Again, the length of time between entry into care and placements with the Society were 2 months quicker than the UK average and the same as in England with its more proscriptive timescales. It is true to say that this is a relatively small sample of children placed by only four voluntary agencies and so is unlikely to be an accurate representation of the UK picture as a whole. However, I think it is helpful for us in Scotland to look at a snapshot of our permanency and adoption placement practices and compare it with other legal jurisdictions. Perhaps our system is not as inadequate as we often believe it to be? It is also worth noting that what came out of the research across the four nations was a sense that it is timeliness of social work decision making and practice that is the main driver to achieve speedy permanency plans for children and not how ‘tight’ we try to make our legal decision making. What’s in a name? St Andrew’s Children’s Society Ltd is a well-known name loved by those of us who have benefitted from its services and by our dedicated staff. However, for those who do not know of us, and who are interested in finding out more about adoption and fostering, it may not always be obvious from our name that these services are the focus of our work. Nowadays, most people go to the internet to find information on the topics in which they are interested, and we are not always easily found in an internet search for adoption and fostering services. The Trustees, therefore, would like to hear from as many people as possible of their thoughts on the subject of changing our name to make it easier for other people to find us. with your name and contact information plus what your connection is with us, e.g. adoptee, adopter, foster carer, relative of any of these people, etc. We are starting a survey on Facebook to get some idea of the opinions of our followers, but we are aware that not all our supporters use Facebook. If you would like to give us your thoughts, please phone, write or email us with your ideas, together Phone: 0131 454 3370 If you want an idea of what early responses are, here is a couple of suggestions: SACSadopt, St Andrew’s Adoption & Fostering. We would love to hear from you, so please get in touch with your suggestions: Email: [email protected] Find us on Facebook: SACS Adoption Reflections14 5 Sunshine Girls Group The Sunshine Girls Group is made up of funny, happy and energetic girls aged seven to ten years old. Constance, Lorna and Sarah really enjoy seeing them every month during term time for a mixture of fun activities. In the group we have enjoyed many crafty projects, including creating a wishing tree, stone painting, pebble creature building and making fairy keyrings. The girls also enjoy some fun games and a bit of calming meditation at the end. We are planning our summer outing which will be in August. The girls keep the workers on their toes and it is always noisy but great fun when the girls are here. If your daughter would like to join our group then please get in touch with your social worker. Please see the Events Diary for the dates of the group and the summer outing. (left) The Wishing Tree; (right) Some of the delightful painted pebbles. Top Ten Tips for anxiety-free and stress-free holidays repare, prepare, prepare! Preparation is key P and needs to start as soon as possible after the holiday is booked. Show photos of where you are going and give as much detail about the place as you can. Talk before Talk about what you are all going to do once you arrive there. For example, say how you are all going to have fun in the pool, or you are all going to enjoy playing at the campsite. alk about after Talk bout what you are all going T to do once you get home. Your child may still believe they are not living with you forever so it’s vital to reinforce this message. Plan an activity for a few days after you get home and talk about it before you go and whilst you are on holiday. lying!? If you are flying talk about the journey to F the airport, check-in, boarding, on the plane, explain that the luggage doesn’t stay with us but goes elsewhere on the plane to be collected at the other end, talk about the cabin crew, that seatbelts that must be worn. Food High on the anxiety list for many children is food – wondering when, what or even if they will get fed. We are talking about breakfast, what we will do for lunch, where we might eat out in the evening. 6 Reflections14 Packing Pack familiar things that remind them of home. In addition to a favourite toy, books and colouring book, pack a favourite pillowcase so that they has familiar smells around them. Clothes Pack clothes together. Mix your clothes and your child’s clothes together in the cases, so they know you are all going away together. Paperwork Ensure you have all the necessary paperwork. If you are pre-adoption order, ensure you have all necessary paperwork and ensure your child goes through passport control with the parent who has the paperwork in their bag! Stick to routine Ok, you’re on holiday so routine is going to change slightly and children will be going to bed a lot later. Nevertheless, try to stick to a routine as much as possible – aim for meals at roughly the same time each day, same time for bedtime, and limit the amount of activities you do! Relax You’re on holiday, you’re allowed to. If you’re not relaxed, children will pick up on this. So relax as much as you can, have a great time wherever you go. Sue du Porto The 31st March was not just the end of another month for the Society, it was also the day that we said an ‘official’ fond farewell to Sue du Porto, as she embarked on yet another expedition into the unknown – retirement! Happily, it was only a week later that colleagues were able to join Sue at Duddingston’s Sheep Heid Inn for an hour of skittles and a wonderful dinner to celebrate with Sue. I then met up with Sue for a very pleasant Q & A lunch. When did you join St Andrew’s Children’s Society? I joined in 1993, following a year out from social work, when I attended an art foundation course at Leith School of Art. Before that I worked at Deaf Action for two years. My post at the Society was to develop the respite care scheme, which provided weekend breaks for adopted children. What brought you to Edinburgh? I arrived in Edinburgh in 1977 as a Community Service Volunteer at Garvald Centre, living and working with young adults with learning disabilities. My contract was for four months, but I ended up staying for nine years, working both residentially and in daycare. Before that I worked in a children’s home in Watford for two years. At the time Hertfordshire Council had been recruiting in the Netherlands for residential social workers. My English mum helped with the application. Was your father Dutch? Yes, I was brought up in the Netherlands. My father, who was a pilot with the RAF during the war, met my mum in a milk bar in Grantham. My mum’s claim to fame was that she was in the same class as Maggie Thatcher during primary school! (I tend to keep this fairly quiet normally) When did you become a Social Worker? After Garvald, I attended the Certificate of Qualification in Social Work (CQSW) at Moray House. My first job after qualifying was in a generic social work team in Airdrie. Although I really enjoyed the work, the daily commute proved too much and after two years I decided to look for work nearer home. Have you seen many changes? After 22 years there have been many changes, mostly positive. These range from the introduction of computers and not having to handwrite Form Fs, to changes in attitudes including the acceptance that adoptive families should have access to ongoing support and training. Having read many files from the 1940/50/60s in adoption counselling, I have been struck by some of the judgemental attitudes prevalent in those days towards young pregnant women. Do you have any specific memories of your work at The Society? Two very memorable experiences come to mind. The first was an unmarried mother who had decided to place her child for adoption. After the birth, the strong attachment of the mother to her new child brought about a change of mind. I felt privileged to be closely involved with that mother and child, giving the support that was necessary to ensure the best possible outcome of that decision. Then a couple of years ago, I facilitated a reunion between an adult adoptee and her birth mother. Both had been in contact independently with the Society for many years, before finally taking the next big step of meeting up and finding out how much they had in common. The initial meeting was very emotional, lasting well over three hours and I felt privileged being part of it in a small way. These memories are of course in addition to all the other special moments too numerous to mention, when children have found their adoptive families. We wish Sue well for a long and happy retirement. What was the Society like in 1993? Much smaller! I joined Denise Burgess, Stephen Small, Shona Easton and Thelma Dewar, working at the Gillis Centre. Reflections14 7 Trustee’s Appeal: We need you! The Society’s Trustees come from a wide range of backgrounds, and that is what gives it strength. However, this strength needs regular reinforcement. Most adopters and their families are aware of the huge contribution our social workers make to the success we have in building new families and also some idea of how important our administrative staff are in support of our work of adoption and fostering. Far fewer people realise that we have a dedicated Board of Trustees who have the responsibility of running the Society in accordance with company law, and adoption and fostering law. At present we have eight Trustees with a variety of backgrounds and skills: 3 adopters, 2 lawyers, 1 accountant, 2 teachers, 3 people with social work experience, 3 people with commercial experience. As you can see, many Trustees have one or more hats! Trustees need to act solely in the interests of the charity, be financially prudent and able to contribute to strategic planning for the future. In recent years, the Trustees have overseen the opening up of adoption to couples of the same sex, the addition of an Aberdeen office and the introduction of the SafeBase programme for supporting adoptive and foster families. Who knows what new challenges and opportunities our Board of Trustees will rise to in the future? A Trustee’s story Would you like to be involved? We are particularly looking for Trustees with financial expertise, knowledge of internet business opportunities, and people who have been adopted. There is an induction programme to help new Trustees learn of their responsibilities, with existing members providing support too. A past Trustee wrote: The time I spent with the Society was most enjoyable and I found my co-board members truly special individuals. I also have nothing but praise and admiration for Stephen and the staff team of their dedication and commitment to the children and families referred to the Society. If you are not able to help, especially if still receiving support from us, is there anyone in your circle of family and friends who might be able to join us and enable more children to find a happy and secure home? If so, please contact Claire McMahon, our Office Manager, with your details, who will pass the information to me. I look forward to hearing from you. Maureen McEvoy, chair of the board of trustees I was appointed a Trustee in late 2014, shortly after early retirement. I had enjoyed a long career as a quantity surveyor. For the previous five years I had owned and run a company providing specialist services to the petrochemicals industry. After retiring I asked the Society if there were any little tasks I could help with now that I had some time available. I was surprised at the mention of becoming a Trustee. However, I was delighted to become involved in this way My connection with the Society goes back to the late 1980s when my wife and I asked to be considered as adopters. At that time it was great to meet others who were going through the same process, as well as getting to know some of the social workers. In my professional career I used to enjoy contributing to the successful outcome of construction projects. Now as a Trustee of the Society I am hopefully making some contribution in new but similar ways. This has included being a member of a small working group resulting in a change to a specific aspect of the Society’s working procedures. Brian O’Callahan, trustee We adopted a sibling group of three little girls. The Society were fantastic in helping us through this tremendous change in our lives. Our daughters are now adults, and we have five grandchildren. www.standrews-children.org.uk [email protected] 7 John’s Place, Edinburgh EH6 7EL St Andrew’s Children’s Society West Lodge, Greenwell Road, Aberdeen AB12 3AX T: 0131 454 3370 Scottish Charity No. SC005754 T: 01224 878158
Similar documents
Welcome to the May 2015 edition of the St Andrew`s Children`s
and adults who had complex needs and learning disabilities and was also supported to complete my social work training and so I qualified as a social worker in 1999. I returned to university the fol...
More information