Dear C2412
Welcome to the kinship carers’ discussion board. Thank you for your posts. My name is Suzi. I am Family Rights Group’s online adviser. I will reply to all your posts here.
You have recently been temporarily approved as a kinship foster carer for your niece. This is known as a
regulation 24 placement. You will now need to have a fuller fostering assessment. I would recommend that you use this advice sheet
2g) becoming a kinship carer: the process to guide you through the assessment.
I am sorry to hear that children’s services have not provided you with information about how they will financially support you as a kinship foster carer.
As Robin has already explained children’s services must pay you a
fostering allowance in the same way as an unrelated foster carer. The main difference is that you are assessed and temporarily approved to care for a specific child – your niece – whereas unrelated foster carer are approved for a range of children. Children’s services must pay you a fostering allowance from the moment you take on the care of the child. The allowance covers the cost of caring for the child you are fostering e.g. food, clothes, toiletries, and other expenses incurred in looking after a fostered child. Foster carers may be paid more money if they have specific skills.
Please see details of national minimum fostering allowances
here.
However, you should ask the fostering social worker to provide you with written information clarifying their fostering allowance scale and what other help and support they can provide, including a setting up grant. You can ask them to provide you with information about the circumstances in which they pay a fee too to some foster carers in recognition of their skills, training, and experience etc. You can ask to undertake training too.
You cannot claim child benefit for your niece as a kinship foster carer.
If you have already had to pay for essential items for your niece, you should record them and keep receipts so that you can request reimbursement from children’s services.
You don’t say if you are caring for your niece under a voluntary (section 20) arrangement with her parents or whether there is an interim care order in place.I am attaching links to our advice materials which explain more about what happens when a child is fostered in each situation.
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Children in the care system under voluntary arrangements
•
children in care under a court order .
I hope this is helpful.
If you have any further queries, please post back, call our freephone advice line on 0808 801 0366 (9.30 am to 3.00 pm, Mon to Fri) or use our advice enquiry or webchat facilities.
Best wishes
Suzie