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Councils failing children in care with immigration issues UK news

Campaigners say high turnover of social workers and complex system restricting life chances

Campaigners say high turnover of social workers and complex system restricting life chances

Children in care with unresolved immigration issues are being let down by local authorities, severely restricting their opportunities in life and increasing the risk they will be unfairly deported, lawyers and campaigners have warned.

Councils are supposed to offer support to those with irregular immigration statuses, but many are failing to identify these children and deal with their issues in a timely manner, the experts said.

Rapid turnover of social workers, heavy workloads and funding cuts are leaving young people to navigate the UK's complex immigration system alone, they added.

Kamena Dorling, the head of policy and public affairs at Coram Children's Legal Centre, said: "When they turn 18, they miss certain routes that are available to children only."

Young care leavers are "suddenly finding themselves unable to work, have a driving licence or a bank account", she added.

Diana Baxter, a partner and immigration specialist at Wesley Gryk Solicitors, said local authorities are not "acting promptly and quickly enough" to resolve the immigration issues of young people in care.

In 2016, the local government and social care ombudsman upheld a complaint from a young woman who was born in Nigeria but moved to the UK when she was 10 and went into care aged 14. The ombudsman found Greenwich council failed to act appropriately to help her regularise her immigration status. A similar finding was made against Dudley council after the local authority failed to obtain citizenship for two children in care.

Bethan Lant, a casework manager at Praxis, a charity that provides support to vulnerable immigrants, said: "I think local authorities are not really thinking about it. They are very much looking at the young person's immediate need."

Lant said this was partly down to social workers' lack of understanding of the immigration system, but "it does feel like a number of them just don't want to. It's almost like they don't see it as part of that person's welfare."

Mr Clark, 23 – who did not want to give his first name – went into care when he was 16 and said he had been left alone to sort out his immigration status.

"It doesn't feel like anyone is helping me to get out of this situation. Immigration is not a priority for the council. There's just no aspect in this that's a priority for them," he said.

Clark was born in Jamaica and moved to the UK when he was six. He said he raised the issue of his immigration status early on, but was rebuffed by social workers and his personal adviser. He said the situation became dire in 2012 when he had issues applying for discretionary leave to remain aged 17.

He said the local authority failed to properly explain to his parents the information he needed for his application and took more than six months to pay for him to apply for the visa.

Clark, who has had six social workers during his time in care, was told last year by the Home Office that he had been residing in the UK illegally, and said the council was again unhelpful. While he was able to apply for another extension of his visa, he said he was unsure if he had the right one.

"I've asked them for help and they said they can't help. I have to now find my own solicitor and I'm not sure where I'll get funding. I have to find my own way," Clark said.

"You always feel like you're not wanted here because you're always being pushed away. The social workers are meant to look after you, but they're not."

Solange Valdez-Symonds, the director of the Project for Registration of Children as British Citizens, said young people were being denied their right to citizenship.

Lack of awareness and rising immigration fees were "leaving children as British as any of their peers growing up without their rightful citizenship and exposed to a plethora of immigration laws and powers that should have nothing whatsoever to do with them", she said.

The Home Office has been contacted for comment.

For more infomation >> Councils failing children in care with immigration issues UK news - Duration: 3:57.

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Gayle King On Why She's Still Friends With Charlie Rose | THR News - Duration: 1:48.

Gayle King opened up about the #MeToo movement in a profile with 'The New

York Times' which published online on Wednesday. The CBS 'This Morning' anchor

extensively discussed how the movement evolved from a topic she covered on the news

to something she's had to face head on as a number of her colleagues at CBS have

been accused of sexual misconduct and harassment. King's coworker Charlie Rose,

who co-hosted 'CBS This Morning,' alongside CBS CEO Les Moonves and '60

Minutes' executive producer Jeff Fager have all been accused of misconduct over the

past year. King told the 'Times' that "you can hold two ideas in your head at the

same time," meaning that she believes the accusers while also believing that the

accused men shouldn't be banished for life. She also discussed the possibility

of redemption for the men accused saying,

King added that it is difficult to talk about the #MeToo movement and brought up

Matt Damon's comments as an example.

King said she isn't sure what Rose's next career steps will be and while she

doesn't anticipate on working with Rose again, she revealed that they do keep in touch.

"I know there are two sides to every story, that's what I know," she said, before

sharing that she recently called Rose to check in on him after he had a health scare.

The 'Times' reached out to Rose for a comment, to which he responded via email,

"Hallelujah. 'The Sunday Times' is profiling Gayle, there is a God in Heaven." Rose did

eventually speak with the 'Times' and had nothing but praise for his former co-host.

For more on this story head to THR.com and until next time

for The Hollywood Reporter News, I'm Neha Joy.

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