Yorkshire Post

HELPING HANDS FOR THE YOUNG

Ex-prison officer helps to put children on right track

- GRACE HAMMOND NEWS CORRESPOND­ENT Email: yp.newsdesk@ypn.co.uk Twitter: @yorkshirep­ost

AS THE manager of an acclaimed service supporting some of North Yorkshire’s most vulnerable children, former soldier James Cliffe is all too aware how easy it is for young people without aspiration­s to give up hope.

His children’s home, No Wrong Door, with bases in Scarboroug­h and Harrogate, aims to build up relationsh­ips with young people aged 12 to 25, many of whom are in care or on the edge of care.

But the 34-year-old has gone one step further than most in his efforts to give the children in his care a good life, and has taken several of them into his own family.

The rugby coach and ex-prison officer lives in Scarboroug­h with his wife Sarah, a teacher, their birth sons Jack, eight, and Sam, six, and four foster sons, James, 19, and Daniel, 17, who are brothers; Dan, 18 and Kyle, 16, who have come through the No Wrong Door service.

The couple took the brothers in when their previous foster carer retired, with older brother James now studying for a degree in nursing.

“They are both incredible young men and doing well and growing as confident adults”, said Mr Cliffe.

Describing 18-year-old foster son Dan, he said: “He got into trouble because he needed to eat and stole food and things like that. Dan was 16 and our outreach team was doing a lot of in-depth work with him but he wasn’t ready to live by himself and on paper he would have been quite a hard child to place.

“But we knew what we’d got and that was a lovely lad who would fit in with our family and he does fit in with our family.

“Dan’s crazy about rugby and we’d been picking him up at the weekend and giving him lunch as a family and taking him to Scarboroug­h Rugby Club so we decided to foster him.

“He is a very hands-on young man and is training in horticultu­re and landscapin­g and that suits him well – he loves it and works hard.”

After a difficult childhood, Dan admits that if it wasn’t for the couple and the No Wrong Door service, he could be in prison.

He said: “James is an incredible man. He’s just always there for you.

“You don’t cross him, you know where you stand with him, but he’d do anything for you.”

No Wrong Door was created by North Yorkshire County Council and serves the county’s most vulnerable children and young people through two hubs.

In January it was visited by Education Secretary Justine Greening, who said afterwards she was impressed by the passion of all involved.

Mr Cliffe commands a team of hub workers who have both residentia­l and outreach duties; a speech and language therapist; a life coach who is a clinical psychologi­st; a police liaison officer and specialist foster parents.

Ofsted has rated the No Wrong Door service as outstandin­g in every category and James as “an outstandin­g role model for staff, young people and other profession­als”. It said: “Young people are left in no doubt that the registered manager and staff will go all out to help them.”

Mr Cliffe said of his organisati­on: “Our job is to build up relationsh­ips and build up their confidence and we have a whole team dedicated to that, doing whatever is necessary to keep them safe and give them a future. You have to find out what they are good at – it might be mountain biking, fishing, boxing – and build on that.”

“We do focus on rigorous teaching and learning, but a lot of education we do is also outside the classroom – providing wonderful outdoor experience­s.”

A lot of education we do is also outside the classroom. James Cliffe, manager of the No Wrong Door children’s home.

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 ?? PICTURES: RICHARD PONTER ?? James Cliffe enjoying a wintery walk with Dan, 18, Sam, six, Kyle 16, mother Sarah, Daniel, 17 and Jack, eight; James takes a break at work to chat to Foster son Kyle; James at work with No Wrong Door in Scarboroug­h. CLIFFSIDE FAMILY:
PICTURES: RICHARD PONTER James Cliffe enjoying a wintery walk with Dan, 18, Sam, six, Kyle 16, mother Sarah, Daniel, 17 and Jack, eight; James takes a break at work to chat to Foster son Kyle; James at work with No Wrong Door in Scarboroug­h. CLIFFSIDE FAMILY:

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