skip navigation
random image random quote

Care Proceedings Changes In The Wind


 
Department for Constitutional Affairs
Children must be at the heart of care proceedings
Department for Constitutional Affairs Press Release
16 April 2007
The welfare of children must be at the heart of the processes involved in considering whether to take a child into care, Family Justice Minister Harriet Harman will say today. Ms Harman will be speaking at a conference organised by The Michael Sieff Foundation with the support of Children Law UK to examine the future of childcare proceedings.

Recommendations on how to improve the way the system works were set out in the Review of the Child Care Proceedings System in England and Wales, published by the Department for Constitutional Affairs in May 2006. The majority of the review's immediate recommendations are being implemented through a combination of:

* revised statutory guidance to support local authorities in preparing care applications, which will be issued by the DfES under section 7 of the Local Authority Social Services Act 1970;

* a new protocol for progressing care cases, which is being developed by the judiciary; and

* improved availability of pre-proceedings legal advice to parents being developed by the Legal Services Commission.

Related Articles

   
  Critical Land Registry IT Error Surfaces
  Don't Over-React To Minor Mistakes
  Land Registry Wants To Prove Identity - At Last?
  Housing Authority To Allow Overcrowding?
  How Early Is A Waste Disposal Licence Necessary?
  Rights of Access Can Grant Parking Rights - in Scotland
  HIP Forms From Law Society
  Family Court Decision Determinative?
  Restrictive Covenants Case Shocks
  HIPs Survey
  HIPs From 10 September 2007
  Government Bites on HIPs
  Gas Company Not Liable For Actions of Predecessor
  Landlord Can Set Review Procedure
  Tenant Loses Right To Buy
  The Effect of Possession Orders on the Right To Buy
  Block Tenant Not Flat Tenant
  Business Tenant Suffers Costs
  House of Lords To Debate HIPs
  Illegal Easements On Common Land
   
 
 

© UKLawyers. All rights reserved.

Legal Disclaimer
[smaller] Change text size [larger]