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Home / Kahu

New law scraps priority to place abused kids with relatives

Simon Collins
By Simon Collins
Reporter·NZ Herald·
22 Sep, 2016 05:30 AM4 mins to read

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Foster parents will get more flexible support in new laws outlined by Social Development Minister Anne Tolley. Photo / Mark Mitchell

Foster parents will get more flexible support in new laws outlined by Social Development Minister Anne Tolley. Photo / Mark Mitchell

A new law outlined today will axe a longstanding provision that gives priority to placing abused children with foster parents from the same extended family or tribe.

Social Development Minister Anne Tolley said the law would require that any child who is removed from its family and cannot be returned to immediate family "must be placed with a safe, stable and loving family at the earliest opportunity".

The change removes a 27-year-old provision that gave priority to placing a child with "a person who is a member of the child's or young person's hapu or iwi (with preference being given to hapu members), or, if that is not possible, who has the same tribal, racial, ethnic, or cultural background as the child".

Instead, the first principle in the new arrangements for children removed from their parents is that "decisions should be centred around the child or young person's best interests and understanding the views and needs of the child".

A Cabinet paper outlining the changes notes that an effect will be "increasing the ability for non-kin placements where it is in the child's best interests".

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The Government has also signalled it will run a recruitment campaign for foster parents to cope with the changes.

Labour children's spokesperson Jacinda Ardern said the change was understandable because there had been many cases of abuse of children in extended family care.

"There is not the same level of scrutiny around kin care, so there is not the same level of assessment of whether or not it's the right or safest placement for the child.

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"That unfortunately has undermined kin care and I can see why we have ended up in this place."

However Ardern hit out at another provision in the new law that adopts all the principles of a "Covenant for the Nation's Children" drawn up by Judge Carolyn Henwood except for a promise "to strive to provide them [children] with a proper standard of living".

The Cabinet paper says: "These commitments (with the exception of the pledge to provide children with a proper standard of living) will be incorporated into the Child, Young Persons and their Families Act."

Ardern said Labour would support putting the entire covenant into law. She said the state didn't have to do everything itself, but it did have a role to play in ensuring affordable housing and adequate incomes.

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The new law will also reform financial assistance to foster parents "to meet the reasonable needs of the child or young person".

The new system will be more flexible than the current age-based pay rates for foster care, with new regulations "setting out the level and circumstances in which financial assistance can be paid in relation to a child poor young person in out-of-home care, including reasonable costs, extra assistance and higher rates".

"These proposed changes will help to provide the foundation for a proactive and transparent financial support system that assist caregiving families to manage through critical times and cope with challenging behaviours," Tolley told other ministers in a Cabinet paper.

"The Ministry of Social Development is also undertaking work with Inland Revenue on the tax treatment of care support payments to ensure there is clarity and consistency for caregivers."

However, the Cabinet papers make no mention of a proposal by the foster parents' support group Fostering Kids for higher pay rates for foster parents who do extra training to cope with the most challenging young people.

The changes are the second step in the reform of what is now Child, Youth and Family and will be rebranded the Ministry of Vulnerable Children Oranga Tamariki.

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The first step, which includes raising the age for young people transitioning out of state care from 17 to 18, is already going through Parliament.

Tolley said the new changes would ensure that children and young people had an opportunity to have a say on decisions made about their care.

They will also set out National Care Standards including the rights and needs of children, the standard of care they can expect, and standards for caregiver training, monitoring and support.

Maori Party co-leader Marama Fox declined to comment on the changes.

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