TY - JOUR
T1 - What future for voluntary children's residential providers in Ireland?
AU - Power, Martin
AU - Power, David
PY - 2022/4/22
Y1 - 2022/4/22
N2 - In Ireland, voluntary provision of children's residential services has a history that predates the foundation of the Irish State. Voluntary providers have thus endured regardless of wars, economic crises, social upheavals, scandals, pandemics, and many other changes. However, the current climate is arguably challenging voluntary providers to their core. Only just being kept afloat by State funding, they are operating against the backdrop of a hollowing out of the third sector, within a mixed economy of provision that is increasingly being dominated by private providers. Moreover, they are, and have been, chronically and comparatively underfunded for many years, and staff are understandably demoralised by the scant progress on pay restoration in line with their counterparts. To compound matters further, the impending regulation of social care workers and proposed inspection regime changes are likely to only increase demands on both providers and staff. This paper is a collaboration between a director of a voluntary children's residential provider and an academic in socialcare. It uses the director’s experiences as a lens to explore and explain the drivers and challenges voluntary residential providers face, and to ask if there is a future for voluntary residential children's providers in Ireland.
AB - In Ireland, voluntary provision of children's residential services has a history that predates the foundation of the Irish State. Voluntary providers have thus endured regardless of wars, economic crises, social upheavals, scandals, pandemics, and many other changes. However, the current climate is arguably challenging voluntary providers to their core. Only just being kept afloat by State funding, they are operating against the backdrop of a hollowing out of the third sector, within a mixed economy of provision that is increasingly being dominated by private providers. Moreover, they are, and have been, chronically and comparatively underfunded for many years, and staff are understandably demoralised by the scant progress on pay restoration in line with their counterparts. To compound matters further, the impending regulation of social care workers and proposed inspection regime changes are likely to only increase demands on both providers and staff. This paper is a collaboration between a director of a voluntary children's residential provider and an academic in socialcare. It uses the director’s experiences as a lens to explore and explain the drivers and challenges voluntary residential providers face, and to ask if there is a future for voluntary residential children's providers in Ireland.
KW - voluntary providers
KW - Ireland
KW - residential childcare
KW - state support
UR - https://www.celcis.org/knowledge-bank/sircc-journal/all-issues
M3 - Article
SN - 2976-9353
VL - 21
JO - Scottish Journal of Residential Child Care
JF - Scottish Journal of Residential Child Care
IS - 1
ER -