At least one in five local authorities in England will miss a vital deadline
for the implementation of information sharing systems for social care
professionals who work with vulnerable children.
The
Integrated
Children’s System (ICS) is part of Every Child Matters, the government
policy established after the 2003 inquiry report into the murder of
eight-year-old Victoria
Climbie.
A series of must-have enhancements to ICS was set in early 2007 by the
Department of Children, Schools and
Families (DCSF) to be implemented by 31 March 2008 as part of Phase 1B of
the initiative.
The deadline affects 150 authorities, but 30 are not expected to meet it and
the number could be higher, according to sources.
Most affected councils are waiting for software from supplier
Anite
Public Sector, which will not be available until the end of May.
“We will not be meeting the 31 March deadline,” said a spokesman for one
council using Anite software.
“The roadmap has slipped, so customers using Anite cannot possibly meet the
deadline.”
Other councils are also experiencing delays, but Anite’s customers are worst
affected, said Colin Gunner, consultant at local government user group
Socitm.
“It’s not just Anite, but Anite is by far the worst, as most other suppliers
have achieved Phase 1B compliance,” he said.
“I would put the number of affected councils at around 25 for Anite
customers, and overall it’s about 30. Anite could deliver in May, but
implementation will then take three to four months.”
Several councils that originally contracted Anite have already switched
supplier.
“There has been a steady trickle of Anite customers coming to us following a
series of missed deadlines,” said another vendor.
A number of councils will receive their software late, but the government has
approved the new target of 31 May, said Peter Houselander, director of health
and
social care at Anite Public Sector.
“The date is later than the initial target, but Anite’s plan to have the
software ready in May has been approved by the DCSF,” he said.
A spokesman for DCSF said: “We are confident the vast majority of authorities
will implement the basic ICS by 31 March 2008, but the department will of course
monitor those that have not.”
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