Today is the launch of Learning Together to Safeguard the City fortnight which is a new way of talking about how we all work together to keep people safe and well. It is delivered in partnership between the Safeguarding Adults Board, the Local Safeguarding Children Board and the Safe in the City Partnership Board, as well as Brighton & Hove City Council, other statutory partners including Sussex Police and Health, and a range of charities and community groups.
Today’s events:
There are a range of learning events taking place this fortnight and you can View the full programme of events or visit Eventbrite to register for a free place. This runs alongside the 16 Days of Action for the Elimination of Violence against Women campaign and you can find out more about the events for this here.
Through out this fortnight we will be posting a series of Everybody’s Repsonsibility Blogs where key figures in the city will talk about what Safeguarding means to them. The first in this series is Graham Bartlett, Independent Chair Brighton & Hove LSCB and Safeguarding Adults Board.
What part does safeguarding play within your role?
The safeguarding boards that I have the privilege to chair are key to co-ordinating the work of those charged with looking after our children and vulnerable adults and to make sure the work they do is effective, joined up and puts the person not the professional at the heart of all they do. We do this by auditing how things are actually done, by reviewing cases where things may have gone wrong, by providing training and by holding each other to account for what we do. To help us do all that we make sure we have members of the public, service user representatives and children feeding in to and advising us in our work.
What does safeguarding mean to you?
To me safeguarding is not just about putting in interventions when things go wrong. It’s about everyone looking after the most vulnerable, seeing where people – children or adults – need extra help and being able to access that help for them. Particularly for adults it’s about what the person in wants to happen rather than imposing a ‘one size fits all’ solution on them. Harm and abuse comes in many forms. Sometimes it can be through people deliberately going out to exploit others and sometimes it can be a parent or carer who, despite their best intentions, lack the skills, resources or support to look after the child or adult they love. Whatever the root, it is everyone’s responsibility to protect those most vulnerable from harm and to support those who are looking after them.
What will you be taking away from Safeguarding the City fortnight?
I am really excited that the two safeguarding boards and the Safe in the City Partnership have come together to learn from each other and some real experts. I firmly believe that only good can come of this initiative and we will all end the event better informed, better equipped and more confident to keep those who need our protection – our most vulnerable adults and children – so that they can live happy, safe and fulfilled lives.
Help us spread the message that Safeguarding is Everyone’s Responsibility on Social Media during the Learning Together fortnight from 26 November – 10 December by downloading our Safeguarding is… or Everyones Responsibility signs and post a selfie under #EveryonesResponsibility or support us by sharing this tweet:
Has needs met within universal provision. May need limited intervention within the setting to avoid needs arising.
Has additional needs identified within the setting that can be met within identified resources through a single agency response and partnership working.
Has multiple needs requiring a multi-agency coordinated response.
Has a high level of unmet & complex needs, or is in need of protection.