UK

Care Proceedings Rise Steeply in Family Courts During UK Lockdown

The number of urgent care proceedings in the family courts has increased sharply since the beginning of the Covid-19 pandemic, the Guardian has learned. Judicial sources say that a combination of the lockdown leading to families being forced to spend the majority of their time together, often in confined spaces, increased drinking by some parents and major money worries are a toxic combination, which is putting vulnerable children at risk. Some family courts have seen a fivefold increase in care proceedings cases in recent weeks. As courts are often operating remotely using phone or Skype hearings during the pandemic there are particular challenges when children are involved.
Aysen Soyer, head of the family law team at Wilson Solicitors, said that she and her team have been working at full capacity since the lockdown began. “It happened overnight,“ said Soyer. “In family court proceedings last week we had two children removed from their parents by phone – that’s unheard of,” she said. She added that it was harder to control parents’ emotions when their children were about to be removed from them when court proceedings were taking place on the phone. Care proceedings are the most urgent matters in the family courts but the way things are working it’s a disaster.” She said it was “inevitable” to reach the conclusion that the pressures of the lockdown were leading to an increase in care proceedings. “Things that might have bubbled away for a bit longer with toxic family relationships have been brought to the fore by the pandemic. Care proceedings are going at a higher rate. Guardians and solicitors are not able to visit children at the moment. My team have been furiously busy since the lockdown started. I think that initially it will get worse and then lawyers and the family courts will find a way to deal with this. At the moment things are just desperate.”
Read more: Diane Taylor, Guardian, https://is.gd/xJSPmt

Related Articles

Back to top button