Family Support & Child Services: Your Rights Explained

Children's Services & Family Support

Understanding Local Authority Responsibilities, Family Support, Child Protection, Assessments, Education Support & Your Rights

Children's Services are one of the most important functions carried out by Local Authorities (Councils). Their purpose is to support children, young people, families, carers, and vulnerable households while promoting children's welfare, safety, wellbeing, development, and life opportunities.

Children's Services do not exist solely to investigate safeguarding concerns. Much of their work focuses on helping families access support early, preventing problems from escalating, and ensuring children receive the care, education, protection, and opportunities they need.

The law recognises that most children thrive best when they are safe, supported, and able to remain within their families wherever possible.

The welfare of children should always remain a primary consideration in decisions affecting them.

 

What Are Children's Services?

Children's Services are departments within Local Authorities responsible for supporting children, young people, and families.

Their work may include:

  • Family support
  • Child in Need services
  • Safeguarding
  • Child protection
  • Early Help support
  • Special Educational Needs and Disabilities (SEND) support
  • Education welfare
  • Children in care services
  • Support for care leavers
  • Support for disabled children
  • Youth services

 

Legal Framework

Children's Services operate under a range of legislation.

Key legislation includes:

Children Act 1989

The primary legislation governing child welfare, safeguarding, and family support.

 

Children Act 2004

Strengthens safeguarding responsibilities and multi-agency working.

 

Children and Families Act 2014

Introduces important duties relating to SEND support and Education, Health and Care Plans (EHCPs).

 

Education Act 1996

Provides duties relating to education and school attendance.

 

Equality Act 2010

Protects children and families from discrimination.

 

Human Rights Act 1998

Protects family life, privacy, fairness, and other fundamental rights.

 

Working Together to Safeguard Children

Statutory guidance used by safeguarding agencies.

 

Family Support Services

Many families access Children's Services for support rather than safeguarding investigations.

Family Support may help with:

  • Parenting support
  • Family difficulties
  • Financial pressures
  • Housing concerns
  • Disability support
  • Behavioural concerns
  • School attendance issues
  • Emotional wellbeing
  • Domestic abuse support
  • Access to specialist services

The aim is often to help families remain stable and prevent problems becoming more serious.

 

Early Help Support

What Is Early Help?

Early Help is support provided before concerns become more serious.

It is intended to:

  • Identify difficulties early.
  • Provide practical support.
  • Improve outcomes for children.
  • Reduce the need for crisis intervention.

 

Examples Of Early Help Support

  • Parenting programmes
  • Family support workers
  • School support
  • Emotional wellbeing services
  • Youth support
  • Housing advice
  • Financial guidance
  • Domestic abuse support

Participation is usually voluntary.

 

Child In Need Assessments

What Is A Child In Need?

Under Section 17 of the Children Act 1989, a child may be considered a Child in Need if they require services to achieve or maintain a reasonable standard of health or development.

This may include children who:

  • Have disabilities.
  • Have health needs.
  • Are experiencing family difficulties.
  • Need additional support.

 

Child In Need Assessment

The council may assess:

  • The child's needs.
  • Family circumstances.
  • Risks and strengths.
  • Support required.

 

Possible Outcomes

Support may include:

  • Family support services.
  • Practical assistance.
  • Referrals to specialist services.
  • Multi-agency support plans.

 

Safeguarding Responsibilities

Local Authorities have legal duties to protect children from harm.

 

Safeguarding Concerns May Include

  • Physical abuse
  • Emotional abuse
  • Sexual abuse
  • Neglect
  • Domestic abuse
  • Child exploitation
  • Online abuse
  • Criminal exploitation
  • Serious welfare concerns

 

Children's Welfare

The child's welfare should remain the primary consideration when safeguarding concerns are assessed.

 

Child Protection Investigations

Where there is reason to believe a child may be suffering or likely to suffer significant harm, the council may undertake child protection enquiries.

This is often referred to as a:

Section 47 Investigation

under the Children Act 1989.

 

Purpose

The aim is to determine:

  • Whether the child is safe.
  • Whether intervention is required.
  • What support may be necessary.

 

Multi-Agency Working

Investigations may involve:

  • Social workers
  • Police
  • Health professionals
  • Schools
  • Other safeguarding agencies

 

Education Support

Children's Services may also support education-related needs.

 

Education Welfare

Support regarding:

  • School attendance
  • Children missing education
  • Educational barriers

 

SEND Support

Children with Special Educational Needs and Disabilities may receive additional support.

 

Education, Health & Care Plans (EHCPs)

Councils have legal duties regarding:

  • Assessments
  • Plan preparation
  • Reviews
  • Specialist support

 

Support For Disabled Children

Local Authorities may provide support for children with disabilities and their families.

Examples include:

  • Assessments
  • Respite support
  • Family support
  • Specialist services
  • Direct payments

 

Children In Care

Some children may become looked after by the Local Authority.

Councils then assume significant responsibilities relating to:

  • Accommodation
  • Education
  • Health
  • Welfare
  • Future planning

 

Care Leavers

Councils continue to owe duties to many young people leaving care.

Support may include:

  • Housing assistance
  • Education support
  • Employment support
  • Personal advisers
  • Financial assistance

 

Parents' Rights During Assessments

Parents generally have important rights.

These may include:

✓ Being treated fairly and respectfully.

✓ Receiving information about processes.

✓ Providing information and evidence.

✓ Receiving copies of assessments where appropriate.

✓ Requesting reasonable adjustments.

✓ Accessing complaints procedures.

✓ Challenging inaccurate information.

✓ Being informed of decisions.

 

Children's Rights

Children may also have rights including:

✓ Being listened to.

✓ Having views considered.

✓ Being protected from harm.

✓ Receiving appropriate support.

✓ Accessing education.

✓ Being treated fairly.

 

Reasonable Adjustments & Accessibility

Under the Equality Act 2010, councils may need to consider reasonable adjustments.

Examples may include:

  • Accessible communication.
  • Interpreters.
  • Alternative formats.
  • Longer appointments.
  • Support workers.
  • Disability-related adjustments.

Families should not be disadvantaged because of disability, illness, or communication needs.

 

Evidence Standards Handbook

Good evidence can be important when working with Children's Services.

Examples include:

Education Records

  • School reports
  • Attendance records
  • EHCP documents

 

Medical Evidence

  • GP letters
  • Hospital reports
  • Therapy records

 

Family Support Records

  • Assessments
  • Support plans
  • Professional reports

 

Safeguarding Evidence

  • Incident records
  • Police reports
  • Professional referrals

 

Record Keeping

Keep copies of:

  • Emails
  • Letters
  • Assessments
  • Meeting notes
  • Support plans
  • Complaints

 

Advanced Claimant Protection

Families have important rights when dealing with Children's Services.

 

Right To Fair Treatment

 

Right To Participation

 

Right To Be Heard

 

Right To Submit Evidence

 

Right To Accessibility

 

Right To Challenge Inaccuracies

 

Right To Privacy

Subject to safeguarding responsibilities.

 

Right To Accountability

Public authorities remain accountable for decisions and actions.

 

Complaints & Accountability

If concerns arise, families may be able to:

Request Clarification

 

Challenge Inaccurate Information

 

Make A Formal Complaint

 

Contact Senior Managers

 

Contact Elected Councillors

 

Escalate To The Local Government & Social Care Ombudsman

Where appropriate.

 

Useful Resources

Children's Services Information:

https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/working-together-to-safeguard-children

 

Find Your Local Council:

https://www.gov.uk/find-local-council

 

NSPCC:

https://www.nspcc.org.uk

 

Childline:

https://www.childline.org.uk

 

Contact:

https://contact.org.uk

 

IPSEA (SEND Advice):

https://www.ipsea.org.uk

 

Local Government & Social Care Ombudsman:

https://www.lgo.org.uk

 

Children's Services Checklist

✓ Seek support early.

✓ Keep copies of all documents.

✓ Record meetings and conversations.

✓ Ask for assessments in writing.

✓ Submit evidence promptly.

✓ Request reasonable adjustments if needed.

✓ Challenge inaccuracies quickly.

✓ Use complaints procedures where necessary.

✓ Keep children's welfare at the centre of discussions.

✓ Maintain clear records and timelines.

 

Key Message

Children's Services play a vital role in supporting children, families, carers, and vulnerable households. Their responsibilities extend beyond safeguarding investigations and include family support, early help, Child in Need services, education support, SEND provision, and child protection.

The welfare of children should always remain a primary consideration. Families should be treated fairly, have their views considered, be given opportunities to provide evidence, and receive support that is lawful, proportionate, transparent, and focused on achieving the best possible outcomes for children and young people.

 

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