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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) >> M (Placement Order), Re [2014] EWCC B42 (Fam) (19 February 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCC/Fam/2014/B42.html Cite as: [2014] EWCC B42 (Fam) |
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1 Bridge Street West Manchester M60 9DJ |
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B e f o r e :
IN THE MATTER OF THE CHILDREN ACT 1989
AND IN THE MATTER OF: M (A CHILD)
____________________
A |
Applicant |
|
- and - |
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B C D (through their Guardian, L) |
Respondents |
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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: NOT KNOWN
Counsel for the Maternal Grandmother: NOT KNOWN
Counsel for the Guardian: NOT KNOWN
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
I INTRODUCTION
II THE AGREED BACKGROUND
III THE LEGAL FRAMEWORK
IV MY FINDINGS
"I would be very concerned about yet another move for D. If the Local Authority is seeking adoptive care for six to twelve months, that is another six to twelve months of D not knowing where she is going to be living. The process of starting to talk about her new family is itself very unsettling".
I accept that as the months go by and D settles with her current carers, growing up, and becoming more aware of her circumstances, moving her on to adopters will become more difficult and painful.
…………………
14 This is a little girl who knows the significance of family members and has strong bonds of affection with them. Contact is generally a positive experience for her. Her grandmother and mother attend conscientiously, sometimes accompanied by other members of the family. There are of course risks in continuing direct contact arrangements when the family do not truly accept the placement as long term. However, I am sufficiently encouraged by the behaviour of the mother and grandmother when D was removed to hope that they are able to put her needs first and will refrain from doing anything which might destabilise the placement. Although, again, it is early days, their conduct has done much to create a positive impression of the birth family for the foster carers, who feel they could work with the family in the long term.
(a) D is now some 3 months older;
(b) She has now started infant school where she has settled well and has friends and has the support of a counsellor;
(c) The evidence of N, the manager of the adoption team, is that there are now in Adoption 22, the local consortium, some 43 families approved to adopt a child of D's age, although none reflect her complex ethnicity. (I note that Mr and Mrs M are of white British origin.) By the time Mr K gave evidence the number within Adoption 22 had reduced to 22. There are eleven families who may be suitable on the national adoption register. Despite that, in the light of the factors which I have previously identified, I remain doubtful whether a suitable placement can, indeed, be identified within the time scale of six months;
(d) The mother has continued to attend contact conscientiously which has continued to be positive. The grandmother has missed a number of visits. Both have continued supportive of the foster carers and have a good relationship with them. They accept that contact must gradually reduce to a level compatible with a long-term placement;
(e) The Local Authority, the guardian and the maternal family all continue to be impressed by the sensitive care which Mr and Mrs M have afforded D;
(f) Given some of D's difficult behaviours it has been suggested—
MISS C: (Interrupts)
THE JUDGE: Miss C, I do understand how upsetting it is for you.
MISS C: Yes, it is upsetting [inaudible] really, you know.
THE JUDGE: I am sorry. Do you want me to break for a minute or shall I just get this over with?
MISS C: Get it over with.
THE JUDGE: Yes.
(f) I hesitate to use the vernacular term but it is suggested on behalf of the family that D is now not "adoptable"? I have expressed my reservations as to whether a suitable family can be identified but this is a different point. Could D herself cope with the loss of contact to her maternal family? Can she attach to new carers? Will her behaviour be such as to destabilise any adoptive placement? I am persuaded that with the help of her foster carers, D is developing a very basic understanding appropriate to her age of the relevant concepts and I accept the professional consensus from the Local Authority and the guardian that D would be capable of moving on and attaching to the right family.
(g) I have been concerned by the level of confusion and distress that D has already demonstrated. I understand the argument that the granting of a placement order means that there is a continuing period of at least six months during which D cannot be told in clear terms what is going to happen. On the other hand, even if I were to decline to grant the placement order, there can be no certainty for D. Whilst it is likely that if the Ms did apply to be long term foster carers that they would be approved as they seem entirely appropriate individuals, that process is some way off and in any events, D, like any other foster child could never be told in clear terms: you are staying here "for good". It is one of the deficiencies of foster care, that there can be no such promises.
V ORDERS
Miss B and Miss C, I am very sorry to have had to reach that decision.
VI POSTSCRIPT