Mark Whitehead 03 March 2015

Council staff could face prison for failing to protect children

Public officials who fail to act on suspicions of child abuse could face five-year prison sentences under new measures unveiled today.

Prime minister, David Cameron, said council chiefs, social workers and teachers who fail to protect children could face criminal action to help ‘eradicate the culture of denial’.

He warned that those who turn a blind eye to child sexual abuse out of a ‘warped sense of political correctness’ would face criminal prosecution in the wake of the Rotherham grooming scandal.

Police forces would be ordered to treat child sexual abuse as a ‘national threat’ equivalent to terrorism and organised crime.

The announcement came ahead of an independent inquiry which is expected to find that 300 children were sexually exploited by gangs in Oxfordshire over 15 years.

The Local Government Association (LGA) said social workers, teachers and local and national politicians should be held to account if they fail to protect vulnerable children but warned that ‘we need a million eyes and ears to look out for our young people’.

Cllr David Simmonds, chairman of the LGA’s children and young people board, said: ‘We need a culture change in the way the grooming and abuse of young people is recognised by both professionals and members of the public, to give anyone who comes into contact with it the confidence to report their concerns.

‘Families and communities need to feel reassured their children are not at risk. We need to feel certain everyone in society recognises that teenagers cannot consent to their abuse and are victims of sexual crime.

‘We need a million eyes and ears to look out for our young people to do this, everyone must be aware of the complexities of child abuse.’

The new Centre for Young Lives image

The new Centre for Young Lives

Anne Longfield CBE, the chair of the Commission on Young Lives, discusses the launch of the Centre for Young Lives this month.
SIGN UP
For your free daily news bulletin
Highways jobs

Head of Market Quality & Sustainability

Royal Borough of Greenwich
£67,290 - £70,710
Royal Greenwich Integrated Commissioning are looking for a skilled and experienced leader Greenwich, London (Greater)
Recuriter: Royal Borough of Greenwich

Programme Officer - WMF1088e

Westmorland and Furness Council
£35,745 - £36,648
The Capital Programme team is responsible for the core delivery of the Council’s c.£60m/year Capital Programme Cumbria / Countywide
Recuriter: Westmorland and Furness Council

Asylum Lead Officer - WMF1080e

Westmorland and Furness Council
£33,945 - £34,834
Westmorland and Furness Council is committed to supporting asylum seekers Barrow in Furness, Cumbria
Recuriter: Westmorland and Furness Council

Locality Officer Level 3 WMF1091e

Westmorland and Furness Council
£32,076 - £33,024
Westmorland and Furness Council is an ambitious authority. Kendal, Cumbria
Recuriter: Westmorland and Furness Council

Head of Commissioning Management

Derbyshire County Council
Grade 15 £59,559 - £65,327
At Derbyshire, we have been on a journey to transform the way we deliver highway services Derbyshire
Recuriter: Derbyshire County Council
Linkedin Banner

Partner Content

Circular highways is a necessity not an aspiration – and it’s within our grasp

Shell is helping power the journey towards a circular paving industry with Shell Bitumen LT R, a new product for roads that uses plastics destined for landfill as part of the additives to make the bitumen.

Support from Effective Energy Group for Local Authorities to Deliver £430m Sustainable Warmth Funded Energy Efficiency Projects

Effective Energy Group is now offering its support to the 40 Local Authorities who have received a share of the £430m to deliver their projects on the ground by surveying properties and installing measures.

Pay.UK – the next step in Bacs’ evolution

Dougie Belmore explains how one of the main interfaces between you and Bacs is about to change.