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Adoption

Here are some suggested organisations that offer expert advice on adoption.

Adoption Support Fund finally renewed

9 replies

UnderTheNameOfSanders · 01/04/2025 18:07

See CYP Now - Government confirms adoption support funding to continue

Why they had to leave it until after the last minute is beyond me. We have been told it will probably take minimum of 5 weeks to renew grants. Luckily DD is only having sessions monthly these days, but when she was having therapy weekly this would not have been good.

Government confirms adoption support funding to continue - CYP Now

Thousands of adopted children and those in other forms of care placement are to continue receiving vital support after the government announced today (Tuesday) that it is to renew funding this year.

https://www.cypnow.co.uk/content/news/government-confirms-adoption-support-funding-to-continue

OP posts:
Misstabithabean · 03/04/2025 08:37

Yes, and it's only confirmed for another 12 months. We have been waiting for confirmation it was going ahead and still cannot apply to the fund until they have sorted out the details, which sounds ominous!

SuperAunt08 · 07/04/2025 23:25

We were very lucky and managed to sneak our application in before the end of March and secure 12 months of funding for therapy but we were very worried it was not going to be accepted or that it would be the last time.
We’ve accessed the fund several times over the last 5 years so we were scared it was coming to an end.

Misstabithabean · 08/04/2025 20:26

@SuperAunt08 I wish I had pushed to do that! We were advised to wait until the government confirmed it and now still have to wait until they give the details. I'm now worried the goal posts will change somehow and we won't be able to access it

Misstabithabean · 15/04/2025 07:29

I'm not sure how to link to the page but this is copied from Adoption UK.

The government has today announced a 40% cut in the amount that will be available per child from the Adoption and Special Guardianship Support Fund (ASGSF) – a Fund set up to provide specialist support for traumatised children and young adults. The ASGSF has helped create a better future for tens of thousands of young people over the last decade.

The total pot remains the same as last year at £50m – a great relief to the thousands of families who benefit. However there are three significant changes to the way the money will be allocated, which will have a direct impact on the children who rely on it. The ‘Fair Access Limit’ has been reduced from £5,000 to £3,000 per child per year. The £2,500 per child per year set aside for specialist assessments has been dropped altogether. Finally, the ASGSF will no longer match fund support for children with an exceptional level of need. Until now it provided up to 50% of the funding for up to £30,000 per child, with the rest provided by the local authority.

These changes are to prevent the Fund being overspent, which has been the case in recent years due to increasing demand. The Fund effectively expired before the government made a last minute announcement on 1st April that it would continue into the new financial year. The new arrangements will cause a further delay while adoption agencies make adjustments to applications for funding for the families they represent.

Adoption UK CEO Emily Frith said: “These decisions will have a direct impact on children and young people who have had a very tough start in life and deserve the same chance to thrive as everyone else. We understand that this isn’t just about the Fund – it’s a consequence of belt tightening across government. But it’s very short sighted at a time when there are more adoptive families in crisis than ever before, and distressing news for everyone who has already faced an agonising wait to find out whether the Fund will continue to exist at all. The government must use the forthcoming spending review to make a commitment to build the Fund back up to where adopted and kinship children need it to be.”

Around 3,000 children in England are placed in adoptive families each year. Most have suffered abuse, neglect, or violence and spend an average of 15 months in care before adoption, often with a number of moves while in care, losing everything that is familiar to them along the way. It is common for adopted people to need support throughout their lives.
Research by Adoption UK shows the overwhelming majority (82%) of adopters say their family has seen real benefit from the support the ASGSF has provided.

Adoption Barometer

The Adoption Barometer is the only UK-wide comprehensive stock-take of adoption. It's based on the findings of a large annual survey. It provides powerful evidence of the realities of adopting and being adopted and makes recommendations for vital chang...

https://www.adoptionuk.org/the-adoption-barometer

UnderTheNameOfSanders · 15/04/2025 11:42

Thank you for that update @Misstabithabean . We haven't heard anything yet from our SWs....

OP posts:
Smeegall · 15/04/2025 19:59

Great decision there! Taking from the most vulnerable people in society. They're right obviously - adopted children and their parents really don't need that support or those assessments...

I'm appalled!!! Can't believe what I'm reading!!!

hollytree1 · 15/04/2025 21:01

I'm unbelievable angry at the disruption to support via the ASF, as well as the much reduced financial limits (we often used our assessment portion as well as the therapy portion), and perhaps most of all the stipulation that all support must be used up this financial year, as the fund will be further reviewed for the following year which makes me worried it won't be renewed at all then!

A couple of grand per year for much needed therapy is nothing compared to the costof keeping a child in care, never mind the emotional trauma of a child returning to care when adoption breaks down!

If applications are increasing, doesn't that indicate that that's because needs are increasing, and that the children being placed for adoption now of a highly vulnerable cohort?

northernblue2028 · 18/04/2025 08:03

This reply has been deleted

Message deleted by MNHQ. Here's a link to our Talk Guidelines.

Misstabithabean · 18/04/2025 08:30

Our RAA said last year that as the costs of therapy have increased, children have been able to access fewer sessions with the previous£5000 allowance. So by cutting the support fund to £3000 this will decrease even further.
I read something the other day that £3000 will cover about 20 sessions. Surely that will be a huge shortfall for any child having weekly therapy? The sessions will either have to be funded by parents to cover the gap between one year and the next or stop until the next funding year starts (if it even gets agreed by the government)

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