Title

CHILDREN'S SERVICES

Balance control with trust for good children's services

A good children’s service requires chief executives to strike a balance between trusting their staff and monitoring them, the SOLACE spokesperson for children and families advised today.

A good children's service requires chief executives to strike a balance between trusting their staff and monitoring them, the SOLACE spokesperson for children and families advised today.

Speaking at The MJ Future Forum North, Merran McRae said: ‘You have to trust your director of children's services (DCS). But equally you have to keep asking them questions.

‘How do you manage to do this without micromanaging is the challenge.'

She also stressed how important it is for chief exectuvies to appoint a permanent DCS and not to settle for a string of interims, because their different styles of working will eventually impact the quality of the service.

Ms McRae added that in order to ensure the service meets standards, it is essential that chief executives meet external partners, like the police, to get feedback about the service.

She said: ‘What are partners saying about the children's services in your area – is there some truth to it or is it just noise in the system?

‘Go out and talk to partners and find out for yourself.

‘If there's lots of chuntering, chances are that there is something going on and you do have to find out.'

Ms McRae said it was equally important for chief executives and officers to ensure that councillors are on board any improvement programme.

She said that the service cannot be improved if council members are not convinced of its importance and contributing in whatever way they can.

Ms McRae also listed a few warning signs that show children's services are poor, including not being able to explain what model is being used.

She said it should be thoroughly understood by all the staff: ‘It almost doesn't matter what your model is, but you need to know what it is.

‘If you speak to your DCS [and they can't really explain it] then it's not an embedded system.'

Other indiciators that the service is not functioning properly include having the same children referred to the system more than once, children not having permanency but ‘drifting around in the system', and if looked after children are under-achieving compared to other children in the area.

CHILDREN'S SERVICES

Responsibility without autonomy

By Jonathan Carr-West | 02 December 2025

Despite the Government’s promises of devolution, the Budget treated councils as mere delivery agents, argues Jonathan Carr-West.

CHILDREN'S SERVICES

The Budget: A step towards fiscal devo

By Heather Jameson | 02 December 2025

The Budget took its first steps towards local government finance reform and Total Place 2.0, but did it resolve any of the major issues facing local governme...

CHILDREN'S SERVICES

Connecting to create safer places

By John Tizard | 02 December 2025

Police and crime commissioner for Bedfordshire John Tizard says shared problem solving and pooled finances, staff and facilities are the way to drive public ...

CHILDREN'S SERVICES

Stepping up support for our armed forces families

By Linda Jones | 02 December 2025

More than a decade after the Armed Forces Covenant was introduced, service personnel, veterans and their families still encounter avoidable disadvantage in k...

Popular articles by Hiba Mahamadi