16 THRIVE Programme Review PDF 218 KB
Report by the Director of Children’s
Services
Additional documents:
Minutes:
16.1 The report provided an
opportunity for the Committee to review the outcomes of the Thrive
programme. The Director of
Children’s Services commended the report to the Committee and
highlighted the fact that the programme had been awarded the Local
Government Chronicle’s ‘Children’s Services of
the Year’ and ‘Business Transformation’ awards
for 2015.
16.2 The Committee welcomed the
report. A debate then ensued with the
Committee raising a number of issues which are summarized below,
together with responses from the relevant officers
present:
- Activities covered by the Thrive
Programme. The Committee asked for reassurance that the
positive data included in the report did not hide activities which
the department were no longer performing. In response to these questions, Liz Rugg agreed
that the Department needs to be careful that top line indicators
don’t mask activities that are no longer being engaged
in. However, the
Committee’s attention was drawn to the target ‘more
children receiving targeted support from early
help’. A
key goal of the THRIVE programme was to ensure that children and
families were responded to as promptly as possible by the right
people. The Thrive programme
therefore involved ‘recalibrating the system’ so that
the right people were able confidently to deal with queries or to
ensure they were passed on to appropriate colleagues to respond
to. A range of measures
have been put in place to assist with this. For example, the Department have established with
partners a multi agency screening hub,
including
the Police, which deal with high level cases where there is
a safeguarding concern.
Alison Jeffery, Assistant Director also added that at the start of
the Thrive Programme the Department undertook an analysis of where
its resources were being directed. The
analysis revealed resources could be more effectively re-directed
to families at Level 3 on the Continuum of Need (which ranges from
Level 1 where children’s needs are met by universal
services to
Level 4 where children have acute needs and families need a
possible multi agency response and specialist
intervention). Resources
were therefore accordingly re-allocated. Given this and a range of other measures
undertaken as part of Thrive, the Department is confident it is
doing all it can in the current financial circumstances to focus
resources where they are most needed.
- Sustainability of the Thrive
Legacy.
The Committee also questioned whether the proposed level of savings
required in the coming years would have a negative impact on the
legacy of the Thrive programme and whether without further funding,
the benefits of the programme would be lost or at least
reduced. In response
to this question the Committee were informed that given the reduced
resources available to ESCC, a key aim of the Thrive programme was
to develop a sustainable framework for coping with future
demand. The Department felt Thrive had
embedded within its teams a whole range of new ways of working
which were efficient, effective and targeted.
- Initial Contact and
Referrals.
The Committee noted that Table 1 of the Finance and Performance
...
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