CHILDREN
Statutory guidance to the UK Border Agency on making arrangements to safeguard and promote the welfare of children
Issued under section 55 of the Borders, Citizenship and Immigration Act 2009
November 2009
Fo
r
ewo
r
d
Int
r
oduction
Pa
r
t
One
–
General
A
r
rangements
to
Safegua
r
d
and
P
r
omote
W
elfa
r
e
Pa
r
t
T
w
o
–
A
r
rangement
s
i
n
th
e
Unite
d
Kingdo
m
Bo
r
de
r
Agenc
y
t
o
Safegua
r
d
an
d
P
r
omot
e
Child
r
en’
s
W
elfa
r
e
14
Annex
A:
Indicators
of
T
raffickin
gIt is the duty of Government and of society as a whole to keep children safe. Public agencies have a particular responsibility to do this, both within their own area of business and in the way in which they work together.Section 11 of the Children Act 2004 places a duty on specified public bodies and key individuals to carry out their functions having regard to the need to safeguard and promote the welfare of children. This applies across a wide range of public activity, from schools to prisons.Section 55 of the Borders, Citizenship and Immigration Act 2009 now places a similar duty on the UK Border Agency. This is a naturalprogression for the Agency which has been steadily improving how it works with children. Last year, the Government lifted its general reservation relating to immigration on the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child, and in January of this year we introduceda statutory Code of Practice for the UK Border Agency on Keeping Children Safe from Harm. The Code is superseded by this new duty which now places the UK Border Agency on the same footing as other public bodies working with children.As Ministers for Immigration and Children, we welcome this coming together and are confident that it will help to support more effective joint working.The UK Border Agency undertakes difficult and sensitive work on behalf of society as a whole. Working with children presents particular challenges. To meet these challenges effectively, the UKBorder Agency needs the support of all those with an interest in children. The development of this guidance has been greatly assisted by the input ofa range of organisations outside Government. We are grateful for this and look forward to continued co-operation to achieve the better outcomes for children which we all want to see.
Phil
W
oolas
Minister of State for Bo r ders and Immigration
Ba
r
ones
s
Delyt
h
M
o
r
g
a
n Parliamenta r y U n d e r - S ec r e t a r y o f Stat e fo r Child r en , Y o u n g Peopl e an d Familie s
INTRODUCTION
1. Improving the way key people and bodies safeguard and promote the welfare of children is crucial to improving outcomes for children.2. Section 55 of the Borders, Citizenshipand Immigration Act 2009 (the 2009 Act) therefore places a duty on the Secretary of State to make arrangements for ensuring that immigration, asylum, nationality and customs functions are discharged having regard to the need to safeguard and promote the welfare of children in the UK. A similar duty is placed on the Director of Border Revenue in respect of the Director’s functions.3. The guidance sets out the key arrangements for safeguarding and promoting the welfare of children as they apply both generally to public bodies who deal with children (Part 1) and specifically to the UK Border Agency (Part2). These arrangements will help agencies to create and maintain the right organisational ethos for working with children. They include:
•
Senior
mana
g
ement
commitment
to
the
impo
r
tance
of
safeguarding
and promoting
c
hildre
n
’
s
w
elfare;
•
A
clear
statement
of
the
a
g
ency
’
s
responsibilities
t
ow
ards
c
hildren
a
v
ailable
for
all
staff;
•
A
clear
line
of
accountability within
the
or
g
anisation
for
w
ork
on
safeguarding
and promoting
the
w
elfare
of
c
hildren;
•
Se
r
vice
de
v
elopments
that
ta
k
e
account
of the
need
to
safeguard
and
promote
w
elfare and
is
info
r
med,
where
appropriat
e
,
b
y
the
views
of
c
hildren
and
families;
•
Staff
training
on
safeguarding
and promoting
the
w
elfare
of
c
hildren
for
all staff working with or in contact with children and families;
•
Safe
rec
r
uitment
procedures
in
place;
•
Effect
i
v
e
inte
r
-a
g
ency
w
orking
to
safeguard
and
promote
the
w
elfare
the
c
hildren,
and
•
Effect
i
v
e
info
r
mation
sharin
g
.
4. Section 55 is intended to achieve the same effect as section 11 of the Children Act 2004 (the 2004 Act) which places a similar dutyon other public organisations1. As well as providing a driver for improvement within the UK Border Agency, the duty will also help to improve inter-agency working in respect of children. Section 55 applies to the carrying out of the relevant functions anywhere in the UK.
THE
ROLE
AND
S
TA
TUS
OF
THIS
G
UIDANCE
5. This guidance is aimed at staff of the UK Border Agency and contractors when carrying out UK Border Agency functions. It setsout the key arrangements for safeguarding and promoting the welfare of children. The guidance is modelled on the guidance which supports section 11 of the 2004 Act2. It isin two parts. Part 1 describes the general arrangements to safeguard and promote the welfare of children which are likely to be common to all agencies covered by section11 and, in the case of the UK Border Agency, by section 55. Part 1 is intended to make clear how the work of the UK Border Agency fits 1 For the full list of bodies cove r ed by Section 11 see paragraph 1.1 of the guidance belo w . 2 Statutor y Guidance on making a r rangements to safegua r d and p r omote the welfa r e of child r en under section 11 of the Child r en Act 2004 updated Ma r ch 2007. Issued by DCSF and available at www.dcsf.gov.uk/ever ychildmatters/_download/?id=1372 into the wider arrangements, although not all of Part 1 is directly relevant to it. Part 2 sets out how those general arrangements apply specifically to the UK Border Agency.6. This guidance is issued under section 55 (3) and 55 (5) which requires any person exercising immigration, asylum, nationality and customs functions to have regard to theguidance given to them for the purpose by the Secretary of State. This means they must take this guidance into account and, if
they
decide
to
depa
r
t
f
r
om
it,
h
a
v
e
clear
r
easons
f
or
doing
so.
7. Where private or voluntary organisations are commissioned to provide services on behalf of the UK Border Agency, the agreement under which the arrangements are made should require that the private or voluntary organisation concerned takes this guidanceinto account in the provision of those services and, if they decide to depart from it, haveclear reasons for doing so.8. The guidance does not replace any current operational instructions and should be read alongside them.
T
IME
T
ABLE
9. The commencement date for section 55 ofthe Borders, Citizenship and Immigration Act2009 was 2 November 2009.
P
A
R
T
1
UNDERS
T
ANDING
THE
DUTY
TO MAKE ARRANGEMENTS TO
SAFEGUARD AND PROMOTE
THE
WEL
F
ARE
OF
CHILDREN
1.1. Section 11 of the 2004 Act places a duty on key people and bodies in England to make arrangements to ensure that their functions are discharged with regard to the need to safeguard and promote the welfare of children. Section 28 of the Act requires similar bodies in Wales to do the same. Theapplication of this duty will vary according to the nature of each agency and its functions. The key people and bodies that are covered by the duty are:
•
local
authoritie
s
,
including
district councils;
•
the
police;
•
the
probation
se
r
vice;
•
NHS
bodies(Strategic
Health
A
uthoritie
s
,
Designated
Special
Health
A
uthoritie
s
,
Prima
r
y Care
T
r
ust
s
,
NHS
T
r
ust
s
,
Local Health
Boards
and
NHS
F
oundation
T
r
usts);
•
Or
g
anisations
(cu
r
rently
the
Connexions
Service) providing services under section114 of the Learning and Skills Act 2007;Border Agency in an Act that deals directly with UK Border Agency work. It therefore appears in section 55 of the Borders, Citizenship and Immigration Act 20093.1.3. The duty does not give the UK Border Agency any new functions, nor does it over- ride its existing functions. It does require the Agency to carry out its existing functionsin a way that takes into account the need to safeguard and promote the welfare of children.1.4. Safeguarding and promoting the welfare of children is defined in the guidance to section11 of the 2004 Act (section 28 in Wales) and in Working Together to Safeguard Children4 as:
•
protecting
c
hildren
from
maltreatment;
•
pre
v
enting
impai
r
ment
of
c
hildre
n
’
s
health
or
de
v
elopment
(where
health
means
‘p
h
ysical
or
mental
health’
and
de
v
elopment
means
‘p
h
ysical,
intellectual,
emotional,
social
or
beh
a
vioural de
v
elopment’);
•
Y
outh
offending
teams;
•
G
o
v
e
r
nors
/
Directors
of
Prisons
and
Young Offender Institutions;
•
Directors
of
Secure
T
raining
Centres;
•
T
he
British
T
ranspo
r
t
P
olic
e
.
1.2. The UK Border Agency functions are not devolved, unlike those of the bodies listedin the 2004 Act, and so the Government has chosen to apply the duty to safeguard and promote the welfare of children to the UK
3 In Scotland the legislative p r ovisions for p r otecting child r en and p r omoting their welfa r e a r e contained in the P r otection of Child r en ( Scotland ) Act 2007 and the Child r en ( Scotland ) Act 1995. The principles of co-operation and info r mation sharing between agencies in the safegua r ding of child r en a r e, howeve r , impor tant themes in the legislative framework and guidance gove r ning the deliver y of child r en’s ser vices in Nor the r n I r eland, whe r e the legislative p r ovisions a r e the Child r en (Nor the r n I r eland) O r der 1995, and the Safegua r ding V ulnerable G r oups (Nor the r n I r eland) O r der 2007. In both jurisdictions A r ea Child P r otection Committees a r e the means of p r oviding local p r ocedu r es and p r ocesses for agencies to comply with the legislation to safegua r d child r en and to co-operate togethe r , and for anyone working with child r en. 4 The W elsh Assembly Gove r nment has p r oduced its own version of “ W orking T ogether” with a definition that matches this albeit exp r essed in a dif fe r ent wa y . It is available at: http://cymru.gov.uk/pubs/circulars/2007/nafwc1207en. pdf?lang=en
•
ensuring
that
c
hildren
are
g
r
o
wing
up in
circumstances
consistent
with
the
pr
o
vision
of
safe
and
effect
i
v
e
care;
and
•
unde
r
taking
that
role
so
as
to
enable
those
c
hildren
to
h
a
v
e
opti
m
um
life
c
hances
and to
enter
adulthood
successfull
y
.
1.5. The overall framework set out in the 2004Act is to provide a basis for achieving the vision of safeguarding set out in the report Safeguarding Children5 i.e:
•
all
a
g
encies
w
orking
with
c
hildren,
y
oung
people
and
their
families
ta
k
e
all
reasonable
measures
to
ensure
that
the
risks
of
ha
r
m
to
c
hildre
n
’
s
w
elfare
are
minimised;
and
•
where
there
are
conce
r
ns
about
c
hildren and
y
oung
people
’
s
w
elfar
e
,
all
a
g
encies
ta
k
e
all
appropriate
actions
to
address those
conce
r
n
s
,
w
orking
to
a
g
reed
local
policies
and
procedures
in
pa
r
tnership
with
other
a
g
encie
s
.
FRAMEWORK FOR
MAKING
E
FFECTIVE
ARRANGEMENTS
TO
SAFEGUARD
AND
PROMOTE
CHILDREN’S
W
EL
F
ARE
1.6. Each agency will have different contributions to make towards safeguarding and promoting the welfare of children depending on the functions for which they have responsibility. For example, the main contribution of some services might be to identify and act on their concerns about the welfare of children with whom they come into contact, perhaps during or following completion of a common assessment while others might be more involved in supporting a child once concerns have been identified. The UK Border Agency is among the former. There are some key features of effective arrangements to safeguard and promote the 5 Chief Inspector of Social Ser vices, Commission for Health Imp r ovement, Her Majesty’s Chief Inspector of Constabular y , Her Majesty’s Chief inspector of the C r own P r osecution Ser vice, Her Majesty’s Chief Inspector of the Magistrates’ Cour ts Ser vice, Her Majesty’s Chief Inspector of Schools, Her Majesty’s Chief Inspector of Prisons, Her Majesty’s Chief Inspector of P r obation (2002). Safegua
r
ding Child
r
en – A Joint Chief Inspectors’ Repor t on A
r
rangements to Safegua
r
d Child
r
en. London , Depar tment of Health. welfare of children which all agencies will need to take account of in addition to those that are particular to its own work, when undertaking their particular functions. These arrangements will help agencies to create and maintain an organisational culture and ethos that reflectsthe importance of safeguarding and promoting the welfare of children.
STR
A
TEGIC
AND
O
RGANIS
A
TIONAL
A
RRANGEMENTS
1.7. Many organisations subject to the section 11 duty (or in Wales the section 28 duty) are also required to take part in Local Safeguarding Children Boards (LSCBs). LSCBs are thekey statutory mechanism for agreeing how the relevant organisations in each localarea cooperate to safeguard and promote the welfare of children in that locality, and for ensuring their effectiveness. The Local Authority convenes and is also a member of the LSCB. The Board partners are set out insection 13(3) of the 2004 Act for England and in section 31(3) for Wales6. They are:
•
district
councils
in
local
g
o
v
e
r
nment
areas that
h
a
v
e
them;
•
the
c
hief
police officer
for
a
police
area
of
whi
c
h
any
pa
r
t
falls
within
the
area
of
the
Local
A
uthority;
•
the
local
probation
board
for
an
area
of
whi
c
h
any
pa
r
t
falls
within
the
area
of
the
Local
A
uthority;
•
the
Y
outh
Offending
T
eam
for
an
area
of
whi
c
h
any
pa
r
t
falls
within
the
area
of
the
Local
A
uthority;
6 In W ales they a r e: the members a child r en’s ser vices authority in W ales ; a Local Health Boa r d; an NHS t r ust all or most of whose hospitals, establishments and facilities a r e situated in W ales; the police authority and chief officer of police for a police a r ea in W ales; the British T ranspor t Police Authorit y , so far as exe r cising functions in r elation to W ales; a local p r obation boa r d for an a r ea in W ales; a youth of fending team for an a r ea in W ales; (h) the gove r nor of a prison or secu r e training cent r e in W ales (o r , in the case of a contracted out prison or secu r e training cent r e, its di r ector); ( i ) any person to the extent that he is p r oviding ser vices pursuant to a r rangements made by a child r en’s ser vices authority in W ales under section 123(1)(b) of the Lea r ning and Skills Act 2000 (c. 21) (youth suppor t ser vices).
•
Strategic
Health
A
uthorities
and
Prima
r
y
Care Trusts for an area of which any part falls within the area of the Local Authority;
•
NHS
T
r
usts
and
NHS
F
oundation
T
r
ust
s
,
all
or
most
of
whose
hospitals
or
establishments
and
facilities
are
situated
in the
Local
A
uthority
area;
•
the
Connexions
se
r
vice
operating
in
any pa
r
t
of
the
area
of
the
Local
A
uthority;
•
CAFCASS
(Children
and
F
amily
Cou
r
ts
Advisory and Support Service),
•
the
G
o
v
e
r
nor
or
Director
of
any
Secure
T
raining
Centre
in
the
area
of
the
Local
A
uthority;
and
•
the
G
o
v
e
r
nor
or
Director
of
any
prison
in the Local Authority area that ordinarily detains children.1.8. Other organisations can be involved in LSCB by agreement. The UK Border Agency is one of these. For details of how the UK Border Agency fits in with these arrangements see Part 2 of this guidance.1.9. At an organisational or strategic level within individual agencies, key features for safeguarding and promoting the welfare of children are:
a.
Senior
management commitment
to
the
impo
r
tance
of
safegua
r
ding
and
p
r
omoting
child
r
en’s
welfa
r
e
Senior managers will need to demonstrate leadership, be informed about, and take responsibility for the actions of their staff who are providing services to children and their families. This could mean identifying a named person at senior management level tochampion the importance of safeguarding and promoting the welfare of children throughout the organisation. Senior managers will alsobe responsible for monitoring the actionsof their staff to safeguard and promote the welfare of children. This includes ensuringthat children and young people are listened to appropriately and concerns expressed about their or any other child’s welfareare taken seriously and responded to in an appropriate manner.
b.
A
clear
statement
of
the
agency’s
r
esponsibilities
towa
r
ds
child
r
en
is
available
for
all
sta
f
f
This should include any children in the care of the agencies, any with whom they work directly and those with whom they come into contact. It could form part of an agency’s existing policy and/or procedures. All staff should be made aware of their agency’s policies and procedures on safeguarding and promoting the welfare of children and the importance of listening to children and young people, particularly when they are expressing concerns about either their own or other children’s welfare. Effective systems should be in place for children, staff and other peopleto make a complaint where there are concerns that action to safeguard and promote a child’s welfare has not been taken in accordance with the agency’s procedures.
c.
A
clear
line
of accountability
within
the
o
r
ganisation
for work
on safegua
r
ding
and p
r
omoting
the
welfa
r
e
of
child
r
en
It should be clear who has overall responsibility for the agency’s contribution to safeguarding and promoting the welfare of children and what the lines of accountability are from each staff member up through the organisation to the person with ultimate accountability for children’s welfare. Itshould also be clear with whom each staff member should discuss, and to whom they should report, any concerns about a child’s welfare. Responsibilities for safeguarding and promoting the welfare of children can operate at three levels:i. Individual, which can be encompassed within job descriptions;ii. Professional, which is governed by codes of conduct for different disciplines or by distinct guidance on the functions being carried out; andiii. Organisational, with clear linesof accountability throughout the organisation to senior office level.
d.
Se
r
vice
development
takes
account
of the
need
to
safegua
r
d
and
p
r
omote
welfa
r
e
and
is
info
r
med,
whe
r
e
app
r
opriate,
by
the
views
of
child
r
en
and
families
In developing services, those responsible should consider how the delivery of these services will take account of the need to safeguard and promote the welfare of children.
e.
Sta
f
f
training
on
safegua
r
ding
and p
r
omoting
the
welfa
r
e
of
child
r
en
for
all
sta
f
f
working
with
o
r
,
depending
on
the
agency’s
prima
r
y
functions,
in
contact
with
child
r
en
and
families
Staff should have an understanding of both their roles and responsibilities and those of other professionals and organisations. This is essential for effective multi- and inter-agency collaboration. Agencies are encouraged to enable staff to participate in training provided on an inter-agency basis as well as in single agency training provided by the agency itself. Safeguarding and promoting the welfareof children is one of the six areas of the Common Core of Skills and Knowledge for the Children’s Workforce (2005) prospectus. This prospectus informs the training provided to all those working in children’s services. Training on safeguarding and promoting the welfare of children should be relevant to the roles and responsibilities of each staff member.
f.
Safer
r
ec
r
uitment
Robust recruitment and vetting procedures must be in place to help prevent unsuitable people from working with children. This means thorough checks are carried out on all people as part of the recruitment process, and references are always taken up. People who recruit staff to work with children must have the appropriate training. The Safeguarding
g.
E
f
fective
inter-agency
working
to
safegua
r
d
and
p
r
omote
the
welfa
r
e
of
child
r
en
This involves agencies and staff working together to safeguard and promote the welfare of children. Inter-agency working is crucial to ensuring the effectiveness of such working. The sharing of information and constructive relationships between individual membersof staff and teams should be supported by a strong lead from the Lead Member for Children’s Services, and Director of Children’s Services and commitment of all ChiefOfficers. This effective working should beat a strategic and an individual child level, in accordance with guidance from their LSCB, regarding safeguarding children, or for the Prison Service, in accordance with the policy agreed with the LSCB local to each prison. The LSCB guidance should be consistent with the current statutory guidance The Framework for the Assessment of Children in Need and their Families (2000) and Working Together to Safeguard Children (2006). TheGovernment’s practice guidance, What To Do If You’re Worried A Child Is Being Abused (HM Government 2006), is for use by practitioners and their managers in all agencies to inform them about what to do when they have concerns that a child may be a child in need, including concerns about a child whom itis believed is, or may be at risk of, suffering significant harm7. The UK Border Agency contribution to inter-agency work is described in Part 2.
h.
Info
r
mation
sharing
Effective information sharing by professionals is central to safeguarding and promoting the welfare of children. It is therefore essential that effective arrangements for sharing information about a child and their family within each agency and between agencies are in place. This will usually be set out in the form of a protocol or information sharing agreement setting outVulnerable Groups Act 2006 establishes a new vetting and barring scheme from October2009 for those who work with children and vulnerable adults.
7 These documents can be found at: www.dcsf.gov.uk/ever ychildmatters/1240; www.dcsf.gov.uk/ever ychildmatters/1236; www.dcsf.gov.uk/ever ychildmatters/_download/?id=760 the process to be followed and the legal and security issues that need to be considered. However, the lack of an information sharing agreement between agencies should neverbe a reason for not sharing information that could help a practitioner deliver services to a child. The Welsh version of “Working Together” contains non-statutory guidance on good practice in information sharing.The decision to share or not to share information about a child should always be taken on a case by case basis based on professional judgement, supported by the cross-Government Information Sharing:Practitioners’ Guide (published in April 2006)8 and in line with the provisions of the Data Protection Act and Human Rights Act 1998 with consideration of any duty of confidence which is owed and the data security issues raised by the Cabinet Office guidelines on handling personal data. Full guidance on these issues is provided in Information Sharing: Practitioners’ Guide (HM Government, 2006). The consent of children, young people and their caregivers should be obtained when sharing information unless to do so would place the child at risk of significant harm.1.10. In order to safeguard and promote children’s welfare, arrangements should ensure that:
•
all
staff
in
contact
with
c
hildren
understand
what
to
do
and
the
most
effect
i
v
e
wa
ys
of
sharing
info
r
mation
if
they
belie
v
e
that
a
c
hild
and
family
m
a
y
require
pa
r
ticular
se
r
vices
in
order
to
a
c
hie
v
e
their
opti
m
um
outcomes;
•
all
staff
in
contact
with
c
hildren
understand
what
to
do
and
when
to
share
info
r
mation
if
they
belie
v
e
that
a child may be a child in need, including those children suffering or at risk of suffering harm;
•
appropriate
a
g
ency-specific
guidance
is produced
to
complement
guidance
issued
b
y
central
G
o
v
e
r
nment,
and
su
c
h
guidance and
appropriate
training
is
made
a
v
ailable to
existing
and
new
staff
as
pa
r
t
of
their
induction
and
on
g
oing
training;
•
guidance
and
training
specifically
c
o
v
ers the
sharing
of
info
r
mation
bet
w
een
profession
s
,
or
g
anisations
and
a
g
encie
s
, as
w
ell
as
within
them,
and
a
r
ran
g
ements for
training
ta
k
e
into
account
the
v
alue
of multi-agency training as well as single agency training;
•
mana
g
ers
in
c
hildre
n
’
s
se
r
vices
are
fully
co
n
v
ersant
with
the
le
g
al
frame
w
ork and
g
ood
practice
guidance issued
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1.11. Contact Point is a key part of the Every ChildMatters programme to improve outcomes for children and will support practitioners, local authorities and other organisations infulfilling their duties to safeguard and promote the welfare of children. It is currently being delivered in phases that began in May 2009and that are gradually being rolled out to other local authorities and partners. Contact Point will be the quick way to find out who else is working with the same child or young person and allow services to contact one anothermore efficiently. This basic online directory will be available to authorised staff who need it do their jobs.1.12. Contact Point will not contain any detailed information (such as case notes, assessments, and clinical data or exam results). The legal framework for the operation of Contact Point is provided by regulations, made under section12 of the 2004 Act and further operational details are set out in Statutory Guidance that was published in late 2007. 8 This is c r oss-gove r nment guidance that complements and suppor ts policies to imp r ove info r mation sharing ac r oss all ser vices. It is at www.dcsf.gov.uk/ever ychildmatters/_download/?id=103 9 Contact Point exists in England onl y .
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