Social workers judge that being brought up in care makes you unfit to be a parent.
Critics of the Government’s plans to extend the secrecy of Britain’s court
system are still insisting that, where courts operate behind closed doors,
this is likely to allow justice to be horribly abused. They are, of course,
quite right. But they do not point out that a perfect illustration of their
case is what goes on daily in many of our family courts.
Last week, I learned of the case of a sensible but desperately unhappy 17-year-old,
who has just lost her child forever. She herself has spent most of her life
in local authority care, although she maintains that she was quite rightly
taken away when young from her mother, who was a drug addict and an
alcoholic.
The girl nevertheless seems to have triumphed over such adversity and, having
found a boyfriend, she last year had a baby. The couple would have been only
too happy to bring up the child together. The boyfriend is said to be “a
brilliant dad”.
But social workers, as is their wont, told her that if she wanted to keep the
baby, she must stop seeing him, and sent her for a six month “assessment”.
She apparently passed this test with flying colours and was found to be a
“competent mother”. But the social workers were still not satisfied. They
tried in vain to establish whether, because of her background, she might
have problems with drugs or alcohol. So they then paid thousands of pounds
to have her assessed by a psychological “expert”.
He could find nothing wrong with her, but he was prepared to agree with those
paying his fees that, because she had been brought up in care, she might
have difficulty bringing up a child. Her daughter might therefore be
exposed, in that vague term beloved by social workers, to a “risk of
emotional harm”.
After a great deal of public expense on three groups of lawyers, a court found, I gather, that, the young mother having been brought up in care, her daughter must now in her turn be put into care. No testimony from the mother was heard.
What does it tell us about our system of “care” when, as it seems, social workers and the judiciary are in agreement that the system is not capable of bringing up a person who is fit to look after her own child?
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/comment/columnists/christopherbooker/9191488/Youve-suffered-care-so-you-lose-your-child.html
After a great deal of public expense on three groups of lawyers, a court found, I gather, that, the young mother having been brought up in care, her daughter must now in her turn be put into care. No testimony from the mother was heard.
What does it tell us about our system of “care” when, as it seems, social workers and the judiciary are in agreement that the system is not capable of bringing up a person who is fit to look after her own child?
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/comment/columnists/christopherbooker/9191488/Youve-suffered-care-so-you-lose-your-child.html
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