- Social workers have been battling to follow up their cases during the lockdown.
- Visitors, including parents, other family, volunteers or host families to Children’s Homes were prohibited during lockdown.
- There are about 129 136 foster care orders “deemed to be valid” until 26 November 2020.
Since the start of lockdown, social workers have battled to follow up on their cases, worsening the mounting backlog of foster care grants and placements, GroundUp reported.
This is according to Arlene Esau, a social worker at Christine Revell Children’s Home in Athlone, Cape Town.
The children’s home currently looks after 45 children from newborns up to the age of 5. Some of these children have been removed from their family homes which were deemed an unsafe environment.
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Reuniting these children with their families “is a main priority for them at the Home”, said Esau.
Esau explained that each of the children at Christine Revell was sent to the home following a court order which gives the home legal guardianship of the child. These orders, however, are only valid for two years, after which they must be extended by the same court.
Foster care orders
The closure of most courts and reduced staff numbers at other urgent courts like the Children’s Courts during lockdown, have meant further delays for social workers who already had mounting caseloads.
According to Lumka Oliphant, spokesperson for the Department of Social Development (DSD), lockdown also affected social workers’ capacity to extend foster care orders through the Children’s Courts.
She said there are 129 136 foster care orders “deemed to be valid” until 26 November 2020. These orders need to be extended before this date.
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Oliphant said to address the ongoing backlogs, the DSD was reviewing policy and legislation of the child protection system and had conducted a “gap analysis” which had led to amendments being made to the Children’s Act.
In a statement on 9 June, the Centre for Child Law and the Children’s Institute welcomed the Social Assistance Amendment Bill, which is expected to help address the “foster care crisis” by lessening “the pressure on the foster care system that is causing the crisis in the child protection system, particularly the children’s courts that deal with such matters”.
Income
“It should be a priority to ensure that the families caring for orphans have access to adequate income and that social workers are freed up from chasing foster care backlogs to enable them to respond to the social consequences of the Covid-19 pandemic,” the statement read.
The bill will soon pass through the Select Committee on Social Services in the National Council of Provinces, after which the department can prescribe an additional grant to help relatives caring for orphans.
Meanwhile, DSD Western Cape spokesperson Esther Lewis said designated social workers had continued doing their jobs from home during lockdown. Home visits had only been conducted where necessary, she said.
“Where emergency interventions were required, social workers still conducted home visits. Designated social workers collaborated with local Children’s Courts to ensure that foster care orders were timeously extended and remained valid during lockdown,” said Lewis.
She added that some courts allowed social workers to electronically extend the orders.
Lewis said 36 000 children are currently in foster care in the Western Cape.
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