Fostering - I agree with you about the 15 year old son but sometimes you have to look beneath the top soil in assessments. I have had cases where a young teenager boy has become a father and the g/parents are applying for a SGO. For me the important and essential thing is whether the g/parents are going to protect the child from their son or daughter if this becomes necessary and if I had any doubt that this was not going to be the case I would not give a positive recommendation because this would mean that the child was going to be in the care of a birth father or mother who have been deemed by the court to be unfit parents.
It is difficult for g/parents as there can be a conflict of loyalty but in my view they have to take this important point on board. If they can and everything else is satisfactory about the g/parents, including age, health, personality, ability to provide a safe and nurturing experience for the g/child then I am satisfied.
I also have to interview the parents and their view of the relative's application for an SGO on their child. (They are usually separated by this point and with other partners). I had one case where the g/mthr was saying all the right things about protecting the child from her daughter if it became necessary, but when I interviewed the mother of the child, she said her mother had said when the social workers and court were all out of the way she would let her daughter look after the child. Needless to say the g/mother denied saying this and I insisted on getting them both together and the daughter was very convincing when tackling her mother about what she had said, whereas the g/mother was rather feeble in her protestations that she hadn't said it. I was not able to make a positive recommendation and the court accepteed this and the child went for adoption.
One of the problems about assessments of SGOs is that once the order is made, there is no more involvement from SSD. You can request a 1 yr Supervision Order but in reality this only means a couple of visits at most.
I can't really answer your point about the differences in length of time for speeding up adoptions as each case is different, and each LA is different, some struggling with 40% vacancies in the inner cities and others not having these problems, though recruitment and retention of social workers is a national problem.
Just a point about the SGOs - the Government have laid down in this legislation exactly what has to be covered in the assessment and you are expected to follow the format. The problem is that some very important issues were ommitted. One being the issue of the relative's relationship with their son or daughter which is quite crucial, the g/parents own childhood experiences and their own method of parenting their own children. There are several more issues that are covered in a fostering assessment that are not covered in the SGO guidelines. Any decent s.w. will include these important matters regardless of the fact that they are ommitted, but I am sure there are many that don't do this.
I am told that the govt dept responsible for finalising this legislation "ran out of time" and that is why some important issues have been ommitted.
Sorry if I have strayed from your point about speeding up adoptions. LAs do have to work to court timetables, but only from when the application for an Order is initiated in the court. Prior to this, assessments can go on and on with delays to the child. Children do not have time to wait for their parents to mature, give up drugs whatever, but sadly far there is far too much delay. I think I mentioned some recent legislation called the Public Law Outline which does lay down conditions for lengths of time betwenn certain processes, but I retired just as it was coming on to the statute book, so don't know how well (or not) it is working.