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The Adolescent and Children's Trust

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Type
  
Children's Charity

Founded
  
1993

Industry
  
Fostering and Adoption

Number of employees
  
approx. 145

The Adolescent and Children’s Trust (TACT) is the largest charity providing fostering and adoption services across the United Kingdom. The charity works in nine offices across England, Wales and Scotland. As well as providing fostering or adoptive families for children, TACT campaigns on behalf of children and young people in care, carers, their families and adoptive families across the UK.

Contents

History

TACT was set up in 1992 in response to changes in child care policy. Instead of local authorities placing children in their care in residential homes, increasing priority was placed on offering family based care to a much wider range of children and young people. This was consistent with the rapidly emerging philosophy of providing care close to children’s own family, school and social contacts.

These rapid changes made it difficult for local authorities to meet the increasing need to provide foster care and adoptive placements and it was a concern for the lack of adequate provision which led to a group of local authority service managers, who were also qualified and experienced social workers to create TACT. The organisation was subsequently registered as a charity ensuring that any surplus income was reinvested in meeting the needs of looked after children placed with TACT.

TACT became an adoption agency in 2004 and expanded its size by joining together with the Independent Adoption Services (IAS) in 2007 and most recently with Parents for Children (PfC) in 2009.

In June 2012 TV chef and bestselling cookery writer Lorraine Pascale became TACT’s first celebrity patron.

Partnerships & Affiliations

TACT is a founding member of Fostering Through Social Enterprise (FtSE), a consortium of voluntary and non profit fostering agencies that advocate for children in respect of regulation, as well as representing its membership at central government level.

References

The Adolescent and Children's Trust Wikipedia