Tuesday, 18 October 2016

The role of the Home Office Childrens Department and the Home Affairs Committee 18.10.2016


I am writing to express shock and amazement at the ignorance of the Home Office according the present Permanent Secretary about the role of the Home Office in relation to the oversight and inspection of child care, including residential care and child protection service between 1948 and 1971 and I view with scepticism the reasons given for the decision to commence the original panel inquiry in 1970.

(In my capacity as Parliamentary Officer for the Association of Children Care officers and then as its Vice Chairman I was involved with the President and the full time Secretary in the passage of the Children and Young Persons Act 1969 which changed the role of the Home Office Children’s Department for the short period before the disastrous creation of Social Services Departments in England and Wales in 1971).

The Library of the House of Commons should have copies of the three year reports to Parliament of the Home Office Children’s department and if necessary I can make available my copies of two reports

The Home Office Children’s Department was a body within the Home Office separate from the Prison and other Departments. The functions of the department can be summarised by the headings of chapters in the report to Parliament 1961-1963. Section 1 The Child Care Service and the Family Prevention and Rehabilitation.  Section II. The Care of Children Deprived of a Normal Home Life with sub sections with included Residential Care, Child Protection and the training of Residential care staff;  Section III on Adoption and Section IV Delinquency and the Juvenile Courts with sub sections on the separate Detention centres  and where some became short sharp shock establishments and where Medomsley is the subject of an Inquiry Investigation leading to a public hearing and with a sub office in relation to the Truth project established at Darlington.  (In this respect the terms of reference of the inquiry are too narrow as the relationship between sexual abuse and violence cannot be separated as the recent Houses of Parliament list of briefing papers related to the Urgent question to the Home Secretary of 17th October 2016 makes clear for although headed Sexual offences includes briefings on Slavery and also Violence against women and girls).

Section V is on Remand Homes and secure provision and Section VI is on Approved Schools; Section VII Employment of Children; VIII Research; IX The International Scene. Appendix  on membership of the Advisory Committee on Juvenile Delinquency and the Central Advisory Council on Child Care and separately on Training in Child Care are important as at one point they included the protected leader of the Paedophile Information Exchange, Peter Righton,  and in the 1963 there are a number of individual  mentions  or establishments of potential interest including one, then Netherton Park Approved School, a subject under Operation Rose where Labour Members of the Commons have continued to raise concerns of cover up.

Bee Serota is included in the 1961-1963 then Chairman of the LCC Children’s Committee who became Minister of State and Shadow minister of State at Home Office, House of Lords and to whom I wrote regarding a matter of political corruption involving a children’s Home West Riding County Council where I had been appointed an Assistant County Children’s officer in 1970, and also Barbara  Kahan Children’s Officer Oxfordshire, who in 1964 became President of the Association of Child Care officer on the first day of my appointment as a Child Care and Court Officer. In 1971 I also wrote to Mrs Kahan in her capacity as Deputy Chief Inspector at the Children’s Home Office Department. In  both instances my communication was on a you should know basis and it did lead to one telephone conversation with a senior legal officer in the West Riding where the Council was  said to have been involved involved  in the corruption investigations in involving  the convicted and imprisoned John Poulson and the former Leaders of Newcstle and Durham County Councils, but where it is widely believed that the imprisonment of the Leader of Newcastle City Council for six years was to deflect attention and protect the position of former Home Secretary and deputy Party Leader Reggie Maudling.

In 1970 I was asked to investigate the position of the head of the children’s home who ignored procedures to protect children and the role the of Area Children’s officers and their child care officers. The head had married a girl in the home when she became 16 years.  The senior Home Office Children’s Inspector in the region and the then recently appointed Children’s Officer had first investigated and then asked me to pay special attention to how the home was run, and I was provided information on the alleged corrupt relationship between head of the home and how he had obtained the position involving a leading Alderman Councillor, who became head the appointments of senior management to the new West Riding Social Services Department (abolished in 1974).

I was asked by the head of the home in the presence of his young wife to fix his position with the new management in exchange for a good position in the new department because of his relationship with the Alderman, which I refused and was treated with contempt at the internal appointment process.

I was subsequently advised by the Home Office that I was being recommended to become one of the new Directors of Social Services and only learned after I had accepted the position of unofficial acting second Deputy with another local authority that I was to have been Director of Social Services (Dewsbury) 1971), but was appointed Director at South Tyneside 1974-1990 and where the present member for South Shields is the Labour Shadow Minister for Families and Children. The Doncaster area Councillor involved became a leading individual in the Association of Metropolitan Authorities created with the reorganisation of local government in 1974

I mention what I did and what happened 1970 and 1971 because I also listened with amazement to the statement that on behalf of the panel members in April 2016. the Director General at the Home Office was advised of the challenges being faced because of the leadership style and approach of the chairman but no formal action was required. In simple terms what was the point? Who was consulted within the Inquiry before the step was taken?  I will comment further on what was said this afternoon, on the Times revelations and the Urgent questions yesterday when the Home Secretary failed to explain why she did not contact directly or arranged for someone to contact directly the Inquiry Chairman about the reasons for her departure or do so especially when the letter of explanation was published and where the Permanent Secretary nearly went as far as to say, not my fault if you did not ask me the right questions and anyway my job is to support the line taken by the Home Secretary.                                                                               

It has always been my view that the decision to focus the original panel inquiry on sexual abuse and from 1970 was a damage limitation response to the cross party political pressure, survivor and campaigner groups which was mounted in the weeks before the sudden change of mind by the then Home Secretary and it can be assumed the Ministerial brief given to the civil servants about the inquiry was limited. It is important to appreciate that the former Home Secretary made it clear that the terms of reference would be agreed with the appointed Chairperson and that she could come back following the appointment of panel members where only two were appointed in the first instance. It was also evident from a Ministerial answer in the Home Office Question Time before the Inquiry announcement decision was made that the department had undertaken considerable background work on the history and cause of the past and present situation and indeed the Lord Tebbit attempted to explain on the Andrew Marr programme (the day before the Mrs May announced the reversal of policy, which the Deputy Prime Minister admitted he did not know about in advance) the approach of the establishment with disastrous results. It can now be assumed that because the Home Office was the lead department the work done for the Ministerial sub-committee went only back to 1970.

That there are dark and potentially unscrupulous forces at work to undermine and if possible wreck the Inquiry was brought out clearly when Professor Jay disclosed that they failed to rent an appropriate building to hold public hearings because the landlords and their committee did not want to be associated with the inquiry. I expect the full list of the landlords to be made available to the Home Affairs Committee so that each body can be questioned on their reasons had if any external influences had been brought to bear. One refusal or even two might be coincidental, but more than two suggests a conspiracy. Has the Inquiry taken steps to ensure its digital storage and communication processes are secure?  The Home Affairs Committee failed to pursue the admission that a vast quantity of material had been set aside unprocessed but that was said to have now been resolved.

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