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Improving outcomes for Families Kris Krasnowski, Director for London Inclusion.

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Presentation on theme: "Improving outcomes for Families Kris Krasnowski, Director for London Inclusion."— Presentation transcript:

1 Improving outcomes for Families Kris Krasnowski, Director for London Inclusion

2 Outline Defining “troubled” families Rationale What works? Discussion points

3 Definition Workless household Family live in poor or overcrowded housing Parents have no qualifications Mother has mental health problems Low income At least one parent has long-standing limiting illness, disability or infirmity Family make food and clothing sacrifices Significantly poorer life outcomes for children Parent based disadvantages : 5 or more A troubled family is one that has serious problems, that has immediate social and intergenerational impacts and costs local services a lot of time and money to respond or correct. But a recent study has questioned the use of these figures as the basis of the Govt intervention, see http://www.poverty.ac.uk/sites/default/files/trouble_ahead.pdf

4 Using Govt’s definition... Almost one fifth of the troubled families are in London = 120,000

5 Rationale Reduced life chances Children aged 13-14 from troubled families are 36 times more likely to be excluded from school; Six times more likely to be in care or to have contract with police Cost to society CLG estimate cost at £9bn annually, or £75,000 per family, per year Almost £1.6bn in London £8bn spent on reactive measures Only £1bn spent preventative measures “I'm committed to transforming the lives of families stuck in a cycle of unemployment, alcohol abuse and anti-social behaviour, where children are truants from school - troubled families who cause such negativity within their communities and who drain resources from our councils...” Prime Minister, March 2012

6 The Govt Programme £448m investment led by CLG’s Troubled Families Unit working closely with LAs. National network of co-ordinators / trouble shooters (3 year funding settlement) Payment by results scheme operated by CLG with LAs (40% Govt funded 60% LA and partners) £200m ESF Families programme led by DWP

7 Spotlight on CLG’s PbR approach PbR criteria are: – 85% attendance at school and fewer than 3 exclusions – 60% reduction in anti-social behaviour across the family – 33% reduction in youth offending – Payment: £3,900 Plus: – Progress towards work (WP or ESF Troubled Families provision) = Payment: £100 Or: – One adult in family moving off benefits and into work = Payment: £4,000

8 What works? Personalised and family focussed. Range of interventions built around a family and its needs. Strong partnerships across local areas drawing on range of expertise from police and social workers to housing providers and job centres. Central co-ordination and local control – usually led by LA to indentify suitable families and maintain oversight. Realistic objectives. Equipping parents and families to cope and move beyond existing barriers one step at a time (but it doesn’t exclude work)

9 Family Recovery Project 1. Whole view of the family - Meeting the needs of both adults and children 2. Team around the family - Unified service response 3. Two lead professionals for adults and children 4. Integrated Family Care Plan adult and children’s needs - Focused on outcomes and consequences 5. Real time intelligence function through Information Desk 6. Capacity building - Encouraging resilience 7. Swift access to adults services – Domestic Violence, Substance Misuse and Mental Health workers 8. Intensive outreach - Fast, intensive, targeted 9. Multi agency response to crime and ASB - Both victims and perpetrators 10. Co-located, multi-agency team - All in one project Source: Westminster Council

10 Questions / observations The evidence base draws on secondary analysis of the Families and Children Study (FACS) in 2004 data – is it an accurate reflection of need? Have problems gotten worse? Obvious differences between CLG’s approach and DWP’s – (devolved vs centralised) what issues does this raise? Can the two approaches work together? Is there a fair funding allocation to London? £24m for ESF scheme, yet London has 19% of families = £38m? Anecdotally, rumours suggest DWP’s provision is underperforming – teething trouble or something more substantial? If it is underperforming what happens to underspend?


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