MSP calls for disability champion as concern mounts over restraint of vulnerable children
Scotland urgently needs a Disability Commissioner to bolster and protect the rights of disabled people, according to an MSP.
Jeremy Balfour, who is disabled, said the role would be key to ensuring effective action on issues like the inappropriate restraint of disabled children.
The MSP, who is planning a private member’s bill, said: “A Disability Commissioner is exactly the right person to tackle the restraint of disabled children.
“I want to see families with children who have been affected by restraint and seclusion taking part in the consultation process so we can really make a difference regarding this issue.
“We have needed someone to be a voice for the disabled for a very long time.
“But shocking issues like restraint and seclusion, and the fact that disabled people have been left so far behind everyone else due to everything that happened during the pandemic, makes this appointment even more critical.”
Balfour’s comments come after campaigners expressed concerns that new guidelines on the restraint of children in schools will not ban the use of a potentially lethal technique in which children are held face-down on the floor.
Last month The Promise Oversight Board published its first report into the Scottish Government’s progress towards improving the lives of children in care, and expressed significant concern about the lack of data on how many incidents of restraint are taking place in Scotland.
Campaigners have also revealed that children in care are being restrained for hours while being moved from secure units and residential schools. Balfour, MSP for the Lothians, believes a Disability Commissioner would be in a position to raise issues and secure action.
He said: “The restraint of Scotland’s most vulnerable disabled children is deeply disturbing and something that simply should not be happening in this day and age, in a country which purports to do its best for each and every child.
“This practice which should only be done as an absolute last resort to protect a child from harm. Anything else is unacceptable.
“It is quite clear that for years now the government has done little to hold local authorities and care providers to account, and the stories highlighted by The Post show exactly why regulation is needed.
“Each and every local authority should be subject to proper monitoring over restraint, and must be accountable for each and every time it is used, and why.
“It is also clear that a national training programme is long overdue to ensure
that no child is ever harmed, and there are proper regulatory processes put in place across the country so parents and children no longer have to experience the distressing situations that have been happening for some considerable years.
Balfour says despite suffering physical disabilities, his childhood was characterised by a determination to make his mark, from his schooldays in Edinburgh to becoming a lawyer and then an MSP.
He said: “I was extremely lucky to have a family who were hugely supportive. In many ways, it was not until I
became an MSP and had an opportunity to meet many more disabled people and campaigners that I saw the difficulties so many of them faced in their lives. It made me extremely determined to do what I could to bring forward change for the better, so there is better access to adapted housing, education, employment and transport, so much of what others take for granted, impacts the lives of disabled people and those who care for them.
“One in five of us has some kind of disability, but so many feel left behind and that is wrong.”
Chief Executive of the Restraint Reduction Network, Ben Higgins said: “It is unacceptable that training in using physical force on vulnerable children in our schools remains completely unregulated.
“Lack of regulation means schools can commission inadequate training that focuses on technical skills, restraint and use of force and does not sufficiently include a focus on prevention, de-escalation or recovery.
“We strongly support the call for the standards to be a statutory requirement across the education sector, as they are now in health and social care in England.”