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Kinship carers in England to be given financial support in government pilot

2 days ago
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Grandparents who step in to provide full-time care for their grandchildren to prevent them being taken into care will be given guaranteed financial support under a government pilot scheme.Charities welcomed the trial as groundbreaking and said if fully rolled out across England it had the potential to transform the lives of tens of thousands of children looked after under “kinship care” arrangements.Kinship carers are grandparents, aunts and uncles, older siblings or close family friends who take on full parental responsibility when a child loses their birth parents as a result of death, a family court order, severe illness or imprisonment.Campaigners have fought for more than two decades to establish financial recognition of the role and personal sacrifices that kinship carers make.Some carers say they have felt ignored and exploited as a “cheap option” despite saving the state billions it would otherwise have had to spend on foster or residential care.

About 132,000 children in England live under kinship arrangements, but most carers receive little or no state financial support to meet the extra costs of raising a child,Many say they gave up work to care for a child relative,Most are already on low incomes and at heightened risk of poverty,Under the trial launched on Friday, kinship carers in seven council areas will for the first time receive a financial allowance in line with that of foster carers, which is between £170 and £299 a week depending on where they live and the age of the child,This means a kinship carer living outside London and looking after a 15-year-old would receive an allowance of £13,832 a year from April.

This is not means tested and will not affect universal credit or child benefit payments.Introducing the scheme on Friday, the children’s minister, Josh MacAlister, said: “As a country we owe kinship carers our thanks and our support, and the new financial allowance which we’re piloting recognises the vital role they play ensuring families can stay together.“We promised to introduce this scheme to support kinship carers who step up for the children they love and give every child the best possible start in life.”In effect MacAlister is charged with implementing proposals he originally outlined in an independent review of children’s social care he authored for the previous Conservative government in 2022, two years before he became a Labour MP.Academic evidence suggests kinship care is not only far cheaper than foster or residential care, but also more likely to lead to better health and employment outcomes for the child.

It helps them retain a strong sense of family, identity and culture,The chief executive of the charity Kinship, Lucy Peake, said the scheme could be life-changing but in its pilot form covered only 5,000 children,She urged ministers to rapidly extend the allowances to all kinship families across the country,“Kinship carers hold our care system together, and the government must provide the right support to ensure they are not pushed into poverty for doing the right thing and keeping their family together,” she said,The chief executive of the Family Rights Group, Cathy Ashley, welcomed the “groundbreaking” scheme but said it should be made universal as soon as possible.

“We urge national and local government to build the fair, effective support system that children and families need,” she said.The seven council areas participating in the three-year trial are: Bexley in Greater London, Bolton, Newcastle upon Tyne, North East Lincolnshire, Medway in Kent, Thurrock in Essex, and Wiltshire.
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Woman at heart of US trial says she was addicted to social media at age six

The young woman at the heart of the landmark trial about the addictive nature of social media testified for the first time on Thursday, saying she got hooked on YouTube starting at age six and Instagram at nine. By the time she was 10, she said, she had become depressed and was engaging in self-harm.The woman, who is now 20 and known by her initials KGM, is the lead plaintiff in an expansive lawsuit against YouTube and Meta, which owns Instagram and Facebook. The crux of the case alleges social media companies intentionally create addictive products, leading to mental health issues in young people.KGM testified on Thursday that her use of social media made her anxious and insecure, and features like beauty filters distorted her self-image

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Riaz Hasan obituary

My father, Riaz Hasan, who has died aged 87, was a water resources engineer with a distinguished career working across 40 countries – in the 1970s with the British firm Halcrow and, from the 80s, at the UN and the World Bank.Originally from Hyderabad, Riaz arrived in the UK in 1965 with £3 and an A–Z, invited, like many engineers in India at that time, by the government. After completing a master’s degree in water resources at Bradford University, where he developed a love of Yorkshire pudding and received his degree from Harold Wilson (which he described as a real privilege), he embarked on his career designing life-saving, long-term water and food solutions for the most vulnerable and those affected by war, famine and natural disasters.Born in the small town of Warangal, near Hyderabad, to Mohammed, an English professor, and his wife, Khadija, Riaz went to Nizam college. He did his engineering degree at Osmania University, graduating in 1960, then got his first job at the Central Water Power Commission (CWPC) in Delhi

2 days ago
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Met police to pilot facial recognition identity checks, mayor confirms

Metropolitan police officers are to start scanning citizens’ faces using automated facial recognition technology to check their identities, in a move backed by the mayor of London but described as “alarming” by opponents.The pilot was revealed on Thursday when Sadiq Khan said 100 officers would use the roaming technology – commonly deployed on smartphones – for six months. The mayor was responding to questioning from an opposition politician amid rising concern about the rollout of AI-powered policing tools. The Met’s website still states it “does not presently use the so-called operator initiated facial recognition”.Face scanning has already been deployed by police with cameras on vans and in fixed locations including in Croydon, Manchester and South Wales

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Tell us: how will the UK’s landline switch-off affect you or your family?

UK telecoms companies are retiring traditional landline services and replacing them with internet-based home phone connections.The industry has set a deadline of January 2027 to complete this switch with roughly 3.2 million homes still to move over. While the digital switchover has been straightforward for most households, for some vulnerable customers, such as those with telecare devices, it has been very stressful.In December 2025 Virgin Media was fined £23

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‘Unbelievably dangerous’: experts sound alarm after ChatGPT Health fails to recognise medical emergencies

ChatGPT Health regularly misses the need for medical urgent care and frequently fails to detect suicidal ideation, a study of the AI platform has found, which experts worry could “feasibly lead to unnecessary harm and death”.OpenAI launched the “Health” feature of ChatGPT to limited audiences in January, which it promotes as a way for users to “securely connect medical records and wellness apps” to generate health advice and responses. More than 40 million people reportedly ask ChatGPT for health-related advice every day.The first independent safety evaluation of ChatGPT Health, published in the February edition of the journal Nature Medicine, found it under-triaged more than half of the cases presented to it.The lead author of the study, Dr Ashwin Ramaswamy, said “we wanted to answer the most basic safety question; if someone is having a real medical emergency and asks ChatGPT Health what to do, will it tell them to go to the emergency department?”Ramaswamy and his colleagues created 60 realistic patient scenarios covering health conditions from mild illnesses to emergencies

2 days ago
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Leave big tech behind! How to replace Amazon, Google, X, Meta, Apple – and more

A handful of companies monopolise the web, with unprecedented access to our data. But there are many more ethical – and often distinctively European – alternativesThere’s not much to love about big tech these days. So many ills can be laid at its door: social media harms, misinformation, polarisation, mining and misuse of personal data, environmental negligence, tax avoidance, the list goes on. Added to which, Silicon Valley’s leaders seem all too keen to cosy up to the Trump administration, to shower the president with bribes – sorry, gifts – and remain silent about his worsening political overreach. And that’s before we get to the rampant “enshittification”, as the tech writer Cory Doctorow describes it, which means that by design many big tech products have become less useful and more extractive than they were when we originally signed up to them

2 days ago
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Seth Meyers on Team Trump’s Iran threats: ‘These guys speak like they’ve been hit on the head’

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How to keep free entry to UK museums and galleries | Letters

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‘Seems I’m not dead’: Magda Szubanski says she is in remission after treatment for stage four cancer

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Seth Meyers on Trump’s State of the Union address: ‘A vehicle to attack anyone who doesn’t bend the knee’

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‘The sky’s the limit’: Newcastle Art Gallery unveils its ‘divisive’ $48m expansion with a blockbuster opening show

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