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Anglesey Council Children Services Assurance Check Findings

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Published March 18th, 2026
Detected March 26th, 2026
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Summary

Care Inspectorate Wales has concluded an assurance check of Isle of Anglesey County Council's children's services. The check, conducted in January 2026, identified strengths in safeguarding and partnership working, alongside areas for improvement related to recording standards and workforce capacity due to rising demand.

What changed

Care Inspectorate Wales (CIW) has published its findings from an assurance check of Isle of Anglesey County Council's children's services, conducted between January 12-16, 2026. The report highlights key strengths, including robust safeguarding practices, effective early help and prevention initiatives, and a commitment to trauma-informed care. Specific positive practices noted are the 'Grow Your Own' initiative for staff development and the Cartrefi Clyd care provision. The check assessed the council's performance against relevant legislation.

The report also identifies several areas requiring improvement. These include ensuring children's voices are consistently and clearly recorded, timely provision of formal advocacy, strengthening formal carer assessments, and improving the consistency of recording standards and SMART outcomes in care plans. The service is experiencing significant pressure from rising demand, impacting workforce capacity and accessibility, with 45% of survey respondents finding it difficult to contact children's services.

What to do next

  1. Ensure children's voices are clearly recorded in all relevant records.
  2. Strengthen the offer of formal carers' assessments for unpaid carers.
  3. Improve recording standards and ensure outcomes in plans are SMART.

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Care Inspectorate Wales concludes assurance check of Isle of Anglesey County Council children services

Findings from our January 2026 assurance check of Isle of Anglesey County Council's children's services, outlining strengths and areas for improvement.

We have recently completed an assurance check of Isle of Anglesey County Council's children's services.

The assurance check, which took place between 12 and 16 January 2026, assessed the local authority's performance in exercising its duties and functions in line with legislation.

Overall, we found a service with clear strengths in safeguarding, preventative practice, and partnership working, led by experienced and visible leaders and supported by a skilled, committed workforce.  However, the service faces real and growing pressures from rising demand, and a number of areas for improvement were identified.

Key strengths identified

Children's voices are strong in most records, with practitioners using person-centred and strengths-based approaches to promote children's voice and independence. In the best examples, practitioners write records directly for children in the first-person narrative - positive practice that keeps children's experiences, wishes and feelings central.

Leaders place a strong emphasis on early help and prevention. The Early Help Hub, convening twice weekly with wide multi-agency representation, promotes timely, co-ordinated responses that prioritise de-escalation and early intervention. Trauma-informed practice is well embedded across the local authority, including in education settings, and is being shared regionally and nationally. The pre-birth pathway is a particular example of positive practice, with positive judicial feedback confirming its impact in keeping babies safely at home through robust early planning.

Safeguarding practices are robust and mostly consistent with the Wales Safeguarding Procedures, with most decisions and actions undertaken in a timely manner. Regular structured meetings, including the Early Help Hub, One Front Door and MARAC, ensure all agencies are sighted on risk and can collaborate effectively.

The local authority has developed Cartrefi Clyd, its own care provision for children who are looked after, enabling children to be cared for locally where their social, health, educational and linguistic needs are met.

The Grow Your Own initiative, which supports practitioners to progress into qualified social work roles, is positive practice that strengthens succession planning, retention and service stability.

Areas for improvement

A number of areas for improvement were identified. The local authority must consistently ensure children's voices are clearly recorded in all relevant records, and that formal advocacy is actively offered, re-offered and provided in a timely manner. The local authority must also strengthen its offer of formal carers' assessments for unpaid carers. Recording standards are variable and outcomes in plans are not always SMART, limiting effective oversight of progress.

Rising demand is placing pressure on workforce capacity, and only 45% of survey respondents said they find it easy to contact children's services. Positively, the local authority has commissioned an external review of early preventative services and should drive forward any recommendations to ensure sufficiency in early help .  The local authority should also continue its efforts to secure a sufficient range of suitable placements for children with complex needs, including those with additional health needs.

The quality assurance framework has not yet been fully embedded following a recent restructure, and the local authority must ensure this is robustly embedded in practice. Strategy discussions must consistently include all relevant practitioners from other agencies, and decisions and actions must be consistently timely and in line with relevant procedures. The local authority should also continue its work with Betsi Cadwaladr University Health Board to address challenges in health integration.

Next steps

We expect the local authority to consider the areas identified for improvement and take appropriate action to address and improve these areas. We will monitor progress through our ongoing performance review activity with the local authority. Where relevant, we expect the local authority to share the positive practice identified with other local authorities, to disseminate learning and help drive continuous improvement in statutory services throughout Wales.


Local authority assurance check letter: Isle of Anglesey County Council children services

This letter describes the findings of our assurance check carried out between 12 and 16 January 2026

Source

Analysis generated by AI. Source diff and links are from the original.

Classification

Agency
CIW
Published
March 18th, 2026
Instrument
Notice
Legal weight
Non-binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Minor

Who this affects

Applies to
Government agencies Healthcare providers
Industry sector
9211 Government & Public Administration
Activity scope
Child Welfare Services
Geographic scope
Wales GB-WLS

Taxonomy

Primary area
Healthcare
Operational domain
Compliance
Topics
Child Welfare Public Administration

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