Applications for Special Guardianship Orders

1. Introduction

Special Guardianship offers an option for children needing permanent care outside their birth family. It can offer greater security without absolute severance from the birth family as in adoption.

It can meet the needs of a significant group of children, mainly older, who need a sense of stability and security but who do not wish to make the absolute legal break with their birth family that is associated with adoption.

It also provides an alternative for achieving permanence in families where adoption, for cultural or religious reasons, is not an option.

A Special Guardianship Order offers greater stability and legal security to a placement than a Child Arrangements Order.

Children subject to a Special Guardianship Order are eligible as previously Looked After Children for additional support with their education (Sections 20(4) and 20A(4) of the Children and Young Persons Act 2008). For further information, please see the Education of Looked After and Previously Looked After Children Procedure - to follow.

Special Guardians have Parental Responsibility for the child and, whilst this is shared with the child's parents, the Special Guardian has the ability to exercise this responsibility without seeking permission from the parents.

A Special Guardianship Order made with respect to a child who is the subject of a Care Order or for an order for contact to a child in care discharges those orders.

A Care Order, however, does not automatically revoke a Special Guardianship Order although the Special Guardian's exercise of Parental Responsibility is restricted as the local authority has  primary responsibility for decision-making under the Care Order.

For further details about Special Guardianship as a permanence option for Looked After Children, see Permanence Planning Guidance (Documents Library).

People thinking about becoming special guardians will be provided with clear, user-friendly information to help them make informed choices. This should include information on support available and how this is reviewed.

2. Who may Apply?

Applications for Special Guardianship may be individual or joint. Joint applicants do not need to be married. Special Guardians must be 18 or over and must not be a parent of the child in question.

Subject to giving notice to the relevant local authority, the following people are entitled to apply for a Special Guardianship Order without needing to first seek the leave of the court:
  • Any guardian of the child;
  • Any person who is named in a child arrangements order as a person with whom the child is to live;
  • Any person who has the consent of each person named in a child arrangements order as a person with whom the child is to live;
  • Anyone with whom the child has lived for a period of at least 3 years (which need not be continuous, but must not have begun more than 5 years before, or ended more than 3 months before, the making of the application);
  • A relative with whom the child has lived for a period of at least 1 year immediately preceding the application;
  • Where the child is in the care of a local authority, any person who has the consent of the local authority;
  • Any person who has the consent of all those with parental responsibility for the child;
  • Any other person, aged 18 or over (other than a parent) may apply for a Special Guardianship Order if they have the leave of the court to make the application.

3. Parental Responsibility

The Special Guardian will have Parental Responsibility for the child and, subject to any other order in force, will have clear responsibility for the day-to-day decisions about caring for the child to the exclusion of anyone else who might have Parental Responsibility (apart from another Special Guardian).

The child's parents will continue to hold Parental Responsibility but their exercise of it will be limited. The parents will, however, retain the right to consent or not to the child's adoption or placement for adoption. The Special Guardian must also take reasonable steps to inform the parents if the child dies (see Section 16, Special Guardian Duty on the Death of the Child).

In addition there are certain steps in a child's life which require the consent of everyone with Parental Responsibility or the leave of the court, for example:

  • Causing the child to be known by a different surname; or
  • Removing the child from the United Kingdom for longer than 3 months.

The court may, at the time of making the Special Guardianship Order, give leave for the child to be known by a new surname and/or to be removed from the United Kingdom for longer than 3 months, either generally or for specified purposes.

For the avoidance of doubt, a child is any child or young person under the age of 18 years.

4. The Circumstances in which a Special Guardianship Order may be Made

The Court may make a Special Guardianship Order in any family proceedings concerning the welfare of the child and following an assessment by the local authority. This applies even where no application has been made and includes adoption proceedings.

Any person making an application for a Special Guardianship Order must give 3 months' written notice to their local authority of their intention to apply. In relation to a Looked After Child, the notice will go to the local authority looking after the child. In all other cases, the notice will be sent to the local authority for the area where the applicant resides. The local authority receiving the notice will then have a duty to provide a report to the Court.

The only exception to the requirement for 3 months' notice is where the Court has granted leave to make an application and waived the notice period.

Where the local authority has received notice from an applicant or a request for a report from the Court, it should send written information about the steps it proposes to take in preparing the report to the prospective Special Guardian and the parents of the child in question. This should include information about Special Guardianship support services and how to request an assessment of needs for support.

5. Planning Meeting

Once notice has been received that an application for Special Guardianship is to be made, it should be passed to the allocated social worker or, if the child is not previously known, arrangements must be made for the case to be allocated to a social worker.

The allocated social worker should arrange a planning meeting as soon as practicable after the notice is received. The planning meeting should clarify the steps to be taken, who will carry out the necessary assessments and who will contribute to the report for the Court. Court timescales will need to be clarified.

The social worker or social workers preparing the Court report should be suitably qualified and experienced. There are no specific requirements as to the level of qualification or experience required and it will be for the manager of the relevant social work team to ensure that the allocated worker is competent to write the report.

In all cases there will need to be:

  • An assessment of the current and likely future needs of the child (including any harm the child has suffered and any risk of future harm posed by the child's parents, relatives or any other person the local authority considers relevant). Where the assessment identifies that the child requires services from an agency other than Children's Social Care, the social worker should consult with the relevant Integrated Care Board (ICB) or Local Education Authority;
  • An assessment of the prospective Special Guardian's parenting capacity including:
    1. Their medical history; DBS checks, references and other statutory checks; any previous assessment undertaken in respect of the prospective special guardian; any likely impact the Special Guardianship Order may have on relationships between the child and the parent;
    2. Their understanding of, and ability to meet, the child's current and likely future needs, particularly any needs the child may have arising from harm that the child has suffered;
    3. Their understanding of, and ability to protect the child from any current or future risk of harm posed by the child's parents, relatives or any other person the local authority consider relevant, particularly in relation to contact between any such person and the child;
    4. Their ability and suitability to bring up the child until the child reaches the age of eighteen.
  • An assessment of the proposed contact arrangements and the support needs (see Section 11, Assessment for Support) of the child, parents/those who have parental responsibility and the prospective special guardian.

6. Approval of Special Guardianship for Looked After Children

6.1 General

If the child is looked after and the application has been agreed as part of the child's permanence plan, the assessments will usually have been undertaken and the outcomes agreed as part of the permanence planning for the child, in which case there will be no need to hold a planning meeting.

Special Guardianship as an outcome for a Looked After child must be approved by the Designated Manager (Special Guardianship).

6.2 Special Guardianship Applications in Care Proceedings

Best Practice Guidance on Special Guardianship (Public Law Working Group, 2021) notes that where there are safeguarding or welfare concerns about a child, the statutory guidance is clear about the importance of local authorities engaging with the parents and the wider family network at an early stage through a Family Group Conference (see Family and Friends Care Procedure, Family Group Conferences): the FGC should be used to share information, resolve possible disputes and conflicts with the local authority and to address long - standing tensions within the family. The pre-proceedings phase of the Public Law Outline (PLO) provides an important opportunity to engage the parents and family members in discussions about the future care of the child. In assessing the appropriateness of any potential applicants, the local authority must assess whether any option would not be consistent with the child's welfare, or, would not be reasonably practicable.

Whilst Relaunching the PLO made clear the importance of aiming to meet the statutory requirement of completing each public law case within 26 weeks, Timetabling and Timescale for Full Family and Friends Assessments (Family Justice Council) provides that:

‘This document serves to remind social workers, Guardians, lawyers, and the judiciary regarding the process required to be incorporated into any timescales for a full Family and Friends Assessment to be done to an appropriate standard, so as to provide for a sufficient (usually 12 week) assessment period to undertake the complex requirements inherent in any full assessment. Delay for children is always to be avoided, but nothing in the Public Law Outline, primary legislation, or jurisprudence requires corners to be cut in coming to a safe evidenced conclusion, that places the welfare of the child at the heart of any recommendation or decision’.

See also: Care and Supervision Proceedings, Legal Gateway Meetings and the Public Law Outline Procedure.

Assessments should be robust, evidence-based and child-focused. Before the assessment, the prospective carers should be provided with full information about:

  1. What the assessment will involve;
  2. The time and commitment needed from them;
  3. A letter should be sent explaining the expectations of the carers and what they should think about during the process.

The assessment should carefully balance the strengths families may have: consider any existing relationships they have with the child; explore their parenting experience; the significance for the child of remaining within their family and network, against the carers' capacity to meet the assessed needs and the challenges that a particular child may bring on a long-term basis (including any additional needs as a result of significant harm or neglect they may have experienced), and until their 18th birthday.

In recognising that each situation will be looked at on a case-by-case basis, an interim placement with the proposed special guardians may be appropriately considered to both establish relationships between the child and special guardians and confirm the applicants' ability to carry out their parenting responsibilities, meet the needs of the child and promote their welfare and best interests.

The child's Looked After Review should make a recommendation regarding the outcome of the Care proceedings for the child's Care Plan and this should be approved by the Designated Manager (Special Guardianship).

Final recommendations should not be made until the essential tasks and activities for a full Special Guardianship Order assessment are completed.

A Supervision Order should not be sought as a means to ensure support and services are provided by the local authority (or as a form of 'safety net' for a child). Where considered necessary, the report should detail the reasons why such an Order is required.

The prospective carers should have time to read the assessment report before it is filed and comment on the report.

Following the filing of the report, the prospective carers should be given the opportunity to seek independent advice and legal advice to understand fully the implications of any Orders made and if need be, make applications of their own.

A Special Guardianship Support Plan will need to be provided around the time of filing the Special Guardianship Order report and its recommendation, detailing the support to be provided to the carers and the child and include contact for the child with their birth parents. The potential applicants should be able to seek legal advice about the Support Plan.

6.3 Placement before a Special Guardianship Order (SGO) is Granted

The Best Practice Guidance (2021) (Public Law Working Group) states that where there is little or no prior connection/relationship between the child and the prospective Special Guardian, it is very likely to be in the child’s best interests to be cared for on an interim basis by the prospective Special Guardian in order to establish a meaningful relationship with the child.

Where the interim plan for the placement of the child with the proposed Special Guardian is endorsed by the court, a timetable will need to be prepared that enables the proceedings to be concluded. That timetable will set out:

  • The legal framework (as set out in Sub-appendix B) that authorises the placement of the child with the prospective Special Guardian until either the SGO is made or the care proceedings are concluded by other means;
  • The period of time required for a robust evidence base to be established about the quality of care of the child by the prospective Special Guardian that will inform the court report. There are a number of factors that will need to be taken into account in agreeing this time period, such as:
    1. Any prior parenting experience by the prospect Special Guardian of the child;
    2. The identified needs of the child and any issues which have been identified and addressed as the child settles into the placement;
    3. Any wishes or feelings the child may have in light of their age and understanding;
    4. Any specific training or support that might be needed by the prospective Special Guardian or the child;
    5. The relationship that the prospective Special Guardian has with the parents of the child and other family members, as well as the significance of those relationships. Both from the child’s point of view and those of the prospective Special Guardian, the on-going relationship within the family must be explored for the benefits and, where they exist, the risks.

An agreed plan must be completed on a case-by-case basis that enables each of the issues fully and realistically to be addressed. As the relationship between the prospective Special Guardian and the child develops, specific questions and issues will arise that will further inform the detail of what needs to be explored.

Alongside the plan, the court will draw up a timetable for the outstanding issues that need to be resolved before a final order is made. As the interim guidance makes clear, that timetable should be dictated by the facts of the particular case. It is anticipated that this will be no more than 12 months from the interim placement of the child with the prospective Special Guardian. Where the evidence indicates that this may be through an SGO, this will include the preparation and submission of a report to the court which is evidence-based and compliant with the Special Guardianship Regulations 2005, as amended. In drawing up the timetable, the parties and the court should consider:

  • Whether the prospective Special Guardian should make a formal application (if they have not already done so) for an SGO; and, if so, whether leave to make that application is required;
  • Alternatively, the court will, in due course, subject to the court report prepared by the local authority, make an order of its own motion.

If the court approves an extension, consideration will need to be given to the legal framework. It may not be possible for the child to be placed pursuant to an interim care order under the current regime imposed by Regulation 24 of The Care Planning, Placement and Case Review (England) Regulations 2010. In these circumstances, an alternative approach would be placement pursuant to section 8 of the Act: a Child Arrangements Order and an Interim Supervision Order to provide support for the placement, particularly during any transition period. The court should bear in mind the consequences arising out of any change to the legal framework, particularly if it impacts upon the child’s status as a looked after child pursuant to section 22 of the Act (since April 2016 children cared for by special guardians who were ‘looked after’ immediately before the Special Guardianship Order was granted have been eligible for the Adoption Support Fund (ASF). The ASF provides funds to local authorities and regional adoption agencies to pay for essential therapeutic services for eligible adoptive and special guardianship order families).

7. Report for the Court

The social worker or social workers preparing the Court report should be suitably qualified and experienced. All assessments/suitability reports must comply with the schedule set out in regulation 21 of the Special Guardianship Regulations 2005 (as amended 2016).

(Where local authorities commission assessments from independent social workers, it is essential that there is clarity about the standard of the assessment commissioned before it is filed).

Once completed, the Court Report should be submitted by the author(s) to their line manager(s) for approval.

The court is unable to make a Special Guardianship Order unless and until it has received a Special Guardianship Report; however, where the bulk of the information required is already before the court in another format, the local authority is not required to start from scratch. Instead, the local authority should be directed to file a report, which will fulfil the requirements by providing any missing information and by setting out the remaining information in the form of cross-references to the information already before the court in other reports.

8. Variation and Discharge of Special Guardianship Order

A Special Guardianship Order can be varied or discharged on the application of:

  • The Special Guardian (or any of them, if there are more than one);
  • The local authority in whose name a Care Order was in force before the Special Guardianship Order was made;
  • Any person who is named in a Child Arrangements Order as a person with whom the child is to live;
  • With the leave of the court:
    • Any parent or guardian of the child;
    • Any step-parent who has Parental Responsibility;
    • Anyone who had (but no longer has) Parental Responsibility immediately before the Special Guardianship Order was made;
    • The child (if the court is satisfied that the child has sufficient understanding to make the proposed application).

Where the applicant is not the child and the leave of the court is required, the court may only grant leave if there has been a significant change in circumstances since the Special Guardianship Order was made.

The court may during any family proceedings in which a question arises about the welfare of a child who is subject to a Special Guardianship Order, vary or discharge the Order in the absence of an application.

9. Special Guardianship Support Services

The local authority must make arrangements for the provision for a range of support services in their area to meet the needs of people affected by Special Guardianship.

Special Guardianship support services are defined as:

  • Financial support (see Section 14, Financial Support);
  • Services to enable groups of children for whom a Special Guardianship Order is in force (or in respect of whom such an Order is being formally considered), special guardians, prospective special guardians, and parents of the child to discuss matters relating to special guardianship;
  • Assistance, including mediation services, in relation to contact between the child and their parents or relatives or any other person with whom the child has a relationship that the local authority considers to be beneficial to the welfare of the child;
  • Therapeutic services for the child;
  • Assistance for the purpose of ensuring the continuance of the relationship between the child and their special guardian or prospective special guardian, including training for the special guardian or prospective special guardian to meet any special needs of the child; respite care; and mediation in relation to matters relating to Special Guardianship Orders and;
  • Counselling, advice and information.

Where the support provided includes respite care requiring the provision of accommodation, the child must be Looked After for the duration of the period of respite care to ensure that appropriate safeguards are in place.

Special Guardianship Support will be subject to the approval of the Designated Manager (Special Guardianship Support).

The provision of any services (other than counselling, advice and information) may include cash assistance (for example to pay a babysitter to facilitate a break etc.). When cash is provided in this way it should not be means tested as it is being given as part of a service rather than as financial support.

Support services should not be seen in isolation from mainstream services and it is important to ensure that families are assisted in accessing mainstream services and are aware of their entitlements to tax credits and social security benefits.

Where the child was previously Looked After, responsibility for the assessment and provision of services for the child, the Special Guardian and any children of the Special Guardian all remain the responsibility of the local authority where the child was last looked after for 3 years after the making of a Special Guardianship Order. Thereafter the local authority where the Special Guardian lives will be responsible for assessing and providing support services.

If a child is not Looked After, the local authority where the Special Guardian lives has the responsibility for assessing and providing support services. This includes assessment and any support that is needed by the child's relatives who may live elsewhere. If the special guardian and their family move, then the responsibility passes to the new local authority. The local authority where the special guardian previously lived should cooperate as needed to ensure a smooth transition for the child.

Ongoing financial support (i.e. that paid on a regular basis), which was agreed before the Special Guardianship Order was made, remains the responsibility of the local authority that agreed it so long as the family qualify  for payments.

Local authorities may also provide services to people outside their area in other circumstances where the authority considers it appropriate. For example, transitional arrangements by the originating authority where a family move to allow time for the new authority to review the family's existing plan without a break in service provision.

In addition to the support provided by local authorities, the Adoption Support Fund in England also covers therapeutic support for children, living in England, who were previously in care immediately before the making of a Special Guardianship Order.

Based on the assessment of needs, local authorities can apply for funding from the Adoption Support Fund.

10. Entitlement to Assessment for Special Guardianship Support

Where the child is Looked After or was Looked After immediately prior to the making of the Special Guardianship Order, the following people MUST receive an assessment at their request:

  • The child;
  • The Special Guardian or prospective Special Guardian;
  • A parent.

Where the child is not Looked After or was not Looked After immediately prior to the making of the Special Guardianship Order, the following people MAY be offered an assessment of their need for Special Guardianship support services:

  • The child;
  • The Special Guardian or prospective Special Guardian;
  • A parent.

In all cases, whether the Special Guardianship child is looked after or not, the following people also MAY be offered an assessment of their need for Special Guardianship support services:

  • A child of the Special Guardian;
  • Any person with a significant ongoing relationship with the child.

If a local authority decides not to assess in cases where they have discretion as above, they must notify the decision in writing, including reasons for the decision, to the person making the request. The person who requested the assessment must be allowed at least 28 days to make representations in relation to the decision.

It will not always be necessary to undertake an assessment before providing information, advice or counselling services. However, if the local authority is considering providing any of the support services (see listing above) then a full assessment should be carried out. However where a request relates to a particular service or where it is clear that a particular service is what is required, then the assessment process can be limited to looking at the need for that service.

11. Assessment for Support

The assessment should be based on the Assessment Framework and include the following:

  • The developmental needs of the child;
  • The child's educational needs;
  • The parenting capacity of the Special Guardian or prospective Special Guardian;
  • Family and environmental factors that have shaped the life of the child;
  • What the life of the child might be like with the proposed Special Guardian;
  • Any previous assessments undertaken in respect of the child, the Special Guardian or the prospective Special Guardian;
  • The needs of the Special Guardian or prospective Special Guardian and their family;
  • The likely impact of the Special Guardianship Order on any pre-existing relationship between the child, parent and Special Guardian.

Assessments for special guardianship support services should follow the guidance set out in, and use the domains of, the Assessment Framework, recognising that the context is different from that for birth families. This takes into account the child's developmental needs, the parenting capacity of the special guardian and consideration of the family and environmental factors that together help to explain the child's life so far and what life might be like with the new family

Consultation with the relevant Integrated Care Board and Local Education Authority should form part of the assessment process, and the person whose needs are being assessed should be interviewed unless the assessment relates only to information and advice or unless it is not appropriate to interview a child. In this case the child's actual or prospective special guardian may be interviewed.

The assessment process should be flexible and should not delay provision of appropriate services.

After the assessment has been undertaken the local authority is required to prepare a written report of the assessment.

Special Guardianship Support will be subject to the approval of the Designated Manager (Special Guardianship Support).

At the end of the assessment and once the necessary approval has been obtained, the social worker must inform the person requesting provision of its outcome, including:

  • Information about the outcome of the assessment and the reasons for it;
  • Where it relates to financial support, the basis on which this is determined;
  • The services (if any) that the local authority proposes to provide to help meet the child's needs;
  • If financial support is to be paid, the amount and conditions attached.

12. The Special Guardianship Support Plan

Where an assessment identifies the need for ongoing support services, a Special Guardianship Support Plan must be completed. This Plan should be based upon the lived experience of the child and the lived experience of the prospective Special Guardian.

Other agencies, such as education and health, may need to be consulted about the contents of the Plan.

As a previously looked after child, the child subject to a Special Guardianship Order will be entitled to additional education support. This will be accessed through the designated teacher in the child's school. For further information, please see Education of Looked After and Previously Looked After Children Procedure - to follow.

From 1 September 2021, the School Admissions Code provides that children being raised by family and friends carers under a Special Guardianship Order or Child Arrangements Order, who struggle to get a school place during the year, will be supported in finding one.

The Plan should be written in such a way that everyone affected can understand and set out:

  1. The services to be provided;
  2. The objectives and criteria for success;
  3. Timescales for provision;
  4. Procedures for review;
  5. A named person to monitor the provision of services in accordance with the Plan;
  6. Contact Arrangements between the child and parent(s) which should include: Type of contact, frequency and duration; who is responsible for making the arrangements of contact; what practical arrangements need to be provided to facilitate contact and what professional support and assistance, if any, will be provided to the special guardian;
  7. Any harm that the child may have suffered and the capacity of the prospective Special Guardian to enable the child’s developmental recovery from that harm.

Special Guardianship Support will be subject to the approval of the Designated Manager (Special Guardianship Support).

Once the necessary approval has been obtained, the social worker must send the proposed plan to the person requesting support, and allow 28 days for that person to make representations about the proposed plan. The social worker should also give information to the person concerned about who to contact to obtain independent advice and advocacy.

Where representations are received, they should be referred to the Designated Manager (Special Guardianship Support) to decide whether to amend or confirm the Plan. The allocated social worker must then write to the person concerned setting out the final Plan. A final notice of the authority's decision must then be given to include the following:

  1. Details of the plan and the name of the person nominated to monitor the provision of services;
  2. Where financial support is to be provided:
    1. The method of determination of the amount of financial support;
    2. The amount, frequency, start date and period of any payment in instalments;
    3. When any single payment is to be made;
    4. Details of any conditions and the date by which those conditions are to be met;
    5. The arrangements and procedure for review, variation and termination of financial support;
    6. The responsibility of the authority in relation to reviews  and of the Special Guardian in respect of any conditions.

13. Review of Special Guardianship Support Plans

Special Guardianship Support Services (other than financial support payable periodically) must be reviewed:

  • If there is any change of circumstances affecting the support;
  • At such stage of the implementation of the plan as is considered most appropriate;
  • In any event at least annually.

Where services are being reviewed the same procedure for assessment must be followed as in a first assessment.

If a local authority proposes to vary or terminate the provision of special guardianship support services to any person, before making any decision as a result of the review, it must give the person an opportunity to make representations and for that purpose it must give notice of the proposed decision and the time allowed for making representations. This notice must contain the same information as the notification of the outcome of a first assessment (see Section 12, The Special Guardianship Support Plan) including a draft of the revised plan.

Any change to the Special Guardianship Support Plan will be subject to the approval of the Designated Manager (Special Guardianship Support). Local arrangements will determine whether any additional approval is required for changes to financial support.

If the local authority decides to vary or terminate the provision of support after the review, notice in writing must be given.

The format and content of the review will vary depending on the circumstances of the case. Notification of changes of circumstances and any review of the provision of support services need not always necessitate direct contact between the local authority and the special guardian. Where the change of circumstances is relatively minor the review might be limited to an exchange of correspondence. In particular, the annual review of financial support might be achieved by exchange of correspondence between the local authority and the special guardian. Where the change of circumstances is relevant only to one service the review may be carried out with reference only to that service. However, where the change of circumstances is substantial, for example, a serious change in the behaviour of the child, it will normally be appropriate to conduct a new assessment of needs.

14. Financial Support

Government guidance says that special guardianship arrangements should not fail just because of financial problems. Financial support should be paid to help secure a suitable arrangement where this is not possible because of a financial obstacle.

Each case must be assessed on its own facts. It would not be lawful, for example, to pay a flat rate to all Special Guardians, or a fixed percentage of fostering allowance.

Local information on Special Guardianship Financial Support - to follow

The local authority must take account of any other grant, benefit, allowance or resource available to the person in respect of his needs as a result of becoming a Special Guardian of a child. Financial support cannot duplicate any other payment available to the Special Guardian.

Special Guardians must be helped to access any benefits to which they are entitled; this will usually include child benefit and tax credits.

The Special Guardian's means will normally be considered when ongoing financial support is being considered. They should therefore be asked to complete a Financial Assessment Form, which, when completed, should be passed to the Finance Officer responsible for carrying out means assessments.

Once the means assessment has been carried out, the Finance Officer should send written notification of the outcome to the relevant social worker, who must present this to the Designated Manager (Special Guardianship Support) for approval.

The social worker should then write to the Special Guardian setting out the amount of financial support agreed by the Designated Manager (Special Guardianship Support) and information in relation to the following:

  • Whether financial support is to be paid in regular instalments and if so, the frequency of payment;
  • The amount of financial support;
  • The period for which the financial support is to be paid;
  • When payment will commence;
  • Conditions for continuing payment and date by which conditions are to be met, i.e. returning Review Forms;
  • Arrangements and procedure for review and termination.

A copy of this letter should be sent to the Finance Officer.

Means may be disregarded in relation to:

  • The initial costs of accommodating a child who has been Looked After;
  • Recurring travel costs in contact arrangements;
  • Any special care requiring greater expenditure due to illness, disability, emotional or behavioural difficulties or the consequences of the past abuse or neglect of a child previously looked after;
  • Where considering an element of remuneration in financial support payments to ex-foster carers.

Where the Special Guardians were previously the child's foster carers, the local authority can maintain the fostering allowance for a transitional period of 2 years but with discretion to extend if necessary.

The only circumstance when the local authority MUST disregard means is when providing financial support in respect of legal costs, including fees payable to a court in respect of a child who is Looked After where the local authority support the making of the Special Guardianship Order or an application is made to vary or discharge a Special Guardianship Order in respect of that child.

Local authorities are not expected to meet the legal costs of a Special Guardianship Order where they oppose an application in respect of a child they previously looked after or in a non-looked after case. Local authorities may wish to advise prospective special guardians in these circumstances that they may be able to obtain help with legal costs from the Legal Aid Agency.

Review of Financial Support Paid Periodically

Where financial support is paid periodically the local authority must review this:

  • On receipt of the annual statement received from the special guardian;
  • If there is any relevant change of circumstances that the special guardian agreed to notify, or any breach of a condition comes to the local authority's notice;
  • At any (other) stage in the implementation of the plan that the local authority considers appropriate.

The procedure for assessment set out for first assessment for financial support (see above) applies equally to a review of financial support. If the local authority proposes, as a result of the review, to reduce or terminate financial support or revise the plan, before making that decision the local authority must give the person an opportunity to make representations. For that purpose it must give the person notice of the proposed decision and the time allowed for making representations, but the local authority may suspend financial support pending that decision if they think it appropriate.

The notice must contain the same information as the notification of the outcome of the first assessment.

The local authority must, having regard to the review, and after considering any representations received within the period specified in the notice, then decide whether to vary or terminate payment of the financial support or whether to seek to recover all or part of any financial support that has been paid; and where appropriate, revise the plan.

The local authority must give the person notice of their decision including the reasons for it and, if applicable, the revised plan.

Where Special Guardians are in receipt of financial support, the social worker responsible for monitoring the Special Guardianship Support Plan will write annually to them with a Financial Assessment Review Form to be completed, together with a request for information about any change in circumstances for the Special Guardian or the child.

The Assessment Form should be forwarded to the Finance Officer for consideration. If any change in financial support is considered appropriate, the recommended change should be forwarded to the Designated Manager (Special Guardianship Support) for a decision.

Where Special Guardians do not return the Assessment Review Forms within the required time scale, the social worker monitoring the support plan should send a reminder letter, giving 28 days notice of the suspension of payments if the information requested is not received.

15. Urgent Cases

Where a person has an urgent need of a service, the assessment process should not delay provision and arrangements can be made for support to be provided as a matter of urgency in appropriate cases. The approval of the Designated Manager (Special Guardianship Support) will still be required. The local authority will need to review the provision as soon as possible after the support has been provided in accordance with the procedures set out above.

16. Special Guardianship Orders in International Cases

Identifying potential long-term carers for the child within the family may include those who are either resident in, or nationals in, overseas countries. Special guardianship can be considered in placing a child outside of the jurisdiction. Consideration must be given to how assessments are carried out in a legally compliant and culturally relevant manner. Thought should be given to:

  • The status of special guardianship in that country and other legal matters;
  • The relevant matters associated with the care of children in that country: permanent, stable and secure family life; safeguarding; education and health; and specifically how all of these relate to the personal living circumstances of the host family and their need for support services, including financial and therapeutic support and contact between family members including those resident in the UK;
  • Contacting local agencies in that country for guidance on the support that maybe offered.

In advance of the child being placed, a plan will need to be agreed about how the placement will be supported and what the contingency arrangements are for the child.

Best Practice Guidance (2021) (Public Law Working Group) provides that if the proposed carers appear to be viable, time may be needed for Children and Families Across Borders (CFAB) to carry out an assessment.

Note:

  1. Contracting states to the 1996 Hague Convention will be better placed to offer co-operation and support than some other countries (see HCCH);
  2. Social workers should carefully explore the local authority's ability to provide financial support particularly after an initial 3 years. when 'out-of-area placements' are abroad.

See also: Children and Families Across Borders (CFAB).

17. Special Guardian Duty on the Death of the Child

If the child with respect to whom a Special Guardianship Order is in force dies, the Special Guardian must take reasonable steps to give notice of that fact to:

  • Each parent of the child with Parental Responsibility; and
  • Each guardian of the child.

Appendix 1: Good Practice: Getting it Right First Time

The following suggested good practice is taken from the Local Government and Social Care Ombudsman report Firm Foundations: Complaints about Council Support and Advice for Special Guardians (May 2018). 

The following is not an exhaustive list but sets out some of the positive steps councils can take:

  • Give early, clear and unambiguous advice to people who are considering becoming special guardians. Consider how this can:
    • Explain what is special guardianship and what this means for parental responsibility, legal security and stability;
    • Explain the council's role and that of the court;
    • Set out who can apply to be a special guardian and what alternatives could be more suitable;
    • Make the process of applying to be a special guardian clear, including the role of the council in writing a report to court;
    • Explain the assessment process before becoming a special guardian. Explain that applicants may need to complete some training.
  • Be as clear as possible about the support that might be available and how the council will assess the applicant's support needs;
  • Be as unambiguous as possible about the fixed term duration of support and what it is likely to be used for;
  • Back up verbal advice and guidance in writing wherever possible, particularly where this may have long term consequences;
  • Manage expectations early on, for example where special guardians expect ongoing support or help with major personal expenditure;
  • Be as clear as possible with applicants that any support may be time limited;
  • Develop advice for social workers involved in supporting potential and actual special guardians. This could include:
    • A flow chart showing responsibilities at key stages such as suitability assessment, financial assessment, permanence panel and court;
    • A checklist of things to cover at first assessment visit (for example explaining the process and financial situation);
    • A summary of the SGO assessment process including child information (for example attachment issues and any early neglect or trauma), carers information (for example current relationship and stability).
  • Keep clear and transparent records of contact with special guardians. This is always important, particularly where guardians will probably be supported by several different social workers and other officers over several years;
  • Write support plans that are clear, in plain English and set actions that are as specific, measurable and achievable as possible so the council and guardian can review progress;
  • Make sure support plans:
    • Are shared, discussed and agreed with special guardians, and this is well documented;
    • Are written so that they are easy to evaluate and keep under review. It should be easy for the council and guardian to decide whether all the support has been provided;
    • Are regularly reviewed and kept up to date. Make sure plans continue to meet the child's needs as they change;
    • Set out the approach to calculating special guardianship allowance. Explain this at the earliest stage as possible, making clear this will be reviewed and depend on evidence of continuing needs;
    • Keep the best interests of the child at the forefront of decision making.