Pacey have released this latest briefing on agencies today on pacey Local
Look out for the reference to the 60 'piloting agencies' and pacey understanding that the registration fee may go up...
CHILDMINDER AGENCIES
PACEY childminder members in England have made clear that their individual registration and
inspection with Ofsted remains the best way to demonstrate to parents and others that their
children will be in a safe and quality childcare setting.
The current Government’s plan to introduce childminder agencies as an alternative method of
registering childminders has raised a number of concerns. Agencies will be piloted by different
organisations (local authorities, children centres, nurseries and other private businesses) over
the coming months, prior to becoming available as an option for childminders from September
2014.
This briefing sets out what PACEY believes are the limitations of the agency approach and what
they may mean for children, parents as well as you and your childminding business.
What is a childminding agency?
The Government is proposing that individual childminders have the option to join an Ofstedregistered
agency and pay a fee for the agency’s services. These services could include matching
parents with childminders; initial training (e.g. first aid, safeguarding etc); continuous
professional development opportunities; quality assurance; and/or support with paperwork
and finances (e.g. tax credits, free entitlement funding). The Government has stated the drivers
for this change in childminding regulation and inspection are firstly to increase the number of
people choosing childminding as a career. This in turn will increase the supply of childminding
and, in theory, then reducing the cost to parents. Secondly to help drive up the quality of
childcare with a particular focus on agencies providing support to people entering the
childminding profession and those who have achieved a satisfactory grade. As both may be in
need of additional support. This is likely to impact on the type of support an agency provides to
childminders on its register.
Government has stressed that agencies will have a large degree of autonomy and be market
driven. This means there will be a variety of different ways an agency may operate with much
depending on how much childminders and – if they provide a matching service – parents are
willing to pay. Every agency will need to be self‐financing and responsible for ensuring that
childminders who register with it meet required quality standards. PACEY assumes this will be
the EYFS but at present that is unclear.
The agency itself would be registered and inspected by Ofsted. It would be required to
demonstrate it was delivering a range of quality improvement activities and would receive a
grade for its services. The agency inspection would include a spot check of some childminders
registered with the agency but they would not receive an individual grade, only the agency
would be graded. This model is adapted from a similar approach in the Netherlands.
What do childminder agencies mean for me?
Increased costs
Childminder agencies will need to be self‐financing businesses. This means that they will have
to charge childminders and/or parents who use their services a fee for doing so. PACEY believes
that agencies will only be able to deliver the level of quality improvement support childminders
need if they charge significant fees from childminders and/or parents. It is not yet clear what
this cost is likely to be and PACEY will be monitoring this as Government plans to pilot 60
agencies begin in the next few months. However, PACEY is clear that it is likely to cost more
than the current Ofsted registration fee of only £35 per year for individual childminders.
Loss of autonomy
PACEY members have made clear that, as a small business, childminding allows you to decide
your own business terms – how much you charge, the hours that you work, how much you
invest in your training, equipment etc. At present it is unclear what impact joining an agency
will have on this. Will the agency require you to take on parents it matches with you? Will it
require you to work a minimum number of hours a week? How will joining an agency affect
your self employed status in terms of tax and other liabilities?
Loss of support elsewhere
Whilst childminders will not be required to join an agency, there is concern that at the same
time as this proposal is going ahead, local authority support for childminders is diminishing.
The agency model may well be seen as a replacement for the freely accessible support many
local authorities offer and which, given spending cuts, many are having to reduce. Whilst it is
clear that in difficult economic circumstances, tough choices have to be made, PACEY is
concerned that agencies may provide a convenient alternative for local authorities looking to
ends their childminding support. This could mean that many childminders may end up with no
mechanism for support to train and develop other than to join an agency.
This is why we are
improving how our members’ access to free training, advice and information from us as well as
support from peers, via PACEY Local. So that childminder still have a choice.
Loss of inspection grading
Many childminders have raised concern that joining an agency will mean they taking on the
grade of the agency rather than retaining their own personal Ofsted grading. Good news if the
agency is outstanding, less good if it is graded lower than your individual grade.
What do agencies mean for parents?
PACEY knows that parents value a childminder’s individual registration and inspection with
Ofsted and are concerned that, without this, they will not be as reassured about the quality and
safety of childcare provided. In a survey with *****, the majority of parents stated that:
Ofsted registration and inspection of individual childminders provides them with
confidence that a childminder is suitable to care for their child (80%)
They would be less likely to use a childminder if they were regulated by an agency rather
than Ofsted (75%)
PACEY is concerned that the level playing field that childminders have enjoyed since the EYFS
was introduced is being dismantled and that agencies will result in a two tiered system of
regulation, leaving many parents confused. At present a childminder can show parents they
work to the same standards as a nursery or pre‐school and are inspected in the same way. This
will no longer be the case for agency childminders. Even for those childminders who remain
individually registered with Ofsted, there is a risk their professionalism will be undermined.
Government proposals include plans to encourage agencies to match parents with a
childminder and ensure emergency back‐up care if that childminder is ill. This fails to recognise
how engaged parents are in making careful decisions around the childcare they choose for their
child (and how much this is a two‐way process with childminders considering the impact a new
child may have on those already in their setting). Parents want to ensure not only that the
childminder is safe and of high quality but also that their child likes the setting, the childminder
and the other children s/he cares for. There is therefore the concern that a move to this model
will mean a move away from a strong personal relationship between childminders, children and
parents to something more commercial and impersonal.
Your business sustainability
Ultimately PACEY is concerned that agencies will lead to a two‐tiered system for childminding
and one that risks eroding the parental confidence that being part of the shared EYFS
framework with nurseries and pre‐schools has provided. Ultimately childminding’s hard won
professionalism and the confidence it currently enjoys from parents and other professionals will
be eroded. Over time, this will impact of childminding’s future sustainability. You can find out
more by reading our IPPR report What Future For Childminders?, published in late June.
In summary the current system of individual regulation and inspection is much valued by
parents and childminders alike because it:
Puts all the necessary processes in place to safeguard children and ensure they receive a
quality care and learning experience.
Ensures parents understand that childminders provide the same standards of care and
learning as nurseries and pre‐schools.
Is not costly or onerous to individual childminders.
Has been proven to raise the quality of childminding.
The agency approach will only serve to dilute this without any evidence it will successfully
increase the number of childminders working in England nor reduce cost to parents. In the
Netherland when this model was introduced, the quality of childminding decreased rather than
increased and there is some evidence from childminders PACEY has surveyed that childcare
costs would increase if they joined an agency.
Conclusion
Parents and childminders have voiced a number of concerns about the impact the option of
joining an agency will have on the quality and safety of childcare provided. If you are thinking of
joining an agency in your area, you may want to consider the following questions before you
make the decision:
How much will agency membership cost and will the support on offer deliver what my
setting needs
What will joining an agency mean to the families already using my service. What about
new families looking for childcare?
How much of my business paperwork is likely to be taken on by the agency and how
much would I retain, as it is part of my self‐reflection and preparing for children in my
setting
What will the agency require of me in return for accessing the support it offers?
Having considered all the pros and cons, you will be in a better place to decide if join an agency
will be worth the additional investment to support your business.
PACEY will continue to provide support, advice, information and training to its
childminder members and you can find out more at
www.**************.
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