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England and Wales County Court (Family) |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales County Court (Family) >> R (deaf parents), Re [2014] EWCC B41 (Fam) (14 March 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCC/Fam/2014/B41.html Cite as: [2014] EWCC B41 (Fam) |
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IN THE MATTER OF THE CHILDREN ACT 1989
AND IN THE MATTER OF: A AND B (CHILDREN)
B e f o r e :
____________________
Re: R (Children) |
____________________
Apple Transcription Limited
Suite 204, Kingfisher Business Centre, Burnley Road, Rawtenstall, Lancashire BB4 8ES
Telephone: 0845 604 5642 – Fax: 01706 870838
Counsel for the Mother: Miss B
Counsel for the Father Mr. C
Solicitor for the Guardian/Children: Mrs. D
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
I INTRODUCTION
II THE AGREED BACKGROUND
"First, it was necessary for all the agencies concerned to understand that communicating with a profoundly deaf person was not simply a matter of interpretation or translation. There was a need for expert insight and support by a suitably qualified person at the earliest stage. It was the duty of those acting for the parents to identify the disabilities as a factor at that early stage. Secondly, the parents and Local Authority should make the court aware of the disabilities and need for special measures as a matter of case management. Thirdly, an expert should be appointed so that the impact of the disability could be addressed at a case management hearing. In the case of a profoundly deaf person, consideration should be given to the use of a deaf relay interpreter as an intermediary to communicate with the Local Authority and the court and, fourthly, the issue of funding had to be considered. These issues are not merely a matter of good practice. The court, the Local Authority and CAFCASS have a duty under the Equality Act 2010 to afford the right level of support."
II MY ASSESSMENT OF THE WITNESSES
III THE LEGAL FRAMEWORK
IV MY FINDINGS
The threshold criteria
a. It is conceded that throughout the period following A's birth, both parents used alcohol excessively, to the extent that it affected their day-to-day care of A and their ability to make appropriate decisions in respect of his care and their capacity to protect him.
b. In terms of impaired decision-making, in particular, the parents permitted a lady called J to care for A for protracted periods from very shortly after his birth. J and her husband were unable to have children of their own. J took advantage of the parents, attending at A's birth and, I am satisfied, in reality, trying to secure A's long term care for herself. The parents were, at best, unable to prevent J's machinations and, at worst, happy to have someone they could leave A with whilst they went drinking in the local pub. Even so, A himself spent far too much time in Pub A.
c. The parents' reliance on J to care for A only came to an end as a result of the referral to the Local Authority and the Local Authority's insistence that she be excluded from A's care and that the parents assume a proper degree of responsibility for their son's day-to-day care.
d. Unfortunately, the parents also left A to be cared for by another unsuitable person. That is K, the 22-year-old brother of the mother. Until Saturday, 20th April 2013, he had never previously cared for A. In his care, A, now still only 11 months of age, sustained a scald to his left upper arm and shoulder. I am still not at all clear as to how that scald could have occurred. The Local Authority has not chosen to pursue any suggestion that it may have been non-accidental. The uncle did not inform the parents of what happened immediately, waiting until the mother called home at around 7.30. Following that call, the parents did not return straightaway but did so at about 9pm. Neither parent saw fit to take A to hospital that night. It is clear from their evidence that one of the factors which weighed in that decision is that they had both been drinking and feared the response of professionals. The mother belatedly took A to hospital on the following morning. By that stage, his arm was blistering and he was detained for treatment for some three days.
e. Following that incident, there was a further written agreement dated 24th April 2013 emphasising that A was not to be left in the care of any unassessed person, including J, that the parent must abstain from alcohol and that A must not be taken to the pub. Both parents acknowledge that they understood the terms of that agreement.
f. On the very next day, social workers discovered that A was once again in the care of J, traced the parents to the pub and found them both intoxicated. Indeed, they were sufficiently incapacitated for the social worker to be obliged to permit J to care for A overnight. The risks inherent in that course were emphasised when, later that night, A was found in bed with L, a man with an extensive criminal record, who had that very night been consuming alcohol.
g. The parents' relationship has been marred by incidents of domestic abuse. The mother has only sustained injury on two occasions, in August 2012 and on 30th November. However, those two incidents are merely the most distressing manifestations of the father's aggression and anger as described by the mother in evidence.
h. The parents failed to engage with professionals or to act upon their advice so as to reduce the risks posed to A. Indeed, they were repeatedly dishonest about their alcohol use, their whereabouts and A's whereabouts. I have already referred to one breach of the written agreement but also, for example, on 24th July 2013, the parents should have been at a meeting with social workers. The mother was telephoned and said that she was at Place B with A. Searches by the social worker and interpreter found both parents in Pub A with A, drinking lager, all contrary to the contract of expectations.
Additional findings
V THE WAY FORWARD
(i) What, if anything, has changed within the functioning of either parent since the children were removed?
(ii) Are those changes sufficient to reduce the risk factors to a tolerable level?
(iii) What still needs to change within the parents' functioning to enable them to provide acceptable care for these two children?
(iv) What is the parents' capacity for sustaining change in their parenting skills?
(v) What is the timescale for such necessary changes?
I will hear further argument as to any additional areas of investigation in due course: