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2023-04-06-accounts

Charity registration number: 1163906

Kinship Carers UK

Trustee Report

For the year ended 31st March 2023

Kinship Carers UK Legal and Administration Information

Charity Number: 1163906

Directors: Don Beckett, Chair (appointed 2017) Victoria Smith (appointed 2015) Susan Sztybel (appointed 2015) Donna Weaver (Appointed 2020) Clare Whittaker (appointed 2019)

Chief Executive

Enza Smith MBE (appointed 2015)

Treasurer

Jane Hinton (appointed 2016)

Principal Registered Address:

43 Somers Road Barbourne Worcester WR1 3JJ

Bank: NatWest Bank 1 The Cross Worcester WR1 3PR

Annual Report 2023

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Kinship Carers UK

Directors’ Report

Year Ended 31[ST] March 2023

The directors present their report and account for the year ended 31 March 2023.

The financial statements have been prepared in accordance with the accounting policies set out in notes to the accounts and comply with the charity’s governing document.

1. Structure

Kinship Carers UK was established on 5[th] September 2011. Kinship Carers UK became a Charitable Incorporated Organisation (CIO) on the 8[th] October 2015.

2. Charitable Objectives

Kinship Carers UK objectives are to promote the better care, upbringing and establishment in life of children, in particular by:

Kinship Carers UK champions the vital role of friend and family carers, otherwise known as kinship carers or connected families, when they take on the challenging role of

permanently parenting someone else’s child. Everything we do is designed to improve the day to day experiences of kinship families by empowering them and supporting them. We listen to what they say about their situation and identify with them positives changes that can be made.

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3. Mission Statement

Kinship Carers UK helps kinship families to succeed by promoting loving and supportive relationships between children, young people and their kinship families. We provide independent support, information and advice. In particular, current kinship families offer a wealth of relevant experience to prospective kinship carers and to all those who work with them.

4. Our Vision

There are around 300,000 children in the UK raised by family and friend carers. These children have suffered similar adversities to those in the care system yet the support they receive bears little, if any, relationship to their needs. There will always be a need for some children to be cared for away from their natural parents, so we are helping to create a world where every unique kinship family we meet is recognised and supported.

We do this by:

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5. Our Values

We are independent: We always act and speak in the best interests of kinship carers and the children in their care and we are not compromised by any political or commercial interests.

We are engaged: We actively listen to and talk with kinship carers, their children and young people in their care and other people and organisations with expertise and insights that can help.

We are transparent and accessible: We communicate clearly what we do, why we do it and how we spend the donations we receive. This is achieved by the Kinship Care.Org website and our publications.

Kinship Carers UK’s long-term aspiration is to develop and refine the service and to provide a blueprint that can be duplicated in other areas of the country where there is a growing need.

6. What We Have Achieved

Kinship Carers UK champions the vital role of kinship carers ‘friend and family carers’ when they take on the challenging role of permanently parenting someone else’s child.

We have offered the following:

Supported Families

We have supported over 617 families to date throughout England. These are families that we meet either on a regular basis or in times of crisis within their lives. The majority of families have orders such as Special Guardianship Orders, Child Arrangement Orders, Kinship Fostering, Carers with private arrangements, also grandparents sharing the responsibility of caring for their grandchildren.

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Face to Face Support Groups

During support groups, we offer adults advice, emotional support and encouragement. Some sessions offered are bespoke training to carers on the following subjects:

Kinship Community cafe

Kinship Carers UK has proven a great success, we have 12 monthly cafés, with guest speakers. The guest speakers have come from a variety of professional backgrounds and have given the carers access to people they often would not meet. The popular Kinship Community Café have also given carers a virtual place to meet other kinship carers. Uptake for this group has been notable and the variety of the speciality of guest speakers has provided a great resource for carers that do not have the opportunity to attend specialist kinship training.

Kinship Carers UK Friends

Kinship Carers UK Friends is made up of 9 volunteers, comprising adults we have previously supported and their friends. The friends group role is to raise funds and provide support for activities that work alongside the aims and objectives of our charity.

Advocacy Service

Our advocacy service has been a life-saving link for a number of kinship carers. We have supported carers in meetings with professionals such as Child in Need meetings, Child Protection meetings, Family Conferences and meetings with schools that help teachers to understand the issues that the children face. With the increase of virtual meetings it has enabled us to widen our support to places across the country.

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Peer Support Programme

The peer support programme has been very successful. Our experience has shown us that each carer has their own identity, their own story and, likewise, so have the children. We carefully identify carers who have a wealth of experience from their circumstances of life and encourage them to share, identify with and support others.

Virtual Support Group

We understand that, for many reasons, it is very difficult for carers to attend support groups. Our demand for virtual support groups has increased dramatically since the start of the Covid-19 Pandemic. We host three regular weekly support groups and have carers from across the UK.

Advocacy Support

We have offered advocacy support virtually during lock down, Kinship Carers have found this support very helpful and it has helped carers to use the support we have given them to act independently with confidence. Advocacy is a major part of our activity after the support group activities. We have supported potential friend and family carers through the court process, gaining valuable experience of legal processes.

We have successfully supported carers, leading to successful results for everyone concerned in working collaboratively with the carers and professionals in seeking the best outcome.

We have supported carers and their children and young people in schools by helping teachers to understand how the trauma that the children have faced in the past has an impact on their lives in school and that they are not ‘naughty children’ but children that need therapeutic support, as with any other looked after child.

Activities

We also encourage families to meet in safe, open-air environments and encourage using a variety of media to communicate as well as pen pal activities such as sharing letters, and photos and communicating with each other using safe media.

While it is important to have family time, it is also important for carers to step out of the role of carer for an evening and have some ‘me time’. This year we have only had a couple of ‘adult only’ evenings, but they proved to be very successful, and this is something that we will build on in the future when it is safe to do so. As an alternative, we offer virtual social evenings for kinship carers to befriend other carers in a safe environment, which has also proved very successful.

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Collaboration with Other Organisations and Raising Awareness

o Kinship Care Alliance

Kinship Carers UK has worked successfully with the Kinship Care Alliance. The Alliance is made up of a group of organisations that subscribe to a set of shared aims and beliefs on the issue of family and friends care. The aim of the Kinship Care Alliance is to prevent children from unnecessarily being raised outside the family, to enhance outcomes for children who cannot live with their parents and who are living with relatives and to secure improved recognition and support for family and friend carers.

Raising awareness

This year Kinship Carers UK has focused on raising media awareness by encouraging carers to anonymously share their kinship experiences. We have had great success with our social media sites and are very proud of the positive response.

7. Future Plans

Our key objectives for this coming year are to:

8. Our Future Aims

Our aims for the next 3 years explain what we believe, what our main priorities are and how we will make a difference to kinship families.

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Everything we do is designed to improve the day to day experience of kinship families, the children in their care and their future lives. Kinship Carers UK is a voice for all Kinship families; we listen to what they say about their experiences, identify with them what improvements can be made and we work in partnership with those able to help us to bring about positive change.

Long Term Aspirations

The long-term aspirations for Kinship Carers UK are as follows:

9. Funding and Support

We are immensely grateful to everyone who has supported Kinship Carers UK for their kind generosity and belief in the work we do.

Individuals who have directly supported us through activities include:

10. Governance and Management

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The Board of Directors held 4 meetings during the year. The directors serve for three years, after which they put themselves forward for re-appointment. The Board of Directors keeps the skill requirements under review and may appoint a person as a trustee in areas that are beneficial to the running of the charity. New Directors are sought by dialogue with directors and advertising. Newly appointed directors serve for a maximum of 3 years and the Board will not run with less than 3 directors, as written in the charity’s governing document. Each new director receives a copy of the CIO documentation and documentation that outlines their role and responsibilities. The Chief Executive Officer also has meetings with new directors to ensure that each person clearly understands their role.

The Board of Directors is responsible for setting out the policies of Kinship Carers UK. The directors elect a chairperson, and the chief executive offer is responsible to the Board of Directors for the execution of these policies.

11. Volunteers

All of our work would not be possible without the hard work of our volunteers, including our directors, support group leaders, youth group workers, administration, fundraisers and our casual volunteering staff. We are very grateful to all our skilled and dedicated volunteers who continue to play a vital role in supporting Kinship Carers UK and kinship families.

With special thanks to the following:

Ellie Turner-Lee Lisa Browne Jane Hinton Debbie Elwood Mike & Brigitte Robertson

12. Risk Management and Internal Controls

The Board of Directors has overall responsibility for ensuring that Kinship Carers UK has appropriate systems of control, both financial and operational. The Chief Executive Officer identifies major risks to which the charity may be exposed; all risks are reviewed and dealt with by the Board of Directors.

The directors are responsible for preparing the Directors’ Report and Financial Statements in accordance with applicable law and United Kingdom Accounting Standards. Directors must ensure that the financial statements comply with the Charities Commission standards.

CIO requires the directors to prepare financial statements for each financial year, which give a true and fair view of the movement of funds, including income, expenditure,

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governance and taking reasonable steps for the prevention and detection of fraud and other irregularities. The directors are responsible for the maintenance and integrity of the financial information included on the Charity Commission’s website.

13. Declaration

The directors declare that they have approved the directors’ report above.

Signed on behalf of the charity’s directors

Signatures
Full Names Enza Smith MBE Donald Beckett
Position Chief Executive Chair
Date 12thOctober 2023 12thOctober 2023

Charity registration number: 1163906

Kinship Carers UK

Receipts and Payments Accounts

For the period from 1[st] April 2021 to 31[st] March 2023

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Section A Receipts and Payments

Receipts 22/23 21/22
Awards £34,400 £16,500
Donations £2,636 £3,287
Events £0 £0
Collections / Raffles £0 £0
Gross Income £37,036 £19,787
Payments
Home Working & Wages £0 £621
Salaries £20,889 £18,713
Travel £871 £763
Bank Charges £80 £21
Office & Equipment £457 £189
Communications £1,966 £1,063
Family Activities £614 £150
Youth Club £0 £135
Insurance £419 £410
Website £198 £3,297
Promotions £45 £224
Training £0 £0
PPE £0 £0
Total Payments £25,539 £25,586
Net of Receipts (Payments) £11,497 £5,799
Transfers between Funds £0 £0
Cash Funds from at start of period £28,093 £33,892
Cash Funds this year end £39,590 £28,093

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Notes

  1. The accounts were prepared on a receipts and payments basis.

  2. All receipts and payments for the period were treated as unrestricted.

Declaration

The trustees declare that they have approved the charity accounts above.

Signed on behalf of the charity’s trustees

Signatures
Full Names Enza Smith MBE Jane Hinton
Position Chief Executive Treasurer
Date 12thOctober 2023 12thOctober 2023

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