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AgentTink
26-02-2013, 08:39 AM
I have copied and pasted the relevant sections from the transcript on the goverments website of the 2nd reading of the childcare bill last night.

Full transcript can be found here:
House of Commons Hansard Debates for 25 Feb 2013 (pt 0002) (http://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm201213/cmhansrd/cm130225/debtext/130225-0002.htm#13022511000001)

25 Feb 2013 : Column 68

Stephen Twigg:….. As for child care agencies, we welcome the idea of additional support for childminders to promote work force development and progression, to increase efficiency and share best practice, and to improve local co-ordination to help parents find good childminders. However, as they stand, the plans are rather hazy on detail. Ministers will need to give assurances that they will not cause knock-on effects, such as extra costs to parents. Ministers will also need to clarify what they will mean for local authorities, how often Ofsted will inspect agencies, and how the criteria for the inspection of agencies will differ from those for inspections of individual childminders.

25 Feb 2013 : Column 69

Meg Hillier (Hackney South and Shoreditch) (Lab/Co-op): Does my hon. Friend share my fear that agencies may cream off a profit and add costs to parents rather than supporting better child care? We have seen that happen in the older care sector.

Stephen Twigg: My hon. Friend has raised a legitimate concern that has been expressed by a number of other people. I hope that the agencies will provide a genuine opportunity for the raising of standards and improvement of quality in the child care sector, but I think that if the system is not managed and co-ordinated carefully, with a continuing role for local authorities, there will be a risk of our going down the path described by my hon. Friend. The quality and cost of child care, as well as parental confidence in childminders, must surely be at the centre of any changes.

25 Feb 2013 : Column 76
6.31 pm

Meg Hillier (Hackney South and Shoreditch) (Lab/Co-op): I represent one of the youngest constituencies in the UK: over 20% of the population of my borough is under 16. Between the last two censuses, the population in the borough of Hackney grew by 30,000. That included a large increase in under-fives, and many people in their early 20s and 30s, many of them parents. Child care is therefore of great importance in my constituency, as well as up and down the country.

The Bill deals with many important issues, but I want to focus on child care. The muddle of Government child care policy is not helped by the child care clauses. They make nothing clearer; in fact, they make the chaos worse. First, the Bill repeals the local authority duty to assess child care provision. I am against that, because it is important that we provide an accurate assessment of the availability of, and demand for, child care in an area, and it is reasonable to expect that to be done locally. I am greatly in favour of local authorities having more say on the subject, but if we remove that statutory duty, in areas unlike mine, where there are not that many children, that may be something that falls off the edge of a local authority’s area of responsibilities. That is another example of the Government’s small-state-is-good

25 Feb 2013 : Column 77

ideology, this time on a local level, and with working parents as the victims. It does not square with the Government’s desires—all our desires, indeed—and need to encourage people into work.

There is also a huge issue to do with the proposed ratios between children and their nursery carers or childminders. The policy is unworkable. It beggars belief. It does nothing to reduce costs, but if one were to say, on a generous reading, that it did, it would be at the cost of quality. So that Members are absolutely clear, let me explain that the Government propose that the adult-child ratios for nurseries should go from one adult per three children to one adult per four children for one-year-olds and younger—for the baby room in a nursery, as most of us would know it—and from one adult per four children to one adult per six children for two-year olds. They propose changing the childminder-to-child ratios from 1:1 to 1:2 for the under-ones, and from 1:3 to 1:4 for children aged two to five.

I am the second of 10 children, so I do not have a problem with lots of children being looked after, but imagine taking six toddlers through potty training, or to the park. A constituent wrote to me on the subject. She is just one of the many parents, childminders and professional child carers in Hackney who are really concerned about the proposal. Her child is looked after by a childminder, whom she values greatly. She says:

“If this ratio had come in before I had gone back to work I may not have gone at all. I didn’t want my baby in a nursery. I feel very strongly that parents need the option of leaving our children in a safe, caring home environment”

with a childminder. She speaks for so many parents up and down the country, and indeed for childminders.

That brings me on to the proposals in the Bill relating to the setting up of childminder agencies. I mentioned my concerns about this in an intervention. I am not alone in my scepticism. It is unclear from the Bill how the proposals will work. Among other things, I am concerned that the concept of an agency is different to different people. It might mean one thing to the Minister who made the proposal, and another to others. Is it a children’s centre or a local authority effectively acting as an agent for Ofsted and professional development locally—something that I could support, with the right safeguards—or is it the relentless march of the private sector, supported by the Government, who are enabling it to turn a profit from the relationship between child- minders and parents? We have had no further clarity on that from the Minister today. Will the agencies be able to allocate any childminder to any family, or will the parent have a say? The local, very specific negotiation about a child is vital to the relationship between parents and childminders.

Will there be the recreation of what we could laughingly call the paradigm of the agencies that manage domiciliary care for older people? As someone who has been a carer for two older people, I would hate to see child care go down that route—to see agencies creaming off a profit while providing inadequate care—when we have a very good childminder sector that has improved immensely thanks to the Ofsted badge of quality, which is prized by childminders and valued by parents.

That is not to say that I do not support any change. Sometimes there are challenges arising from Ofsted inspecting such a range of childminders, but I would prefer that to be done through the local authority, or

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possibly the local children’s centre, both of which already have a relationship with the childminder, rather than through new agencies being set up.


25 Feb 2013 : Column 89
Lucy Powell (Manchester Central) (Lab/Co-op): ….. This is an important Bill that will impact on children and their parents—on how families function and how the state supports them in so doing. I support many aspects of the Bill and the spirit of this debate, which has been conducted in a very comradely fashion. Some of the Bill received pre-legislative scrutiny, and it is much better for that. However, there is concern inside and outside the House about some of the proposed changes, particularly to child care, that are being foisted on a sector that is fairly united in its opposition to them. It is therefore disappointing that so much of that aspect did not go to consultation before the Bill came before us.


Lucy Powell: I agree with my hon. Friend. In addition, my local authority in Manchester is experiencing a huge cut to its children’s services budget, which is having a massive impact on how the local council provides for children in care. That is particularly worrying.

As I said in my recent Adjournment debate on child care, the child-care crisis is one of the most fundamental issues facing families today. Part 4 of the Bill relates to child care and many elements have been met by a chorus of disapproval. Childminder organisations have welcomed the changes to allow Ofsted to charge for early reinspection at the request of the provider, but there is deep concern at opposition to plans to create new childminder agencies. Providers, the third sector, parents and the Government’s own advisers also have deep reservations about measures to change child-care ratios. Indeed, an unpublished report being sat on by the Secretary of State apparently says that changes to ratios will lead to a deterioration in the quality of care and will not help parents reduce their costs. I have previously asked for that report to be published and I repeat that request tonight. The Minister is in danger of driving down quality while costs balloon.

There are many concerns about the proposed childminder agency changes, and I echo those raised earlier by my hon. Friend the Member for Hackney South and Shoreditch (Meg Hillier). Childminders are concerned that agencies could charge them high fees for registering and that plans for Ofsted to cease inspecting agency-registered childminders could confuse parents. Indeed, the Pre-School Learning Alliance has questioned why the Government would create another layer of bureaucracy that will see many parents and childminders pay more while duplicating the work of several organisations.

I am also concerned about plans to remove the existing duty on local authorities to assess the sufficiency of child care in their area. I have spoken before about the

25 Feb 2013 : Column 91

child-care crisis facing families hit by the triple whammy, including a reduction in the number of places. Indeed, my hon. Friend the Member for Washington and Sunderland West (Mrs Hodgson) has highlighted the closure of Sure Start centres in some parts of the country and my hon. Friend the Member for Newcastle upon Tyne North (Catherine McKinnell) also raised that point earlier. More than 400 centres have been lost since this Government took office and 4Children has highlighted that 55% of children’s centres no longer provide any on-site child care, while 50% of those that still do report that those places are massively over-subscribed.

Sufficient child care is a prerequisite for parents—mainly mothers—returning to work. Removing the duty on local authorities to ensure sufficient child care will not help parents who are trying to get back into the workplace. It is a backward step that sends the wrong message to families who struggle to find the right child care.

lisbet
26-02-2013, 08:55 AM
Thank you so much for posting that :thumbsup: They raised some good questions. And interesting to hear that they already have a report that says it will drive down quality! :mad:

Tunja
26-02-2013, 09:04 AM
[QUOTE=AgentTink;1216589]I have copied and pasted the relevant sections from the transcript on the goverments website of the 2nd reading of the childcare bill last night.

Full transcript can be found here:
House of Commons Hansard Debates for 25 Feb 2013 (pt 0002) (http://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm201213/cmhansrd/cm130225/debtext/130225-0002.htm#13022511000001)

25 Feb 2013 : Column 68

Thanks. That saves me trawling through as I missed the last part of the debate.
Tunja

shortstuff
26-02-2013, 09:18 AM
Thanks for sharing, i was wondering when i would find time to watch the recording x. It goes to show our voices are being heard. Well done to all of those actively vocal :-)

hectors house
26-02-2013, 09:45 AM
Thank you for posting - pity no one mentioned the various petitions and surveys though.

mum26
26-02-2013, 09:49 AM
That's great and reassuring that our views are being heard.

FussyElmo
26-02-2013, 12:05 PM
Thanks for that :thumbsup:

nipper
26-02-2013, 12:19 PM
I think we are on their RADAR now!

Ripeberry
26-02-2013, 12:25 PM
Thanks for posting that :)

wendywu
26-02-2013, 12:28 PM
As least they are pointing out that we dont want agencies and it will only raise child care cost and lower quality :thumbsup:

teacake2
26-02-2013, 12:49 PM
Typical though isn't it, where are the male MPs?
Teacake2

SammySplodger
26-02-2013, 12:54 PM
No surprise all supporting MPs so far are all Labour... Lib Dems appear to be falling in with Conservatives. The summing up part at the very end by Jo Swinson was dreadfully depressing and ignored all that Lucy & Meg had said.

jo.jo76
26-02-2013, 02:05 PM
Typical though isn't it, where are the male MPs?
Teacake2

There was one male MP that mentioned it! And a Lib Dem!

9.25 pm

Dan Rogerson (North Cornwall) (LD):

25 Feb 2013 : Column 125

The Bill contains measures on child care and the role of the Children’s Commissioner, and I hope Ministers will address the concerns felt by childminders that the proposed agencies will enable them to get on with the job and are not about forcing them into a new straitjacket or seeking to bring them together into a large privatised agency. I am sure the Government will seek to correct that concern.

SammySplodger
26-02-2013, 03:10 PM
Oooh I missed that / was saying night night to Daughter - I stand corrected - one male Lib Dem!

jo.jo76
26-02-2013, 03:14 PM
Oooh I missed that / was saying night night to Daughter - I stand corrected - one male Lib Dem!

It was a bit 'blink or you'll miss it!'

Still can't believe I spent my whole evening watch bbc parliament! At least it meant all the kids went to bed easily and didn't want to stay downstairs watching telly with me! :laughing::laughing:

SammySplodger
26-02-2013, 05:21 PM
My kids and DH were a bit grumpy and did not fully understand what was going on. DH now gets it - saw the summing up bit and said "whaaaaaaaat?!" Still think we have a very long way to go.

I do not understand why Childcare is part of the bill - should be dealt with separately and properly.

jo.jo76
26-02-2013, 09:20 PM
I do not understand why Childcare is part of the bill - should be dealt with separately and properly.

Exactly! There are so many other huge issues being put through on this bill!

The Juggler
26-02-2013, 09:34 PM
thanks for posting. I chased up my local MP last night to see if he'd heard back from Ms Truss saying that I knew the 2nd hearing had taken place. Will let you know if I hear anything.

k1rstie
27-02-2013, 09:55 PM
I posted the letter on Friday, and got the reply back today from the House of Commons!! It was basically a copy of Sarah's suggested letter.


It reads

''Thank you for contacting me about childcare.

At the moment, restrictivre staff:child ratios put a cap on quality. Whereas in England nursery staff may look after no more than four two-year-olds, in France they can be responsible for eight and in Denmark, Germany and Sweden, therre are no limits at all. In these countries, the emphasis is on the quality of the staff, not the number of children.

England's relitively tight ratios have two main effects: higher costs for parents and lower pay for staff. Nursery staff below the supervisor level are paid an average of £6.60 an hour - barely more than the minimum wage. In turn, low pay drags down the quality of the workforce. In other countries, providers can use the extra income they get from taking on more children to reduce fees for parents and pay staff more, but this is not possible in England. Crucially, these countries also ensure they employ highly qualified professionals in the early years.

The Government is therefore going to free high quality providers to offer more places, so long as they employ well-qualified staff. This will mean more great childcare places for parents to choose from and more freedom for providers to pay staff more and attract high quality people into the profession.

Kindest regards

Dr Phillip Lee MP''

sarah707
28-02-2013, 06:24 PM
Thank you for doing all that Agent Tink :clapping:

I think it shows that some MPs are listening - and we need to focus on the ones that aren't a little more while not forgetting to thank the ones who are on our side...

Letter writing again this weekend please guys! :cheerleader: