When a child is taken into care, parents can ask straight away for contact to be set up, even if the local authority does not tell parents they can do this.
Many parents find that they do not get contact at the start of child protection investigations, and then find that their children do not want to see them, or they are being told by social workers that their children do not want to have contact.
Keeping that connection with your child is vital to ensure no negative external influences affect your child’s state of mind, and that your child can continue to feel that you love and care for them.
The right to contact can be found in Section 34(1) of Children Act 1989, which says that children’s social services must allow a child to have reasonable contact with: his or her parents; guardians; anyone who looked after the child under wardship just before a care order was made; and anyone with a residence order or child arrangements order for residence just before a care order was made.
If you have parental responsibility for your child, the local authority must tell you where your child is once they enter care, and can only ever withhold this information if it is not in the child’s best interests to share their location.
You are entitled to ask for help with travel costs to get to and from the contact sessions if paying for these expenses would cause you financial hardship. You can ask the local authority what their policy is on helping with these costs, as they have the power to fund your travel.
Once contact starts, if you think the level of contact you are getting with your child is not good enough, you should ask the social worker for a written statement explaining the reasons for the current level of contact. Getting this written statement is very important, as it establishes the local authority’s position about the contact routine and prevents the local authority from adding more reasons later on.
You should also send a proposal to the social worker in writing (text or email) for the kind of contact you think is appropriate for you and your child.
If a social worker refuses to change the format or frequency of the contact, Section 34 of the Children Act gives you the power to apply to the family courts to ask for a different contact routine, or for contact if you have not yet been able to see your child.
An application for contact to the court is made using a C1 form, or if court proceedings have already started, you can use a C2 form. You will also need the C15 supplement form.
If you fit into any of the carer categories in the second paragraph of this article, you do not need permission to submit an application for contact. Anyone else who wants to apply for contact will need to get the court’s permission.
The courts must take into account the following principles when deciding to grant contact or change the terms of a current contact arrangement:
- If the contact is in the child’s best interests
- Reasonable contact between the parents and child should continue
- The application is part of an effort to set aside a care order
- Parents can show a change of circumstances which the local authority should have acknowledged when putting together the child’s care plan
The court is also required to acknowledge that ongoing contact with natural parents:
- Lets a child know that his or her parents still love them and care about them, and that this is important for a child’s sense of security
- Protect against a child feeling abandoned or as if they have suffered a loss, which can be deeply damaging to the child
- Ensure the child remains connected to his or her roots, and cultural, religious and ethnic identities.
If the local authority decides to stop contact, they must get a court order before stopping that contact. It is not legal for a social worker to stop contact without getting a court order first.
The only exceptions to this legal duty are: if there has been an incident of some kind which the local authority thinks is serious enough to stop contact, or if the quality of contact between you and your child has gotten worse over a long period of time.
The local authority can then pause contact for up to 7 days. However it still cannot stop contact for more than 7 days, or indefinitely, without a court order.
If a local authority has failed to comply with a contact arrangement, you can ask the court to attach a penal notice against the head of the children’s social services in the local authority, in your application for contact. If the local authority continue to breach an order for contact, the court can then issue a punishment such as a fine, or imprisonment.
Many thanks to Victoria Hudson for drawing our attention to the article below, which led to us to write this post.
Additional information:
Really, really useful. This needs sharing everywhere šš¦š Xxxxxxxxxxxx
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Xxxxxxx
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I agree tummum !
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Reblogged this on tummum's Blog and commented:
Really, really useful for any parents having problems with contact. It takes the homework out of it for you šš¦šš Xx
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I shared it across parts of Facebook to many parents of taken children ..
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Thank you Paul
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Great idea Paul šš¦ Xx
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Thank you for sharing on your blog too, Tum Mum xxxxxxxxx
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Also shared to groups and like pages šā¤ļøš¦ Xx
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Very kind of you xxxxx
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Reblogged this on | truthaholics and commented:
Very useful summary:
“The courts must take into account the following principles when deciding to grant contact or change the terms of a current contact arrangement:
If the contact is in the childās best interests
Reasonable contact between the parents and child should continue
The application is part of an effort to set aside a care order
Parents can show a change of circumstances which the local authority should have acknowledged when putting together the childās care plan
The court is also required to acknowledge that ongoing contact with natural parents:
Lets a child know that his or her parents still love them and care about them, and that this is important for a childās sense of security
Protect against a child feeling abandoned or as if they have suffered a loss, which can be deeply damaging to the child
Ensure the child remains connected to his or her roots, and cultural, religious and ethnic identities.”
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This maybe the case but do we expect the social workers etc involved to play ball, especially when you aren’t aware of these rights and they know it? And we all know that a sw’s ‘concerns’ are very often false so they can manipulate the situation in their favour. It’s about time sws abided by these rights themselves. My involvement with care proceedings started nearly 22 years ago and too many sws and othr ‘professionals’ lie as much now as those I had dealings with did then. They were obviously experts in this so had clearly been that way for years, any fledglings ones presumably helped along by their superiors.
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If you have parental responsibility for your child, the local authority must tell you where you child is once they enter care, and can only ever withhold this information if it is not in the childās best interests to share their location
That is what they say .However I have been involved helping parents in hundreds of cases over the last 20 years and in NOT ONE of those cases were the parents informed of the addresses of their children or their foster parents.
Doubtless in every single case social workers decided that it was “not in the children’s best interests” to divulge their whereabouts…………..
Surprise,surprise !
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In theory, this is exactly how it should be but in practice, this does not happen, social workers can and do stop contact and give reasons such as the voice of the child, the child is poorly, the child is on holiday this can add up to months breaking the bond, and never expect a judge to side with the parents, contact order was declined due to age and voice of the child
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Some very interesting information here.
Re- LA’s cant stop contact for more than 7 days without a court order.
i wish we had known this back in 2015. in our case they stopped all contact which has continued for over 6yrs.
With regards to
“you can ask the court to attach a penal notice against the head of the children’s social services in the local authority, in your application for contact. If the local authority continue to breach an order for contact, the court can then issue a punishment such as a fine, or imprisonment.”
But what happens when the LA have no further involvement with your children can you still request this ?
If this is true we will be doing this next tuesday at our 3rd hearing for a child arrangement order.
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Hi Keith, the above information applies during the life of a case. If a parent wants to challenge wrong-doing after a case has concluded much of how this will be done will depend on how much time has passed and what kind of case they want to bring. An order will only be overturned in exceptional circumstances and in a court setting, a parent would have to prove something like a procedural breach, and then show that breach was key in some way. In the circumstances you mention, the court is unlikely to undo an order but you should get legal advice and someone to look at your files to understand better what the options are. Hope that helps.
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Unfortunately social workers do not follow the law. When it finally gets to court nothing gets changed & contact is still withheld. Needless to say Judges donāt follow the law either. The whole system is corrupt. Has anyone ever got contact once the child is in the care system? Has anyone ever got contact after a Special Guardian Order? What was the excuse? The child doesnāt want to see you? So does no one ask why not? If a child becomes estranged, why arenāt meetings set up to re-establish relations? If the child is estranged from parents why does that spill out onto stopping contact with extended family? Children want to be with their families but that can change when they are manipulated & they are being manipulated. Social Workers do damage to children by stopping contact but they are never held to account.
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Dana i agree with you 100%.
” Has anyone ever got contact after a Special Guardian Order?”
In our case NO and we have not seen our two children for 6.5 yrs.
“What was the excuse? The child doesnāt want to see you?”
Thats exactly what we have always been told for over 6yrs. of course it Lies.
“So does no one ask why not?”
NO. and thats the way they like it. Keep the children like prisoners without a voice.
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