Six social workers sacked by Birmingham City Council
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Six social workers at a city council criticised over the death
from starvation of a seven-year-old girl have been sacked, it
emerged today.
The staff were dismissed over the past year for not doing their
jobs properly at Birmingham City Council, which is taking part in a
serious case review into the death of Khyra Ishaq.
She died in May 2008 from starvation, and her mother and stepfather
were both jailed last week for her manslaughter.
Colin Tucker, director of children's social care at the council,
said the sacked staff showed "no sign whatsoever" of meeting
expected standards.
In an interview with the BBC, he said: "We are not appointing some
staff, as well as that we have dismissed six staff in the last
year.
"There is a clear indication we are serious about our
standards.
"They did not adhere to standards and expectations that we laid
down.
"They showed no sign whatsoever that they were keen to do so, so we
dismissed them."
The dismissals are not thought to be directly linked to Khyra's
death. But they follow a number of other child deaths over recent
years.
Khyra died when her body succumbed to an infection after months of
starvation at her home in Handsworth, Birmingham.
She was removed from school in December 2007 and social workers
made several attempts to visit her home.
Khyra's mother, Angela Gordon, was jailed last week for 15 years
over her death, while her former partner Junaid Abuhamza was jailed
indefinitely with a minimum term of seven-and-a-half years.
During the trial, judge Mrs Justice King said "in all probability"
Khyra would not have died had there been "an adequate initial
assessment and proper adherence by the educational welfare services
to its guidance".
Mr Tucker was brought in last year after Ofsted inspectors branded
aspects of Birmingham City Council's children's department as
"inadequate".
He said there are about 120 vacant posts which are filled with
agency staff.
He added that he wanted to cut the number of agency staff being
used to between 40 and 50.
Mr Tucker said the six social workers were "totally separate"
from the Khyra Ishaq case and had simply not met the department's
standards.
He told Radio 4's Today programme: "They were frontline workers,
they weren't senior managerial staff.
"Since I've been there, we've introduced a whole new set of
standards - that includes managers going through an intensive
programme of assessment.
"We're remodelling in the autumn. That remodelling will have fewer
managers in place, less duplication, more responsibility."
Asked about the death of Khyra, he said: "In the profession, in the
city, we are so upset about that it is untrue.
"Staff don't come into social work to harm children or to miss
signs of when they're being abused or mistreated.
"Believe me, their motivation is to safeguard children. This has
cast, and rightly so, a real shadow over this department for two
years. But we can't turn the clock back."
Mr Tucker pledged to give the press access to frontline social
services in Birmingham once the SCR is published.
He said social work has been "on its knees" for 10 years and is not
a popular profession for young people.
"I didn't want my children to become social workers and I feel
really bad about saying that," he said.
Social work is a "hostile" job and the media should be more fair
and balanced in its oversight.
Mr Tucker said Sharon Shoesmith, the former children services chief
who was sacked over the death of Baby P in Haringey, had been
"relentlessly vilified" which was "not acceptable".
He added: "I think we do have to encourage communities to trust us
more and that's very difficult in a climate where I feel with my
staff often that we're damned if we intervene and we're damned if
we don't."
A spokeswoman for Birmingham City Council stressed that the
dismissals were not directly related to Khyra Ishaq's death but
added that the case remained of "critical importance" to the
authority.
A serious case review into Khyra's death is still being conducted
by the Birmingham Safeguarding Children Board. A summary of its
findings is expected to be published soon.
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