Grandparents Plus

National charity for kinship carers in England and Wales

Grandparents Plus is a national charity in England and Wales that supports and campaigns on behalf of the 200,000 grandparents, siblings, aunts, uncles, and other relatives who are raising children because their parents cannot look after them.[1]

History

The organization was co-founded in 2001 by Michael Young, Baron Young of Dartington and the charity's co-chair, Jean Stogdon OBE, a social services manager and Guardian Ad Litem.[2] It is based on The Young Foundation, Bethnal Green, London. The Chief Executive is Lucy Peake.[3]

Due to various family circumstances, including parental death, disability, serious illness, substance use disorders, imprisonment or domestic violence, relatives who raise children from within the wider family are known as kinship carers. As a result, Grandparents Plus changed its name to Kinship, enabling the charity to represent all Kinship carers and those who are in crisis.[4]

The charity is funded by the Big Lottery to provide advice, information, and a peer support network for kinship carers. It publishes research and campaigns for improved support and recognition, both for kinship carers and for grandparents in the United Kingdom who provide childcare, arguing that both groups are undervalued economically.[5][6]

Film

Grandparents Plus and the production company My Pockets launched a film for Kinship Care Week called, 'Something to be proud of'. The film tells the story of a child's experience with kinship care.[7]

Published Reports

  • "Grandparenting in Europe: Family Policy and Grandparents’ Role in Providing Childcare", March 2013 showed that British grandparents are almost twice as likely to be in paid work as their European counterparts and 6 in 10 are providing childcare for grandchildren. The report warns of a 'care gap crisis' unless action is taken.[8]
  • "Giving Up The Day Job", June 2012 showed that 47% of kinship carers who were previously working gave up their jobs when the children moved in[9][10][11][12]
  • "Doing It All? Grandparents, Childcare and Employment: Analysis of British Social Attitudes Survey Data from 1998 and 2009" December 2011 showed that 63% of grandparents with grandchildren under 16 are providing childcare, with half (50%) of mothers relying on grandparents to look after their babies when they return from maternity leave.
  • "Too Old To Care"
  • "What If We Said No?", Oct 2010 showed that 47% of kinship carers say the reason for taking on the care of a child is a parent struggling with a substance use disorder.
  • "Grandparenting in Europe", June 2010 showed that one in three working mothers depends on grandparents for childcare.[13]
  • "Protect, support, provide – examining the role of grandparents in families at risk of poverty", March 2010[14]
  • "Recognition, respect, reward", October 2009

References

  1. ^ buttleuk, Spotlight on Kinship Care, University of Bristol, Nandy & Selwyn pg 7 retrieved 25/5/2013[permanent dead link] 2001 Census analysis ref indicates that there were 173,200 children living with relatives.
  2. ^ "Home Help: Michael Young and Jean Stogdon explain why they have launched a new group for grandparents", The Guardian, 18 Jan 2001, retrieved 25/5/2013
  3. ^ "Interview: Lucy Peake, Chief executive of Grandparents Plus", Katy Morton, Nursery World 18 October 2015, retrieved 18/07/2017
  4. ^ "Kinship – why we have changed our name – Kinship – The kinship care charity". Kinship. Retrieved 28 April 2023.
  5. ^ "Grandparents who become full-time carers plead: 'We can’t do it all for love', Yvonne Roberts, The Observer, 21 Oct 2012, retrieved 25/5/2013.
  6. ^ "Childcare: the grandparents' army", Jenny Uglow, The Guardian, 16 Nov 2012, retrieved 25/5/2013
  7. ^ "Grandparents Plus launches new film – Kinship – The kinship care charity". Kinship. Retrieved 28 April 2023.
  8. ^ "Care for young and old under one roof – it’s what families do", Judith Woods, The Telegraph, 25 May 2013, retrieved 25/5/2013
  9. ^ "60,000 Grandparents forced to give up work to bring up grandchildren", The Telegraph, 12 June 2012, retrieved 25/5/2013
  10. ^ "Grandparents losing out when they take on care of children", ITV Wales, 12 June 2012, retrieved 25/5/2013
  11. ^ "Mother & prison: thousands of children being brought up by their grandparents",Paul Vallely & Sarah Cassidy, The Independent, 19 Sept 2012, retrieved 25/5/2013
  12. ^ "Benefit Support for Kinship Carers and Foster Carers", Community Care, 22 June 2012,retrieved 25/5/2013
  13. ^ "Meet Today’s Truly Great Grandparents", Sally Williams, The Telegraph, 13 June 2010, retrieved 25/5/2013
  14. ^ "Grandparents carers risk financial hardship",BBC News Channel, 3 March 2010, retrieved 25/5/2013

External links

Official website