Caithness Map :: Links to Site Map Great value Unlimited Broadband from an award winning provider  

 

Call For New Foster Carers To Come Forward

10th May 2009

Photograph of Call For New Foster Carers To Come Forward

The Highland Council is joining in with the UK-wide campaign Foster Care Fortnight which starts today (Monday 11 April), to attract more local people into fostering. The fortnight is co-ordinated by fostering charity Fostering Network, to raise the awareness of fostering and highlight the shortage of foster carers across the whole of the UK.

In the Highlands there are 100 foster carers aged between 21 and 65 who look after 130 children and young people.

Speaking at the Highland launch held this morning in Inverness Chairman of The Highland Council's Housing and Social Work Committee, Councillor Margaret Davidson said: "Children of all ages and a variety of backgrounds find themselves placed with Foster Carers. There are many reasons why young people are unable to live with their own families and the reality is that they will in their young lives have had a lot to cope with. Foster Carers play a very important role in helping children during difficult, insecure and bewildering times. With the right care, stability and hard work they can really make a difference to a young persons life when it is most needed."

There is no such thing as a typical foster family. Carers can live in urban and rural areas, they can be are single, married or living with a partner. They have different racial, cultural and religious backgrounds and some have children of their own or have no children or have children who are now grown up. What they do all have in common is kindness, patience and an ability to understand children.

One of these people is Mhairi Geddes from North Kessock who has cared for 40 children of various ages during the 15 years she and her family have been fostering.

Mhairi said: "Fostering was something we wanted to do for a long time before we started. We had no previous experience of fostering before we began ourselves. We didn't know any foster carers or young people who had been fostered. In my own family however, I have experience of adoption and I am very close to my adopted family member.

"Having brought up five children of our own we felt we could use our experience to help other children and hopefully make a difference in their lives.

"Ever since we had our own family we enjoyed having children around. We always had a busy house as we encouraged our children to bring their friends home. That meant we knew where they were and that they were safe. When our two oldest children left home to start their own families we decided that was the time to begin fostering.

"We have been fostering now for 15 years during which time we have cared for 40 different children of varying ages. These have been mainly teenagers through choice as we feel this suits our lifestyle better. We are always given information about a young person before we decide whether they will fit into our family which also includes the other children in placement. In the early stages we just offered a place for 1 child, however now we can accommodate 3 long term foster children and also offer respite for 2 others. Some carers choose to offer short term care.

"We began offering respite because after one child we had cared for had gone home to his own family, he needed regular respite breaks and it made sense for him to come to us as we knew him well. My family maintain contact with him to this day. This has been the case with many of our foster children as they have grown into adulthood.

"Fostering can be very rewarding when you can see the changes in a child's behaviour, regular school attendance and in most cases the child returning to their own family. During our 15 years of fostering we have found that the rewards far outweigh the challenges and we intend to continue fostering for as long as we are able.

"Although fostering is not for the fainthearted we would thoroughly recommend it to those who have a keen interest in child welfare, a good measure of patience, a sense of humour and space in their home."

The Highland Council Fostering and Adoption Service provides the training and support needed. There are many different ways to get involved, it's even possible to foster on a part time basis.

Foster carers are given an allowance to cover the cost of caring for a child as well as a fee and receive training and ongoing support from our fostering team

Following a successful Care Commission inspection in November last year, the Council announced funding of an additional £420,000 to further enhance its fostering service and implement the Scottish Government's national strategy for foster care and kinship care.

Photo
Foster Carers Janet Bray; Mhairi Geddes; Laura Higgins; Louise Torrance join the Director Harriet Dempster and social work staff for the launch of the 2009 campaign.

 

Related Businesses

 

Related Articles

The Axe Falls As Highland Council Management Restructures To Save £310,000Thumbnail for article : The Axe Falls  As Highland Council Management Restructures To Save £310,000
As intimated in Highland Council's budget plan, a new senior management structure is to be implemented following approval by Council 14th March.  It reconfigures the senior management team into two layers, rather than three and brings Highland Council into line with other benchmarked authorities.  
16/4/2024
Apprenticeships Offer Earning Opportunities Alongside Learning In Refurbishment Of Historic ParkThumbnail for article : Apprenticeships Offer Earning Opportunities Alongside Learning In Refurbishment Of Historic Park
Today, Morrison Construction introduced some of their local apprentices who are working on the UK Governments' Levelling Up Funded refurbishment project at the Northern Meeting Park in Inverness.  All these apprentices have been recruited from the Highland area.  
13/4/2024
Independent Candidate Wins Inverness South Bi-electionThumbnail for article : Independent Candidate Wins Inverness South Bi-election
The by-election to elect a councillor to represent Ward 19 - Inverness South on The Highland Council has been won by Duncan Cameron McDonald - Independent who was one of the eight candidates who contested the vacancy.   Voters in the ward went to the poll yesterday (Thursday 11 April) and the by-election count was held this morning in The Highland Council Headquarters in Inverness.  
10/4/2024
Technology Placement Programme In Highland
The Technology Placement Programme offers funding to businesses in the Highland Council area to cover up to 70% of the cost of employing a student or graduate.   The Technology Placement Programme offers funding to businesses in the Highland Council area to cover up to 70% of the cost of employing a student or graduate.  
3/4/2024
Council Announces Extra Digital Funding To Support Highland BusinessesThumbnail for article : Council Announces Extra Digital Funding To Support Highland Businesses
Following the success of its Business Digital Grant scheme launched last year, The Highland Council is delighted to announce further funding.  This is to help Highland companies access digital support alongside other business growth support.  
27/3/2024
Wick Public Service Obligation Celebrates Successful Second Year Subsidising Wick Aberdeen FlightsThumbnail for article : Wick Public Service Obligation Celebrates Successful Second Year Subsidising Wick Aberdeen Flights
The Highland Council is delighted to confirm a highly successful second year for Public Service Obligation (PSO) flights between Wick and Aberdeen.   The period from April 2023 to March 2024 has seen a substantial increase in passenger numbers, with several months seeing over 1,000 passengers using the service, and overall the service has seen year on year growth of 25%.  
18/3/2024
Members Agree Digital Ambition For Highland Council - Or How To Make Cuts Without Saying SoThumbnail for article : Members Agree Digital Ambition For Highland Council - Or How To Make Cuts Without Saying So
Members of Highland Council, who met on Thursday 14 March 2024, approved a corporate Digital Ambition, which has been designed to deliver significant organisational change across Council services, recognising the current priorities within the organisation.   The Strategy, which is embedded within the wider Council Delivery Plan, has been developed to focus attention and resources on areas of change which will deliver the greatest benefit to the Council.  
14/3/2024
Clarification On The Role Of MCR Pathways' Coordinators And Mentors In Highland Schools
The Council remains committed to supporting mentoring in our schools, including the support that is currently delivered through the MCR Pathways programme.   Highland Council is currently undertaking a review of Employability Support provided by a number of different council services and how these relate to the work carried out by external partners and in our schools.  
15/3/2024
Council Agrees A New Draft Highland Outcome Improvement Plan
Highland Council members have considered and agreed a revised draft Highland Outcome Improvement Plan.   The partnership plan has been reviewed and updated by the Community Planning Partnership.  
15/3/2024
Members agree Highland Council's new Community Wealth Building Strategy
Members at today's (14 March 2024) meeting of The Highland Council agreed the local authority's new draft Community Wealth Building Strategy.   They were also asked to note that a period of public engagement on the draft will now begin, with a final strategy returning to full Council for consideration in September.