Fostering is a way of providing a family life for children who cannot live with their own parents.
It is often used to provide temporary care while parents get help sorting out problems, take a break, or to help children or young people through a difficult period in their lives.
Often children will return home once the problems that caused them to come into foster care have been resolved and that it is clear that their parents are able to look after them safely.
Others may stay in long-term foster care, some may be adopted, and others will move on to live independently.
Are there different types of fostering?
Types of foster care include:
This rest of this page is about fostering a child through an agency (all the types of fostering apart from private fostering). For more information on private fostering see the somebody else’s child website and advice note.
Is fostering a job?
All foster carers are registered with and contracted to a local authority or voluntary or independent agency. Many foster carers are volunteers, but increasingly they are seen as professionals and receive a fee on a basis of being self employed – see are foster carers paid?
What do foster carers do?
The foster carer’s role is to provide high quality care for the child. All children in foster care will be looked after by a local authority and the foster carers will work in partnership with the local authority to provide this.
The foster carers may also work with other professionals such as therapists, teachers or doctors to help the child to deal with emotional traumas or physical or learning disabilities.
For more information see our advice note on foster care.
What kind of people become foster carers?
Fostering agencies, including local authorities, need a wide range of people to meet children and young people’s very different needs.
It is best for children to live with foster carers who reflect and understand the child’s heritage, ethnic origin, culture and language, and fostering agencies need carers from all types of backgrounds.
People do not need to be married to become a foster family – they can also be single, divorced or cohabiting. Gay men and lesbians can become foster carers, although in Scotland they can only do so as single individuals living on their own. People in households with 2 or more unrelated adults of the same sex can’t foster in Scotland. You can read about different types of adoptive and foster families in past issues of Be My Parent News & Features.
There are no upper age limits for fostering, but fostering agencies expect people to be mature enough to work with the complex problems that children needing fostering are likely to have, and fit enough to perform this very demanding task!
How are foster carers recruited?
Fostering agencies often recruit new carers through publicity campaigns or newspaper or radio advertisements. They may have information stands in public places.
If you are interested in becoming a foster carer, the best first step is to get in touch with your local authority’s fostering team or with a fostering agency in your area. You can find their details in the phone book or in our agencies directory.
What preparation and training do foster carers get?
People who want to become foster carers need to go through thorough preparation and assessment.
They attend groups where they learn about the needs of children coming into foster care.
Alongside this, they receive visits from a social worker.
The social worker will then prepare a report that is presented to an independent fostering panel, which recommends whether this person/family can become foster carers.
Training does not stop when a person becomes a foster carer. All carers have an annual review and any training that’s needed to ensure they are suitable to continue fostering.
Some carers also take a national qualification such as an NVQ level 3 Caring for Children and Young People (or an SVQ in Scotland).
For more information about the training of foster carers see our advice note.
Are foster carers paid?
Allowances
All foster carers receive an allowance to cover the cost of caring for a child in their home.
For foster carers working on behalf of an agency, this is set by the individual fostering agency, and is usually dependent on the age of the looked after child.
Fostering Network produces an annual guide, Foster Care Finance, recommending the basic levels of allowances it believes agencies should be paying.
In England the government has now introduced national minimum allowances for fosters carers.
Fees
Increasingly, fostering is being seen as a “professional” role and many local authorities, voluntary and independent fostering agencies run schemes, which pay foster carers a fee. This may be linked to the child’s particular needs but is often a reflection of the skills, abilities, length of experience or professional expertise the foster carer has.
Tax relief
The introduction of tax relief in 2003 means that foster carers in the UK do not pay tax on their income from fostering, up to a maximum of £10,000 plus allowances.
National Insurance contributions
Since April 2003, foster carers have also been entitled to Home Responsibility Protection – a way to make sure that you do not get less Basic Retirement Pension just because you have stayed at home to look after a child.
What about adoption?
Fostering is different from adoption because when a child is in foster care, the child’s parents or the local authority still have legal responsibility for them. But when a child is adopted, all legal responsibility for the child passes to the new family, as though the child had been born into that family, and the local authority and the birth parents no longer have formal responsibility for the child.
When there is no possibility for a child to return home to their parents, attempts will be made to see if anyone else in the family can care for them. If this is not possible, a family must be found who can provide “permanence” for the child, to allow them to feel as secure as possible. This either happens through long term fostering or adoption.
If a foster carer decides that they want to adopt a child, they can ask to be assessed as a possible adopter for that child. Their suitability will be considered in the same way as anyone else applying to adopt.
Some foster carers can now apply to become Special Guardians.
Further information
You can read articles about long-term and permanent fostering from Be My Parent website.
Advice notes
Our advice note Foster Care – Some questions answered contains more information on all the above areas, plus information about:
For information about private fostering take a look at the private fostering advice note or the dedicated website Somebody Else’s Child.
Talking About Origins offers help in talking about a child’s origins with them.
Source: BAAF (British Association for Adoption & Fostering) website
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