Transcript Slide 1

Resilience and early intervention:
A voluntary sector perspective
Maggie Jones
Children England
22nd March 2013
Resilient Families
UCLan and Howgill Symposium
West Cumbria
About Children England
Our Mission: To create a fairer world for children and
young people by championing the voluntary
organisations which work on their behalf
• The leading membership organisation for charities and
community groups working with children, young people
and families in England
• Supporting and representing the sector since 1940’s
• Membership network of over 100,000 like-minded
people working across the sector
• Represent the full diversity of the sector
• Overarching Strategic Partner to DfE for the VCSE sector
The CYP&F Voluntary Sector
• 64,000 charities (half of all charities) in England have
children, young people and families as their main
beneficiaries (2009/10 data)
• And 21,000 ‘civil society’ organisations (half of all)
• Total income - £3.3 billion (core c.yp.f service sector),
PLUS £8.7billion in wider sector serving cyp as part, but
not focus, of delivery
• 96% operate at local level only
• 54% do not employ any paid staff
• 91% annual income of less than £100k
• 53% under £10k income
• Only 1% of total income from corporates
The Voluntary sector role in building
resilient families
Respect and self worth
Strengths based approach
Non stigmatising services
Whole person/ child/family approach
Often grew from and steered by peers
Community and cross sector links
No wrong front door
“Stitch in time” approach
’
Perfect Storms
• Aim: to capture the cumulative impact of the
pressures faced by the CYP VCS, our statutory
partners and CYPF that we support
• Not a representative survey of the sector and it
produces no new statistical data
• Interviews with over 50 people from the VCS and
statutory, including commissioners
• Based on these in-depth interviews and wider
statistics, we suggest that there are two perfect
storms, one affecting the VCS business model and
the other local areas
Challenges for maintaining the voluntary
sector role in resilience and early intervention
1. Operational challenges
• Delivering through instability, churn and rapidity of change
within the operating environment
• The impacts and costs of Competition and Collaboration
• Maximising the power and capacity of volunteering and charity
donation, without exploiting them as a cost-saving measure
• Sharing and transferring risk and liability in contracting
• ‘Reward’ based payment vehicles (eg PBR)
• Impacts of short-term funding on service continuity, workforce
stability, and demonstrable outcomes for children and families
• The myth of early intervention funding
2. Identity challenges
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Arm of the state?
Lose the capacity to be bottom up
Single function based services
No room for innovation and radicalism
Holding higher levels of risk can undermine early
support
• Families see using us as a mark of failure not
empowerment
VCS role in alternative local service
economies
 Edgar Cahn and the Core Economy
 VCS economy, based on gift, reciprocity, self help and
philanthropy
 VCS as bridge between the Core and Cash based
economies
 In creating value from things and with people others
leave behind, we give them a status and build
confidence
 Communities creating value for themselves
So how do we support families and
communities to weather the storms?
• Three sectors playing to their own strengths not wasting time on
a lowest common denominator model. Lets find where it works
• Challenge and resist purely commercial solutions to human
relationship based services
• We must find better ways of valuing the un-costed and un-seen
• Could make a major contribution to Pre-distribution in the
longer term
• Use local political capital: local charities, communities and
councillors/ elected and appointed board members
• It may feel un-tested and unsure, but so are most Government
policies and all recent attempts to rebuild economies!
These are the times we were made
for.
The children, young people and
families we work with need us more
than ever before
We cant afford to let them down
Thank You
www.childrenengland.org.uk