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City adopts a new campaign to recruit more foster carers



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Published Date: 12 May 2008
A CAMPAIGN to encourage more people to become foster carers has been launched in the Capital, after it emerged the city had 40 children waiting for a placement.
Edinburgh City Council's Caring for our Children Campaign is aimed at attracting foster carers, day carers and adopters.

The high-profile campaign will include posters appearing on buses and taxis throughout the Capital, as well as flyers and news
paper adverts.

It is hoped the campaign will encourage people who have considered fostering to come forward and help provide badly-needed homes for some of the city's most vulnerable children.

Among the most urgently-needed foster carers are those from black and ethnic minority backgrounds, to allow the council the choice to put children in a family which shares the same culture and lifestyle as them.

It is understood that the number of black and ethnic minority children needing foster homes within Edinburgh is rising.

They are also looking for families willing to take on disabled children and teenagers.

The launch was timed to coincide with the start of Foster Care Fortnight, an annual campaign co-ordinated by national charity the Fostering Network to raise awareness of fostering and to recruit more foster carers.

Kirstie MacLean, the council's service manager for family-based care, said the drive was aimed at giving them greater flexibility when placing children in care.

"We do need to get more foster carers, both for long-term placements and for emergency care, but also we want to have as much choice as possible," she said. "We are trying more and more to keep siblings together in foster care, and that can be hard.

"I was at the retirement of a woman who had been a carer for more than 25 years, and she said she had always got more back than she gave out.

"It can be a difficult, frustrating job, but ultimately most find it to be very rewarding."

Tracy Thomson, 17, has been in foster care since she was ten, after her mother suffered a series of strokes and became unable to look after her.

Over that time she has stayed with several foster families, and felt that their help had been invaluable to her.

"The families I have stayed with have all been really nice, and they have helped me get through school and cope with what happened to my mum," she said.

"Sometimes it has been difficult going from family to family, as you always have to start again, so it would have been better to be with one family.

"But it has been so important to me. I could be in care until I'm 21, and I have needed these families to be there for me."

Anyone over 21 can be a foster carer – they do not need to be married, or a homeowner, or even employed.

Councillor Marilyne MacLaren, convener of education, children and families, said: "I am very pleased that we plan to raise the payment for foster carers over the next few years. It is important that people do not feel they can't afford to be foster carer."





The full article contains 527 words and appears in Edinburgh Evening News newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 12 May 2008 1:44 PM
  • Source: Edinburgh Evening News
  • Location: Edinburgh
 
1

Duncan in Edinburgh,

12/05/2008 14:12:52
Fantastic Lib Dem form of words there from the incomparable MacLaren:

"we plan to raise the payment for foster carers over the next few years".

Really? When, by how much, and what will be the new rate?
2

Scotish Exile,

12/05/2008 15:49:35
"Anyone over 21 can be a foster carer – they do not need to be married, or a homeowner, or even employed"....great.....the lazy, sorry, unemployed can give the kids lessons on how to sponge off of us tax payers, whilst coining it in!
3

Vandala,

12/05/2008 16:03:17
#2 Get a life.
4

,

12/05/2008 16:10:20
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
5

alex paterson,

At the moment in Sevilla 12/05/2008 17:16:38
Foster cares are badly needed and are very welcome,it is a very responsible position to undertake,a little bit more financial help would go a very long way.
6

WKKB,

13/05/2008 12:00:38
"Among the most urgently-needed foster carers are those from black and ethnic minority backgrounds, to allow the council the choice to put children in a family which shares the same culture and lifestyle as them."

The problem is that it is most often the white/caucasion families that take these kids on. When I was in the States I found that White families there took in a lot of black and ethnic babies because black and ethnic families don't seem to want to step up and take them in themselves. Is that what's going to happen here?
7

WKKB,

13/05/2008 12:23:24
I didn't mean to offend anyone, if I did I apologize. Maybe it's not because black and ethnic families don't step up, maybe it's more financial and they just don't have the means... What ever the reason, in my experience (and I was very closely linked in the states with the fostering system) I see more caucasion families taking foster children of any race or ethnicity in.

 

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