THE STORY BELOW IS PR OF THE WORST KIND, THE MINISTER IS FULL OF SHIT AND THIS IS WHY. THE CHILDREN WAITING TO BE ADOPTED HAVE PARENTS FIGHTING THE ADOPTION IN FAMILY COURTS ACROSS BRITAIN. I AM AWARE OF SOME CHILDREN IN FOSTER CARE AWAITING ADOPTION FOR SOME 7 YEARS AND SOME DO NOT GET ADOPTED AT ALL.. TOO OLD, WRONG COLOUR WRONG SIZE, ITS AMAZING HOW THESE SO CALLED "DESPERATE TO ADOPT" POEPLE GET FUSSY WHEN THE CHILD IS 7 TO 15 AND TROUBLED.
DONT FALL FOR THIS BULLSHIT: THE ONLY REASON THE LAW IS BEING CHANGED IS TO FORCE TIMESCALES ON THE LAW THAT CURRENTLY DOES NOT HAVE ANY REGARDS THE ADOPTION PROCESS FOLLOWING THE COURT ORDER REMOVING THE CHILD FOR ADOPTION FROM THE CHILDS PARENTS. TIMESCALES WILL MEAN THE PARENTS WHO WISH TO PURSUE THROUGH THE COURT APPEALS, FOLLOWING THE REMOVAL OF THEIR CHILDREN WILL HAVE TO DO SO WITHIN A SIX MONTH PERIOD, THAT SIX MONTH PERIOD MUST ALSO INCLUDE THE COURT CASE IN THE FAMILY COURT REMOVING THE CHILD FROM HIS/HER FAMILY. THE EXACT WORDING HE USED WAS "FROM INTERVENTION TO ADOPTION PLACEMENT IT SHOULD TAKE PLACE WITHIN 6 MONTHS"
RECENTLY I WAS ASSISTING A FAMILY, THEIR JUDGE SAID THE MUM HAD UNDERTAKEN EVERY GROUP ASKED OF HER AND HAD TAKEN THE ACTIONS ASKED OF HER BY SOCIAL SERVICES. EVEN THOUGH SHE DID ALL OF THIS AND HAD FANTASTIC REPORTS BACK THE LOCAL AUTHORITY APPROVED ADOPTION. THE LOCAL AUTHORITY SAID "WE FEEL MOTHER CAN CHANGE BUT NOT WITHIN THE TIMESCALE THAT WOULD BE RIGHT FOR THE CHILD". lOCAL AUTHORITY'S ARE ALREADY IMPLEMENTING THESE NEW TIMESCALES, THOUGH ONLY WHEN IT SUITS THEM.
NOW THE STORY BELOW IS BOASTING OF THE CARE HIS PARENTS GAVE TO 89 FOSTER CHILDREN, BUT THEY DID NOT ADOPT. HIS FAMILY HAVE MADE SERIOUSLY GOOD MONEY FROM FOSTERING, WHY ADOPT?
THERE ARE 4600 CHILDREN WAITING TO BE ADOPTED! YET WE ALL KNOW THAT BABIES AND CHILDREN UNDER 2 ARE ADOPTED IMMEDIATELY. THE OTHER CHILDREN ARE THE OLDER CHILDREN AND THE "HARD TO PLACE", IN OTHER WORDS THE ONES ADOPTERS DO NOT WANT.
WHEN YOU GET MINISTERS IN NATIONAL NEWSPAPERS TRYING TO SELL THEIR FAMILY LIFE AND HIS HEROIC STORY OF HIS PERSONAL CRUSADE TO CHANGE ADOPTION LAWS IT SMACKS OF DESPERATE P.R AND THAT IS ALL IT IS. THE FACT IS MOST OF THESE CHILDREN'S PARENTS ARE CAPABLE OF CARING FOR THEM AND SOME MAY NEED SUPPORT, THE LOCAL AUTHORITY HAVE WITHDRAWN FROM SUPPORTING PARENTS AND FAMILIES TO SAVE MONEY, THE FACT IS THIS IS ALL SIMPLY A PLOY TO REMOVE THE LEGAL ROUTES FOR MUM AND DAD TO GET THEIR CHILD HOME. IT IS A NATIONAL DISGRACE, LEGAL AID IS ALSO BEING REMOVED FROM PARENTS.. THE PARENTS IN THIS COUNTRY DO NOT STAND A HOPE IN HELL AGAINST SOCIAL SERVICES AND THAT IS WHAT WILL EVENTUALLY LEAD TO EITHER CIVIL UNREST, OR BIGGER PRISONS TO HOLD THEM ALL. 'KIDS IN CARE PARENTS IN PRISON' NICE AND NEAT
'I had 89 brothers and sisters' Children's minister Edward Timpson reveals why he is going to free children from the adoption mire.
One of my strongest childhood memories is arriving home from school, aged five or six, to discover two small children running amok around the house.
When my mother told me they’d be staying with us for a while, I fled to my bedroom and slammed the door, vowing not to come out until they were gone.
Over the next few hours, I got used to the idea and came out of my room. I’m the youngest of three children and with my father out at work all day and the children at school, my mother needed to fill the void. She’d been a nursery nurse and nanny and decided she needed something to occupy her time. She answered an advert for foster carers – hence the children running around our home. They were just the first. Over the years, I’ve had 89 ‘brothers and sisters’, including the two boys my parents subsequently adopted.
Family time: Edward, far right, knows the importance of a stable home life and says he has seen the difference his mother made to her foster children's lives
I always say that I became a grandfather long before becoming a father to my own three children. Aged nine, I was bottle-feeding and changing nappies; my resentment long gone. As I grew older and understood more, I came to treasure seeing sometimes troubled children pass through our home and watching them grow.
The experiences were not all happy. Some youngsters had endured a chaotic start to their lives, were very difficult and put a lot of strain on our family. But overall, it was incredibly rewarding. Some of the children were emergency placements, taken out of danger and put with us for periods of a few days to a few months.
Today, more than 30 years after those first two youngsters put my nose out of joint, I still value the insight my mother’s urge to care for the vulnerable has given me into the lives of children.
Her vocation was the impetus that led me to train as a barrister in the family courts, representing children in council care. When I entered Parliament, I made it my mission to introduce reforms to the adoption system – measures I believe will command cross-party support.
Prospective parents, eager to give a home and love to a child, are put off by intrusive checks (posed)
At the moment, Britain’s adoption system is a national crisis. There are currently 4,600 children who have cleared all the legal stages for adoption but are still in local authority care awaiting families – a process that takes, on average, two years seven months. Yet we know that in some areas, prospective adopters are being ignored or turned away by their local authorities. Many give up, or are forced to adopt abroad.
Edward Timpson says we owe it to children to provide with care and stability
We urgently need 2,000 to 3,000 adoptive parents to clear the backlog, as well as another 400 to 600 a year for the children coming through the system. That’s why I have set out a series of measures that will simplify the entire process, free up the ‘market’ in adoption and put an end to the current situation where some areas have children waiting for families, while other local authorities turn away prospective parents.
I know from my own experience and from research that the current adoption process is cumbersome and inefficient. We will maintain the necessary checks and safeguards, but end the over-emphasis on finding a perfect ethnic match between child and adoptive parents. Yes, a child’s ethnicity and religion are important, but it is not acceptable that it takes black children, on average, a year longer to find adoptive families.
We know from our research that many prospective parents are put off by adoption agencies’ intrusive and often irrelevant checks. Last week, we heard of a couple who were asked what company their car was insured with – what effect can that have on their suitability to adopt? No longer should people fear being turned away because, for example, they are smokers, or overweight.
We are introducing a National Adoption Gateway to streamline the current system of more than 180 adoption authorities. Our research tells us that 30 per cent of people who apply to adopt currently receive no response within three months. We will ensure that they are called back within 24 hours and visited within a week.
The Government will invest £150 million into making the new system work. A third of that money will be ring-fenced to solve two problems. The first is finding homes for hard-to-place children, who might be older children, sibling groups or youngsters with disabilities. The second is the anomaly that forces councils to pay £13,000 to other local authorities who find suitable parents and £27,000 to adoption agencies run by the charitable sector.
The government wants the approval process to be cut from the current two years to six months to help ease the path of adoption (posed)
There are many excellent councils, but adoption is too patchy. Some authorities are very efficient and join with their neighbours to provide a regional solution. But too many make life difficult for prospective adopters. That’s why, if they fail to improve, we’ll pass their responsib-ility for adoption to outside agencies run by the voluntary sector.
We want the approval process to be cut from the current two years to six months from the moment prospective adopters register their interest. We’re also going to allow adoptive parents to see the adoption register so they can decide for themselves whether they could be suitable parents for a specific child. And to help make more adoptions succeed, we’re increasing support for adoptive parents – for instance by offering the same maternity leave as for natural parents.
I want to make it easier for people from all walks of life to foster and adopt because I’ve seen the good it can do. When I’m in my Crewe and Nantwich constituency, I can’t escape my family’s fostering legacy. I was out knocking on doors when a car slowed and a window opened. ‘Oh no,’ I thought, ‘here comes an egg.’ Instead, a head poked out and said: ‘Hello Edward.’ It was one of my ‘brothers’ with his new family. At a public meeting, a man approached me and said: ‘You won’t remember me. I’m the one who accidentally smashed your fish tank.’ How could I ever forget?
I’ve seen the difference my mother made to the children she fostered. To this day she maintains an open-door policy to those she helped. Some seek her out in times of trouble because she gave them the only stable period in their childhood. Others have never been in touch – often for the best of reasons: they have grown up, settled down and now have jobs, homes and children of their own. Some of the endings have not been so happy. But I know, and they know, that she provided them with love, care and stability for at least a part of their lives.
We owe it to children in care, the most fragile and vulnerable members of our society, to give them the same opportunity.
Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/debate/article-2268839/I-89-brothers-sisters-Childrens-minister-Edward-Timpson-reveals-going-free-children-adoption-mire.html#ixzz2JLlMbk9v
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Doing nothing more than making it easier for the government to steal babies, because they are worth more money and easier to sell.
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