Children’s Hearings Scotland (CHS) has released their annual Impact Report for 2021 – 2022. In this Impact Report, we highlight some of the major achievements from the year and how we have delivered on our duty as a Corporate Parent.
Key elements of this year’s Impact Report include:
– Partnering with the Scottish Children’s Reporter Administration, Scottish Government and The Promise Scotland to form the Hearings System Working Group, which delivered its Issues List in March,
– Celebrating 50 years of Hearings in April 2021,
– Launching our Equality, Diversity and Inclusion Strategy,
– Launching the CHS Promise Programme, which is a cross-organisational project that includes all the work we are doing locally and nationally to improve the hearings experience for children, young people and families,
– Adapting to various significant changes to the laws around children’s hearings, including the Children (Scotland) Act 2020 which ensures brothers, sisters, people with brother/sister-like relationships are given new rights in hearings,
And most importantly, despite the ongoing challenges brought by the pandemic, the provision of over 21,000 hearings which took place to support and protect nearly 11,000 children in Scotland.
National Convener and CEO, Elliot Jackson, said: “The CHS Impact Report shows the work and reflection of the dedication and contribution of our Panel Member and Area Support Team volunteers and CHS National Team staff.
“As we progress with our vision for the future of the Children’s Hearings System it has been a privilege to look back and see what we have achieved over the last 12 months and look forward to seeing how we shape the next phase especially our focus on improving the hearings system through the Hearings System Working Group”.
Over the course of this year, we worked with our volunteers and partner organisations to listen to and help support and protect nearly 11,000 children.
As we go forward, and look towards how we can further improve the Hearings System, we are committed to putting the voice of children and young people at the centre of everything we do, and to working together to make Scotland truly the best place to grow up in.
Good afternoon everybody and apologies for interrupting your Sunday afternoon, but I wanted to say a few words about the truly historic achievement that was secured in Glasgow last night.
I’m very, very pleased to be joined by Alok Sharma, my friend the President of COP.
For two weeks at COP26 politicians and negotiators and campaigners from around the world have been locked in talks about how we’re going to keep our planet habitable for future generations by getting real about climate change.
It was the biggest political gathering of any kind ever held in this country.
And there was a reason for that.
All these world leaders came to Glasgow because their populations are telling them they need to act.
We’ve heard about the peril we face if we fail.
We’ve heard from the individuals who are already living with the effects.
And yesterday evening we finally came to the kind of game-changing agreement the world needed to see.
Almost 200 countries have put their name to the Glasgow Climate Pact, marking a decisive shift in the world’s approach to tackling carbon emissions, setting a clear roadmap to limiting the rise in global temperatures to 1.5 degrees and marking the beginning of the end for coal power.
Because for the first time ever a UN climate change conference has delivered a mandate to cut the use of coal for power generation.
And it’s backed up by real action from individual countries – for example we’ve arranged a multi-billion pound partnership to help South Africa ditch coal and create new green jobs instead.
On top of that we’ve brokered a deal with the G20 to end international finance for coal by the end of next month.
We’ve persuaded most of Western Europe and North America to mirror the commitment I made last December by pulling the plug on financial support for all overseas fossil fuel projects by this time next year.
And when you add all that together it is beyond question that Glasgow sounded the death-knell for coal power.
It’s a fantastic achievement and it’s just one of many to emerge from COP26.
90 per cent of the world’s economy is now following our lead here in the UK by committing to net zero, ending their contribution to climate change altogether.
Don’t forget when Alok Sharma took up the COP reins it wasn’t even a third who committed to net zero.
The developed world is finally going to hit the $100 billion climate finance target – albeit a bit later than we all would have liked.
Over 130 countries have signed up to halt and reverse deforestation by 2030 – between them they’re home to more than 90 per cent of the world’s forests.
We’ve got trillions of pounds of private sector assets lined up with climate goals.
We’ve even managed to do something that has eluded the world for six years by finalising the Paris Rulebook, allowing us to move from interminable debates about how to measure emissions and instead get on with cutting them.
Of course my delight at this progress is tinged with disappointment.
Those for whom climate change is already a matter of life and death – who can only stand by as their islands are submerged, their farmland turned to desert, their homes battered by storms – they demanded a high level of ambition for this summit.
And while many of us were willing to go there, that wasn’t true of everyone.
Sadly that’s the nature of diplomacy.
We can lobby, we can cajole, we can encourage but we cannot force sovereign nations to do what they do not wish to do.
It is ultimately their decision to make, and they must stand by it.
But for all that we can be immensely proud of what has been achieved by Alok Sharma and his team.
I want to take this opportunity to thank him for his many months of tireless diplomacy, and thank everyone involved in making COP26 a success – from the bobble-hatted volunteers to Peter Hill and his team in the COP Unit.
I know it’s tempting to be cynical.
To dismiss these types of such summits as a series of talking shops.
But we came to COP with a call for real action on coal, cars, cash and trees and that’s exactly what we’ve got.
And just look at what it all means for our planet.
Before Paris, the world was on course for a devastating four degrees of warming this century.
After Paris, we were heading for three degrees.
At Glasgow we’ve turned that dial down to around two degrees.
That’s still far too high.
But for all our disagreements the world is undeniably heading in the right direction.
Even the most pessimistic commentator will tell you that that goal of restricting the growth of temperatures to 1.5 is still alive.
Now the work continues to make it a reality.
Alok is going to keep pushing, along with everyone else in the UK Government to strengthen the promises made in Glasgow and make sure they’re delivered rather than diluted.
The UK Government will get on with our extraordinary record of decarbonisation, get on with delivering our green industrial revolution and exporting that revolution worldwide.
There’s still a long journey ahead of us and very little time to complete it.
But COP26 has shown us that we can do this.
We can end our reliance on coal and fossil fuels.
We can put the brakes on runaway climate change.
And we can preserve our unique planet for generations to come.
I want to finish by thanking once again the people of Glasgow for providing a spectacular summit, and of course, I want to thank Police Scotland as well for everything they do.
Nominations now open for the 2021 LGIU Scotland & CCLA Councillor Awards
The only national awards ceremony celebrating the ‘vital’ work of individual councillors across Scotland opens its call for nominations.
Local Government Information Unit (LGIU) Scotland and CCLA are proud to officially launch the 4th annual Cllr Awards, honouring the achievements of councillors that so often go unrecognised.
This year’s award categories celebrate the essential and varied work of councillors and include the coveted Community Champion, Leader of the Year and New Councillor of the Year awards, alongside a new Resilience and Recovery category for 2021.
Nominations can be made by anyone who would like to recognise a councillor doing outstanding work for their community. They are open until Friday, 24 September with the shortlist unveiled at the end of October.
The winners will be decided by a panel of judges composed of senior councillors and officers as well as leading stakeholders from across the sector. They will be revealed at this year’s ceremony taking place on Wednesday, 24 November. Due to the ongoing Covid related restrictions, it will be held as a hybrid event with virtual link ups to a Glasgow venue.
This year’s awards are made possible thanks to the generous support of founding partners, CCLA.
Jonathan Carr-West, Chief Executive of LGIU Scotland, said: “Local government supports all of us, each and every day. On every street, in every town, up and down the country, it is the vital work of councillors that keeps things moving.
“Now is the time for us to support our local heroes by nominating those councillors who have stepped up to the plate during extraordinary circumstances to deliver for their communities.
“As we officially open nominations for Cllr Awards 2021, we welcome contributions from any member of the public as well as other councillors, officers and leaders. We look forward to once again receiving the highest calibre of nominations and showcasing the essential work of councillors in November.”
A VERY special ceremony has taken place to present the first youngsters from FetLor Youth Club with Bronze Duke of Edinburgh Awards following an ambitious programme of volunteering, wilderness activities and physical challenges.