The British Association for Adoption and Fostering (BAAF) (until 2001, British Agencies for Adoption and Fostering) was a membership association formed in 1980 and a registered charity. Membership was open to organisations and individuals concerned with child adoption and fostering. Corporate members included local authorities, independent fostering agencies, voluntary adoption agencies, NHS trusts, law firms and voluntary organisations. Individual members included social workers, health professionals, law professionals, adopters and foster carers. BAAF's 2013–14 annual review reported a corporate membership of more than 450 and 1400 individual members.
On 31 July 2015 the board of trustees announced the immediate closure of the charity. In a vague explanation it cited "significant changes and prevailing economic conditions" as the reasons for the surprising and sudden closure.[1] The charity was insolvent and in administration. Some of BAAF's functions in England were transferred to the children's charity Coram, with a new entity to be created named CoramBAAF Adoption and Fostering Academy.[1]
Following the closure a former chief executive and acting chief executive, and a group of former staff members, made separate requests to the Charity Commission for an investigation. According to the Civil Society Governance website, "The (former) letter is believed to suggest that the regulator’s guidance for struggling charities was not adhered to in the months before the collapse, and that more could have been done to keep the BAAF from closing".[2]
According to the Children & Young People Now publication, Anthony Douglas, the chief executive of CAFCASS who chaired the BAAF board of trustees, "declined to comment" on his board's decision to close the charity.[3]
Following the closure of BAAF the Adoption & Fostering Alliance Scotland and the Association for Adoption and Fostering Cymru were formed in Scotland and Wales respectively, with funding from the Scottish and Welsh governments, to continue the work of BAAF in those jurisdictions.
BAAF services
Until its closure BAAF was a membership association, publisher, training provider and advisory service. In cooperation with SAGE Publications it published the academic journal Adoption & Fostering. Post-qualifying training was delivered in partnership with Sheffield Hallam University in England, with Stirling University in Scotland and with QUB in Northern Ireland.
BAAF also ran the Be My Parent family-finding service consisting of the www.bemyparent.org.uk Web site [4] and Be My Parent newspaper. Both Be My Parent services featured children who need an adoptive or permanent foster family. The Web site also offered information, articles and real-life stories about adoption and fostering.
Contracted services
BAAF managed the Adoption Register for England and Wales, under contract with the UK and Wales governments, Scotland's Adoption Register, which is funded by the Scottish Government, and the Adoption Regional Information System for Northern Ireland (ARIS) for the Northern Ireland Executive. These registers maintain records of children waiting to be adopted and of approved prospective adopters awaiting an adoptive placement.
BAAF operated the Independent Review Mechanisms (IRM)[5] in England and Wales, on behalf of the UK and Wales governments respectively. The IRMs review the decisions of adoption and fostering agencies on their approval of adopters and foster carers, and on disclosure of adoption records.
Public policy and public information
BAAF worked to increase public understanding of child adoption and fostering. And it lobbied for reform where necessary. It had campaigned for unmarried couples, including same-sex couples, to be allowed to adopt jointly, for the right of adopted people and people who were donor conceived to receive information about their birth families, and for foster children to be able stay in care after the age of 18.[6][7]
BAAF ran National Adoption Week, which is dedicated to finding families for those children who wait the longest,[8] and Somebody Else’s Child, the first national campaign on private fostering.
In 2011 BAAF also supported the launch of a publication designed to improve fostering outcomes for Muslim children in care. The guide, Foster Carers Caring for Muslim Children, was developed by the community development charity Mercy Mission UK with a national consultation with children, carers, professionals and supervisory support from BAAF.
Management
In December 2014, Caroline Selkirk became the new Chief Executive. BAAF had advertised for a "visionary" Chief Executive at a salary of up to £100,000. Seven months later the charity she led had ceased to exist.
Selkirk was previously employed by NHS Tayside as Deputy Chief Executive from May 2011. She started her career as a state registered chiropodist working in England and Scotland before undertaking an MSc in Health Promotion and Health Education. She worked in a number of health promotion and management positions in the southern England. In 1994 she moved to West Sussex Health Authority as Contracts Manager and subsequently became Assistant Director of Performance Management. In 2000 Selkirk returned to Scotland and was appointed Assistant Director of Planning at NHS Tayside. She was appointed Director of Change and Innovation in 2003.
Selkirk replaced Barbara Hutchinson who had the position of Interim Chief Executive. Hutchinson is a former Deputy Chief Executive of BAAF. She returned to BAAF from retirement to take up the interim position on 30 May 2014. This followed the departure of Srabani Sen who was Chief Executive from December 2013 until May 2014. Sen left BAAF so soon after her appointment to "pursue exciting opportunities that have emerged recently".[9] Sen's LinkedIn profile subsequently reported that she was the Director of Lead for Change, which "works with organisations to give them a competitive edge and a sustainable future by embedding the needs and aspirations of their clients and service users into their strategy, leadership and governance".[10]
The Board of Trustees was chaired by Anthony Douglas who is Chief Executive of CAFCASS, the Children and Family Court Advisory and Support Service.[11]
Revenue
BAAF raised revenue from membership fees, the sale of its publications and services, fees for its public contracts, and through charitable donations. In 2010 it controversially accepted a £100,000 grant from Ladbrokes, the bookmaker.
Patrons
BAAF's President was Rupert Hambro. Patrons included: Elizabeth Butler-Sloss; Nicky Campbell, presenter of BBC Radio 5 Live, who was adopted; hairdresser Andrew Barton; interior designer Annabel Elliot; Clare Grogan; and Nimmy March.
In 2014 Butler-Sloss withdrew as head of an inquiry into child sex abuse. This followed an allegation that in a previous review “she wanted to exclude some of his allegations in a bid to protect the Church of England” according to the BBC, because she "cared very much about the Church".[12]
Archives
References
- 1 2 "Statement from BAAF Chief Executive Caroline Selkirk" (Press release). BAAF. 31 July 2015. Archived from the original on 4 August 2015. Retrieved 31 July 2015.
- ↑ "Subscription page".
- ↑ "Staff speak out after more than 50 jobs go in shock BAAF closure".
- ↑ "Be My Parent".
- ↑ "Independent Review Mechanism". Archived from the original on 2010-04-18. Retrieved 2010-03-05.
- ↑ "Children and Young People Now".
- ↑ feast, Julie (14 August 2007). "Letters:Donor-assisted conception". Children & Young People Now. Archived from the original on 23 September 2015. Retrieved 31 July 2015.
- ↑ Oclee, Daisy (25 October 2007). "Adopting an 'older' child isn't the second best option". The Independent. London. Archived from the original on May 6, 2008.
- ↑ Puffett, Neil (16 June 2015). "BAAF chief executive departs after less than six months". Children & Young People Now. Archived from the original on 14 July 2014. Retrieved 14 July 2014.
- ↑ Sem, Srabani. "Srabani Sem". LinkedIn. Archived from the original on 11 August 2014.
- ↑ "BAAF's Chair Appointed Chief Executive of CAFCASS (Press Release)". Families Link International. 9 June 2004.
- ↑ "Abuse inquiry: Baroness Butler-Sloss criticism rejected". BBC News. 12 July 2014.