Inglewood Children's Home

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Company typeLeeds City Council
IndustryLeeds Social Services
PredecessorNone
Founded1899
Inglewood Children's Home
Company typeLeeds City Council
IndustryLeeds Social Services
PredecessorNone
Founded1899
Defunct19 September 2013
FateClosed
SuccessorNone
Headquarters
Social Services Department Merrion House Leeds
,
England
Area served
West Yorkshire
Key people
Susan Noble (Manager)
ServicesChildren's Social Care
Number of employees
22 (as of 2013)

Inglewood Children's Home was a children's home in Otley, West Yorkshire founded in 1899.[1]

The home was originally built on Inglewood Drive in 1899 but in the mid-1980s was moved to Whitley Croft Garth in a cul-de-sac. The home originally housed up to 16 young people in the mid-1990s but over time the number reduced to 8 by 2011.

Inglewood Front Building

Closure

In May 2013 Children's Services decided that the home should be closed and open three smaller homes in its place.

New Criteria For Residential Provision

Leeds City Council stated criteria that residential provision had to meet to remain open, these were;

  • Homes should as far as possible replicate family life. They should be small and set within local communities. Homes should be part of the community and contribute to community life
  • All homes will be run based on restorative practice principles
  • Except in exceptional circumstances, children's homes should not be seen as permanence option
  • Children must have an individual and clear care plan, placement plan and personal education plan which supports their development
  • Children must be supported to participate in their own plans, in the running of the home and in service development
  • Children should be encouraged to develop positive interests and participate in a range of activities.[1]

In the Children's Services Scrutiny Board report they gave this conclusion about the future of Inglewood based on the new criteria for children's homes.

Inglewood children's home is in a very large home in Otley, built on a difficult to manage footprint at the end of a cul de sac with sheltered housing for the elderly. The home does not fit with the principle of smaller group homes and therefore the long term plan is close the home and reinvest resource into a smaller home at a time when the demand for residential places as a whole has sufficiently reduced or when smaller homes developed with environments and neighbourhoods are available."[1]

Closure aftermath

The home officially ceased to be a Children's Home as of 31 August 2013 but staff were deployed there until 19 September 2013.[1][2] All the staff and young people at the home were relocated although it was reported that one cleaner was made redundant and had to find work outside of Leeds City Council.[3] The children at the home said "the closure was disruptive."[4][5] In 2014 Roy Walker, the Service Delivery Manager for Residential Services in Leeds City Council, had confirmed the plans to replace the home with three smaller homes was scrapped due to funding.[citation needed]

Young people

Controversy

References

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