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England and Wales Family Court Decisions (other Judges) |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Family Court Decisions (other Judges) >> A County Council v A (a child) [2021] EWFC B46 (28 June 2021) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWFC/OJ/2021/B46.html Cite as: [2021] EWFC B46 |
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Family Court Hearing Centre The Law Courts Chaucer Road Canterbury CT1 1ZA |
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B e f o r e :
sitting as a Deputy High Court Judge
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A COUNTY COUNCIL |
APPLICANT |
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- and - |
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A CHILD (VIA THE GUARDIAN) |
(1) RESPONDENT (2) RESPONDENT |
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Tel: 01303 230038
Email: [email protected]
Miss Sophia Stapleton (Counsel) on behalf of the Applicant
Miss Joyce Hitchman (Solicitor) on behalf of the First Respondent
Mr Simon Johnson (Counsel) on behalf of the Second Respondent
Other Parties Present and their status
None known
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Crown Copyright ©
His Honour Judge Scarratt:
"S' case is depressingly all too familiar to those working in the Family Court and as I believe indicative of a nationwide problem. There is currently a very limited capacity in the children social care system for young people with complex needs who need secure care.
It appears that demand for registered places is currently outstripping supply. This is the frustrating experience of the many family judges before whom such difficult cases are routinely presented. It is also the experience of the Children's Commissioner to whom I have forwarded a number of redacted documents in this case with the agreement of the parties"
He went on to say:
"The crisis caused by the coronavirus Covid 19 pandemic will plainly have impacted on the provision of secure accommodation of present and made the task of finding a bed in a secure unit for S yet more difficult, but I wish to stress that the problems raised in this case are not related to the pandemic. The absence of satisfactory secure provision is a chronic problem which in recent years has become even more acute to the significant detriment of a large number of very damaged young people in our society."
"Frustrating experience"
I find it rather more than frustrating. I find myself to be sad and, frankly, embarrassed that I am not able to serve and assist this very troubled young person in the way that I would wish to do.
"To be blunt Q is being failed by the care system given the inability to locate a suitable secure placement in which he can receive the intensive therapeutic work which he so plainly and urgently needs. If he does not receive this work soon, he will be a huge risk to young children and others. The nature of his likely offending behaviour also places him at risk of being a victim of serious harm both in the community and in custody.
As this judgment makes clear Q is, through no fault of his own, a profoundly damaged young person who desperately needs care and help. The window of opportunity to tackle and address his difficulties is running out since he will be 18 years old in just over a year's time.
At that point no order that this court can make could prevent him from leaving a placement and living in the community where he will be at significant risk of harm himself and where he will present a significant danger to others"
It struck me, when reading the judgment of Knowles J in the case of Q, that if I replace Q with A, every single word that her Ladyship, a very experienced family judge, has said, applies in this case.
"Finally, I am compelled to note that this yet another case in which the Court is once again faced with approving an unregulated placement by reason of a lack of any other option consequent on the continuing paucity of regulated provision for children in this jurisdiction.
I set out the ever-growing list of such cases and the difficulties they cause for the vulnerable children who are the subjects of them in detail in Lancashire CC and G. Since that case was published there has been at least further published judgment that of Gwyneth Knowles J and Q dealing with very similar issues.
The need for these resource issues to be addressed for the benefit of the highly vulnerable children with which the Courts are concerned in these difficult and troubling cases remains as grimly pressing as it ever was"
And, with great respect to McDonald J, I agree with every word he has said particularly in his last sentence:
"The need for these resource issues to be addressed for the benefit of the highly vulnerable children with which the Courts are concerned in these difficult and troubling cases remains as grimly pressing as it ever was"