Special guardianship

2002

Special guardianship

Home > Fostering & adoption > Legislation, policy & practice > Special guardianship

Some of the documents linked to on this page are in the pdf format.

To read pdfs you will need Acrobat Reader (download free from Adobe).

On this page:

> What is Special Guardianship?

> Regulations and Guidance

> Why was Special Guardianship introduced?

> When might Special Guardianship be used?

> Who can apply to be a Special Guardian?

> Applying to be a Special Guardian

> Support for Special Guardians

> What is different about Special Guardianship Orders?

> Further reading

What is Special Guardianship?

The Adoption and Children Act 2002 introduces a completely new court order, Special Guardianship, intended to provide another option for legal permanence for children who cannot grow up with their birth families.

A Special Guardianship Order gives the special guardian legal parental responsibility for the child which is expected to last until the child is 18. But, unlike Adoption Orders, these orders do not remove parental responsibility from the child’s birth parents, although their ability to exercise it is extremely limited.

In practice, this means that the child is no longer the responsibility of the local authority, and the special guardian will have more clear responsibility for all day-to day decisions about caring for the child or young person, and for taking important decisions about their upbringing, for example their education. And, importantly, although birth parents retain their legal parental responsibility, the special guardian only has to consult with them about these decisions in exceptional circumstances.

On this page we mainly cover issues relating to local authority foster carers. For more information on how Special Guardianship affects kinship carers and birth parents please contact the Family Rights Group.

What are the Regulations and Guidance?

The Adoption and Children Act 2002

The Adoption and Children Act 2002 inserts new sections into the Children Act 1989, and modifies some existing sections of the Children Act. In relation to special guardianship, these are the relevant references:

Section 115 of the Adoption and Children Act 2002 (insertions)

Inserted Section 14 A-G of the Children Act 1989

Schedule 3 of the Adoption and Children Act 2002 (modifications)

Any decision about special guardianship must be viewed in the light of the welfare checklist in Section 1 of the Children Act 1989. In addition there are Special Guardianship Regulations 2005 which set out further provisions, particularly in relation to special guardianship support services and the report to the court. There is also a summary at the beginning of the Special Guardianship guidance (paragraphs 1-21), based on the Act, and regulations. The Act, regulations and statutory guidance need to be read together in order to fully understand the new system.

Regulations

England

The Special Guardianship Regulations 2005:

http://www.opsi.gov.uk

Wales

The Special Guardianship (Wales) Regulations 2005:

http://www.opsi.gov.uk/legislation/wales/

Guidance

England and Wales

DfES Guidance on Special Guardianship:

http://www.dfes.gov.uk/adoption/docs/6207adoption.pdf

Why was Special Guardianship introduced?

For some time researchers and practitioners have highlighted that there are some, mainly older, children and young people in care who may accept that they can not live with their birth parents, but who are still unhappy about being adopted and breaking all legal ties with their family. Long-term fostering has provided an alternative placement option for this group of children and young people, but it hasn’t always offered them the security and sense of belonging that they need. At the same time, some foster carers who have been caring for children over a period of time, have felt anxious and frustrated about the lack of clarity about their role in day-to-day decision making, and have expressed their need for a legally secure relationship with these children. Special Guardianship Orders have been introduced to offer an alternative permanency option for this group of children and their carers, and one which might be more appropriate in other particular circumstances.

When might Special Guardianship be the preferred option?

Any decision to apply for a Special Guardianship Order should clearly always be based on meeting the needs of the child or young person, but there are particular situations where it might be more appropriate:

Older children and young people in long-term care, as described above, who may wish to retain some legal ties with their birth family and who do not want to be adopted

Unaccompanied asylum-seeking children who need a secure, permanent home here, but have strong attachments to their family abroad

Prospective carers from minority ethnic groups who may wish to offer a child a permanent family, but have religious or cultural difficulties with adoption as it is set out in law

Kinship care, where members of the extended family may not want to adopt the child, but do need more security and clarity about day-to-day decision making

Who can apply to be a Special Guardian?

A court may make a Special Guardianship Order in respect of a child on the application of:

Any guardian of the child

A local authority foster carer with whom the child has lived for one year immediately preceding the application

Anyone who holds a residence order with respect to the child, or who has the consent of all those in whose favour a residence order is in force

Anyone with whom the child has lived for three out of the last five years

Where the child is in the care of a local authority, any person who has the consent of the local authority

Anyone who has the consent of all those with parental responsibility for the child

Any person, including the child, who has the leave of the court to apply

What is the process?

There is nothing in the Special Guardianship regulations setting out a planning process which local authorities must follow, as there is for adoption. Each local authority will need to establish their own policies and procedures to make a decision about special guardianship for children in their care, and it is not necessary to have a panel to make this recommendation.

All applicants must give their local authority 3 months notice in writing that they are going to apply for an order, and local authorities are required to produce to the court a report on all children, not just those who are looked after, when an application is made. This report must include information about the child, the child’s wishes, the child’s birth family, contact arrangements, the prospective special guardian and recommendations about whether or not an order should be made (See the schedule to the relevant regulations for further details). The local authority is expected to start work on this report, or arrange for someone else to do it, as soon as possible after receiving the notice. The court cannot make an order without having received a report. Local authorities are expected to ensure that the social worker who prepares the report is suitably qualified and experienced, but there are no restrictions on who can write the report as there are for adoption.

Before making the Special Guardianship Order a court must consider whether to vary or discharge any other existing order made under Section 8 of the Children Act 1989. The court can also decide to make a Section 8 Contact Order at the same time as the Special Guardianship Order. In all circumstances the court must consider the whole range of options available before making a Special Guardianship Order.

What kind of support is available for Special Guardians?

The Adoption and Children Act 2002, and the regulations made under it, require the local authority to make arrangements for the provision of special guardianship support services. These include financial and other support for the Special Guardian, but also services for children and birth families, for example, mediation services to assist contact between the child and their birth family. (See relevant regulations for a full list of these services). These services should be integrated and developed alongside adoption support services and other more general provision for children and families.

If an application is made for Special Guardianship on a child who is looked after by a local authority then the child, the birth parent and the prospective special guardian are all entitled to an assessment on request for these support services. In addition, the local authority that last looked after the child continues to have the responsibility for assessment of need for these services and for providing them, for 3 years from the date when the Special Guardianship Order was made. Importantly, this local authority retains responsibility indefinitely for regular financial support agreed before the making of the Special Guardianship Order.

Children who were looked after by a local authority immediately before a Special Guardianship Order was made, and aged between 16 and 21 years, may qualify for the advice and assistance available to care leavers from that local authority.

A foster carer who becomes a special guardian for a child they were fostering, and who previously received an element of remuneration with the fostering allowance, can receive some remuneration up to 2 years after the order was made, and for a longer period in exceptional circumstances.

In all other situations, including when the 3 year period has expired, responsibility for assessing and providing support services is with the local authority where the special guardian lives.

If a child is not (or was not) looked after by a local authority, then there is no entitlement to an assessment for Special Guardianship support services, but this assessment may be requested.

What is different about Special Guardianship Orders?

Any child who was previously looked after by a local authority will cease to be looked after once a Special Guardianship Order is made. A Special Guardian may then exercise parental responsibility to the exclusion of all others with parental responsibility, apart from another special guardian. A Special Guardian can also appoint a guardian in the event of death. This differs from the holder of a Residence Order who exercises parental responsibility jointly with other people who have parental responsibility (the birth parents for example). However, Special Guardians, unlike adoptive parents, do not have exclusive parental responsibility, they cannot give their consent to change a child’s surname, or live abroad for more than 3 months without the agreement of others with parental responsibility, or the leave of the court. They can also not override a parent's refusal to consent to the adoption of the child.

By contrast with adoption, where birth parents lose all their parental responsibility, under residence and special guardianship orders they retain the right to consent or not to adoption, and they can also apply for contact with their child through the courts.

Adoption Orders are almost always for life, while Residence Orders last until the child is 16 or 18. Special Guardianship Orders last until 18, but the court is asked to take account of the child’s need for a lifelong relationship with their special guardian at the time the order is made.

Finally, Adoption Orders are irrevocable, but both Residence Orders and Special Guardianship Orders can be varied or discharged. However, the thresholds for revoking a Special Guardianship Order are higher, and a parent can only apply for revocation where the court has granted leave for the application because of a significant change in circumstances.

Further reading

Adoption and Children Act 2002 training materials - on this page you'll find a number of different types of training materials provided by the DfES, including the workbook that was used as a source for this page.

Your guide to Special Guardianship - a new option for children needing permanent families - a leaflet produced by the DfES for service users and the general public.

The Adoption and Children Act 2002 and special guardianship by Felicity Collier - an article published in the Jan/Feb 2005 issue of ChildRight (No.213, pp.5-7)

Special guardianship orders - an introduction by Julia Nelson - an article published in the July 2005 issue of Family Law (Vol.35, pp.573-575)

Achieving permanence for looked after children through special guardianship: a study of the experience of New Zealand guardians with implications for special guardianship in England. by Peter Ward - an article published in the Winter 2004 issue of Adoption and Fostering (28(4), pp.16-26)