Job summary
The Adult Social Care Group is responsible for all things related to adult social care in central government.� I want this group to be a place where we really make a difference to outcomes for our users, where we are outward facing and understand what it feels like in the real world and where we are supportive to and inclusive of each other.� We are mid-way through a big reform agenda to transform adult social care in England including: investing in better workforce training, recognition and career progression; replacing paper care records with digital records; giving the public information on how�well their local council delivers adult social care compared to others; expanding the use of online and telephone care assessments; providing home adaptations that help people�live independently in their own homes; and much more.
It's a big task with many challenges, but together we can make so much difference to the people we serve.� If you have the ability to influence at senior levels in government and across the sector through the power of your expertise and relationships, we would love to hear from you.
Job description
As the Chief Social Worker for Adults (CSW) you will be the head of profession, the public face of adult social work in England and a senior leader within the Department of Health and Social Care (DHSC).�
You will represent the profession at events, sponsor relevant guidance relating to social work and leads the network of Principal Social Workers. Reporting to the Director General for Adult Social Care you will sit within the Social Care Group in DHSC.
As an expert in social work, you will work closely with other Directors in the Social Care Group and the Chief Nurse for Adult Social Care, along with a range of officials across DHSC, including the Director and teams leading on Mental Health, Learning Disability and Autism.
You will be supported by a small administrative team but will not have any direct reports.
As CSW you will provide expert advice to Ministers and civil servants on all matters relating to social workers and social care practice. Topics where advice may be needed include social work�s role in relation to mental capacity; mental health; safeguarding and discharge from hospital (where social workers are key to assessment decisions regarding care needed after discharge); improvement of social care assessment processes; and the recruitment and retention of social workers, as a crucial component of the adult social care workforce. You will also have a formal role relating to the escalation of safeguarding issues.
You will offer expertise on local government and adult social care more generally, offering a frontline perspective on issues to inform policymaking, and will have strong links with the adult social care sector including with Association of Directors of Adult Social Services; Social Work England; British Association of Social Workers; the Principal Social Worker Network; the Principal Occupational Therapists network; adults using services; and employers of social workers in the local authority, NHS, private and voluntary sectors.
As the CSW you will generate ideas and opportunities for improvements in adult social care, being cognisant of wider issues including the political and fiscal context and will also maximise opportunities for join-up with the Department for Education and the Chief Social Worker for children�s social care on matters relating to social work and social care practice.
If successful you will bring inspiring, confident and empowering professional leadership to adult social workers across the social care sector. With the experience of operational leadership and delivery of high-quality adult social work and social care, you will have the ability to motivate and inspire the workforce and have experience of effective partnership working at all levels to achieve successful outcomes.
Key Responsibilities
Advice on policy and practice:
1. Provide expert advice to Ministers and senior officials across Whitehall on all matters relating to social work practice, adult social workers as well as wider issues on social care in particular workforce capacity, wellbeing, and resilience.
2. Facilitate and advise on formal escalation of Safeguarding issues via the National Escalation Protocol for Issues from Safeguarding Adult Boards (SABs).
3. Generate ideas and opportunities for improvements in adult social care, not limited to social work, taking account of the political and fiscal context.
4. Support effective partnership working at all levels to ensure maintenance of high-quality adult social work practice and promote its role in delivering high-quality, personalised and compassionate care.
5. Work with the Department for Education to improve the training available to social workers and collaborating with children�s social workers.
6. Ensure relevant research is commissioned and used alongside a detailed personal understanding of current best practice, to generate new ideas and opportunities for improvements in adult social care.
Professional leadership:
7. Provide visible, professional leadership to the adult social work workforce, including through maintaining relations with the regulator (Social Work England).
8. Engage with key strategic regional and national policy makers, professional bodies and the public to ensure an understanding of social work is reflected in the development of future policies and strategies.
9. Provide leadership and guidance to Principal Social Workers and work with the Principal Social Worker Network to stay informed of current issues in the profession and ensure the needs and views of the workforce are understood to inform future policy.
10. Lead on raising the profile and reputation of adult social workers with key stakeholders, to attract more people to work in the sector ensuring that social work practice continues to develop through co-production with practitioners and people who draw on social work services.
11. Maintain a good knowledge of practice, research and policy within the UK, globally, and within and outside the health and care economy in order to help consider any other appropriate options to help shape programmes of work.
Person specification
It is important through your CV and Statement of Suitability that you give evidence and examples of proven experience of each of the following�essential criteria:
12. Ability to communicate and influence at very senior levels on a range of adult social work and care issues through the power of expertise, relationships, and personal credibility. This applies both internally with Ministers and senior civil servants, and externally with stakeholders in the adult social care sector including Association of Directors of Adult Social Services and the Principal Social Worker Network.
13. Proactive in identifying opportunities to add value to policy making, and creative in generating ideas. Being cognisant of the political and fiscal context.
14. Proven track record of operating successfully in a senior leadership role within social work, adult social care, or local government.
15. Significant knowledge and experience of national policy development and implementation and ideally� working in or with central government.
Qualifications
Relevant professional and/or academic qualifications which meets the requirements to register as a qualified social worker with the Regulator, Social Work England. Please confirm what you hold in the qualification section of your application.
Benefits
Alongside your salary of �120,000, Department of Health and Social Care contributes �26,190 towards you being a member of the Civil Service Defined Benefit Pension scheme.
Whatever your role, we take your career and development seriously, and want to enable you to build a really successful career with the Department and wider Civil Service. It is crucial that our employees have the right skills to develop their careers and meet the challenges ahead, and you�ll benefit from regular performance and development reviews to ensure this development is ongoing. As a Civil Service employee, you�ll be entitled to a large range of benefits.
Equality, Diversity and Inclusion
The Civil Service values and supports all its employees.
We have strong and pro-active staff networks, special leave policies for hospital appointments, reasonable adjustments put in place for those who need them, and diversity talent programmes to help everyone irrespective of background, to achieve their potential.
Pension
Your pension is a valuable part of your total reward package.
A competitive contributory pension scheme that you can enter as soon as you join where we will make a significant contribution to the cost of your pension; where your contributions come out of your salary before any tax is taken; and where your pension will continue to provide valuable benefits for you and your family if you are too ill to continue to work or die before you retire. Visit
Generous Annual Leave and Bank Holiday Allowance
25 days annual leave on entry, increasing on a sliding scale to 30 days after 5 years� service. This is in addition to 8 public holidays.
This will be complimented by one further day paid privilege entitlement to mark the King�s Birthday.
Staff Wellbeing
Flexible working including part-time or time- term working and access to Flexible Working Schemes allowing you to vary your working day as long as you work your total hours.
Generous paid maternity and paternity leave which is notably more than the statutory minimum offered by many other employers.
Childcare benefits (policy for new employees as of 5 April 2018): The government has introduced the Tax-Free Childcare (TFC) scheme. Working parents can open an online childcare account and for every �8 they pay in, the government adds �2, up to a maximum of �2000 a year for each child or �4000 for a disabled child. Parents then use the funds to pay for registered childcare.
Onsite facilities Opportunity to use onsite facilities including fitness centres and staff canteens (where applicable).