Dec 2008 02


Everybody is appalled by the death of Baby P, but we need to understand that the implications go far beyond Haringey.

According to Children's Secretary Balls:

"When I met with the Chief Inspector, she told me that in her judgement the failings in management, oversight and practice identified by the Inspectors’ report in Haringey are “exceptional”.


Does anyone believe that? Is it remotely plausible that these shocking failures are confined to Haringey?

Scanning Balls' summary list of shortcomings reveals issues we come across all the time on BOM. And not just in social services:

  • Silo mentality"Agencies acting in isolation from one another without effective co-ordination"
  • Shambolic work practices"Poor gathering, recording and sharing of information"
  • Weak management"Insufficient supervision by senior management"
  • Lack of oversight"Insufficient challenge by the Safeguarding Children Board to council members and frontline staff"
  • Reliance on box-ticking"Over-dependence on performance data which was not always accurate"
  • Inability to learn"Failure to implement the recommendations of the Victoria Climbie inquiry, which heavily criticised it five years ago"

These are issues that pervade the entire public sector. But there are reasons to think they may be particularly acute at the sharp end of social services.

Why?

Because by their very nature, the customers of social services are not the sort of people who can demand good service.

As we know, it's hard enough for the famously articulate middle-classes to get service out of their local schools and hospitals, but at least they know how to go about it. When it comes to social services, they don't even bother to try. Why should they? They're not big users. And that means there is no pressure for improvement from the customer side.

So how are social services kept up to the mark? Who checks on them? Who ensures they are discharging their responsibilities and takes action if they're not? How does the power work?

It's certainly not at the local level. As we've blogged many times, local councils are now little more than an executive arm of Whitehall. Balls's decision to take direct control of Haringey Social Services is a particularly stark reminder of that relationship, but our councils are more financially dependent on central government than their counterparts virtually anywhere else in the developed world. And as always, power follows the money.

Which means that the natural tendency of local councils is to look up rather than out. The key thing for them is to convince Whitehall that they're doing the job specified by Whitehall.

But central direction is a terrible way of running local services. Not only is Whitehall woefully ignorant of the real life issues at the coalface, it's also far too distant to organise and manage local effort effectively. In practice, its management comes down to the familiar Stalinism of output targets and performance league tables (see several thousand previous posts).

A key element in any Stalinist system is the Government Inspector, and in this case, the Government Inspector is Ofsted.

Their most recent report on Haringey was done just last year, but it shockingly failed to identify any significant issue with the social service department. Indeed, it praised the council for providing “a good service for children”, and improving their "life chances".

We also know that the inspectors were led by someone who'd worked under the head of Haringey social service in a previous job. She said:

“Haringey Borough Council delivers a good service for children and young people… The number of children on the child protection register continues to decrease. Thorough quality assurance systems are in place and the number of re-registrations demonstrates effective planning for these children."

Given what had already happened to Baby P, that was an extraordinarily ill-judged and ill-informed comment.

Especially when we now hear that those comments were made not on the basis of a proper inspection, but on the basis of a box-ticking exercise, a so-called "self-assessment".

As we've blogged many times (and here on Haringey itself), these self-assessments are worse than a waste of time. All they really show is that the reportee has learned how to tick the right boxes, yet they are used to provide a false and dangerous comfort that everything is fine.

Ofsted now say they are going to step up real inspections and also make them unannounced. But once again, the real problem is over-centralisation of power, and the way that top-down management structures impose their own logic and undermine responsibility for delivering results in the real world.

While Balls may have had no alternative but to seize control of hopeless Harringey, the only long-term solution is the return of power and responsibility back to the local level.

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Mike Denham is a former Treasury economist who worked extensively on public spending and fiscal analysis during the 1970s and early 1980s. His work included cost benefit appraisal of public projects, analysis of public sector cost inflation and value for money studies.

For the next 20 years he worked in the City as an investment manager, closely following fiscal and monetary policy developments. Now semi-retired, he scrutinises public spending on the TaxPayers' Alliance Burning Our Money blog.

Mike studied PPE at Oxford University, and has a Masters in Economics from the LSE. He lives in Surrey with his wife, and has two sons.



  • Hardeep Singh

    It’s not a case of will they learn anything from their mistakes both at a local and national level but quite simply they can’t – learn that is. The culture at the heart of these organisations is one that permits deviation and at best lethargic performance, pity it is after all so critical and poor children suffer, not what I want to see.
    However Mr. Denham is correct in his assertion that if people of the middle classes are passed pillar to post and left chansing our own tail then how on earth can people at such a desperate level seek help from the authority? What’s changed her very little I’m sad to say we can’t see the report because of the current Stalinist agenda that appears to have been adopted at Westminster lately and thus we have to take their word for it, the same people who facilitated such a systematic failure in the first place. Next we’ll have self assessment for criminals, do you think you deserve to go to jail for bank robbery … please tick “yes” or “no” …..?

  • Steve Robson

    I hate to agree with anything you people say because I am very clear you are part of the problem. You bear as much responsibility for what happened at Haringay as anyone else. your representation of the view that money spent on child protection and on good quality local authority management is waste leads to the penny pinching that gets us into these situations. We actually need more social workers and for them to be paid more because they do a far harder job than you, me, Hardeep Singh and anyone else at the TPA. THAT COSTS MONEY as do good Managers and Leaders. The TPA’s suggestion of paying a local authority CEO £60K will lead to more Baby P’s not less.
    All this having been said, you are right about the target regime and the Inspection Regime. As you say targets didn’t work in Stalinist USSR and they don’t work now. People will always play to the target and miss the point, like the old joke about the Soviet factory with a taget to make 100,000 shoes, they made 100,000 left shoes. As for the inspectors, you are correct, its all very well to say this now, but if Inspectors really have a point, saying it before something happens would help and they didn’t, so they too are as implicated as Haringey.
    Talking of missing the point, what is Hardeep on about, now there’s a (presumably) private sector person who always misses the point. See, every sector has them.

  • Hardeep Singh

    Steve my friend, you’ll find that we do overlap every now and then so chzalk and cheese we most certainly aren’t. Perhaps we do require more social workers but what about the management structurer that will guide and administer that at the point of execution. No good having the numbers it’s all about effectiveness at the end of the day. We all want the same thing …..

  • http://www.shootthem.com Brown

    No safety nets and no social workers. This is actually the real way forward.

  • Angus Ross

    It is not just OFSTED inspections that are at fault here…The Local Government Ombudsman has also had a part to play…
    It is reported that since the Victoria Climbie affair, one hundred and fifteen (115) complaints have been made to the Local Government Ombudsman about child protection in Haringey Council. Only one (1) of these complaints has been upheld with a finding of ‘maladministration with injustice’ with a paltry settlement of £70. This outcome is a statistical impossibility and exposes the inadequacy of Administrative Justice within the UK.
    There is a Downing Street Petition on this matter to which correspondents are invited to subscribe…
    http://petitions.number10.gov.uk/LGO-Haringey/

  • Keith Edmunds

    Thank you Angus. As you know, it is my petition. I raised it because, to lay the blame entirely at the feet of Social Workers in Haringey ignores the fact that the problem is systemic. The Local Government Ombudsman (LGO) turns a blind eye for a number of reasons:
    1. Haringey are a Labour Council, as is of course the Government, that appoints and pays the LGO’s.
    2. The LGO’s (three of them) are all Ex Local Government Chief Executives, two of whom seem to be have been chosen for their posts, as they had amongst them, the largest number of findings of ‘maladministration with injustice’ against them, by previous LGO’s, when they were in post as Council Chief Executives.
    3. The appointment of LGO’s by the Department for Communities and Local Government is based on recommendations from the Local Government Association.
    4. In addition to the statistical impossibility of their findings against Haringey Council for child protection complaints since Victoria Climbie, this is only part of the story – their overall findings of complaints against Councils are less than 1% in total – again a total statistical impossiblity.
    5. All three LGO’s in the tenure of this Government have now, in total, come from the ranks of Ex Chief Executives from Councils.
    6. The above facts point to the undeniable systemic failure that starts and ends with the Government, who are either so incompetent that they allow this status quo to exist or they are complicit with it.
    For further facts visit:
    http://ombudsmanwatch.org/
    http://psow.co.uk/
    This incestuous Government inspired cover up regimen – the Local Government Ombudsman- must be instantly reformed, otherwise there will be more and more Baby ‘P’s. After all, if it had not been for the persistence of the Media, the cover up, perpetrated by Haringey Council would have stood with the nodding aquiescence of both the Government and the Local Government Ombudsman.
    PLEASE SIGN THE PETITION VIA THE LINK IN THE PREVIOUS POST.

  • Sue Doughy

    But the Baby P and Karen Matthews cases are not all that new. As a child, one of 6, we often brought home village children who would not otherwise have had a hot meal that evening – if ever. My father recounts that many people who joined the army in 1939 – 1945 had never seen a hair comb, never worn socks and had no idea of cutlery. There always appears to be more ferrel children under Labour. Crime as if everything is nationalised is more common then. What to do apart from get social workers out of the circle in favour of a regime that does not think biological parents are always best, and that women can do no harm.

  • Keith Edmunds

    Oh yes, and where are the Audit Commission in all this mess?
    The responsiblity for the dismal failure of Local Government in this country also lies at their door – the supposed Regulator!

  • Roger Brunskill

    We have to remember that Haringey and possibly Kirklees are Labour peoples republics and as such subscribe to the “liberal package” which requires being non judgemental morally and physically.

  • Steve Robson

    Roger
    Perhaps we should also remember that it is the Right who are very keen on hitting children (smacking, spare the rod etc), while it is liberals who more generally oppose it.

  • Graeme Pirie

    “No safety nets and no social workers. This is actually the real way forward.”
    I agree with this comment hard as it may seem.
    What we have now is a vicious circle, the likes of Karen Matthews/Baby P’s parents etc, breed either out of stupidity or because in our society kids are worth benefits. We then need to provide social workers to ensure these kids are not harmed. The kids who grow up in that sort of environment often go on to behave in the same way, increasing the need for even more social workers.
    Worst of all, because we have social workers, they take on the responsibility (which should be the parents), and get the blame when things go wrong.
    The cycle needs to be broken and it seems clear to me that the solution is in preventing inadequate parents from having kids in the first place. The only way it seems that can be done is to remove the incentives for them to do so. Parents should recognise and accept that parenting has a financial burden and a great deal of responsibility.