Charity working with young people concealed abuse by staff member Tusla claims
An organisation working with vulnerable young people âconcealedâ the sexual abuse of a teenager by one of its staff members from Tusla, the Stateâs child protection authority has claimed.
Extern, an all-island charity that works with at-risk children, as well as running addiction, homelessness and mental health services, failed to notify Tusla of the serious child protection incident for more than a year.
The incident occurred in Northern Ireland in the second half of 2019, and while authorities in the North were informed, Tusla was not notified until September 2020. The perpetrator was later convicted.
Correspondence between Tusla and Extern, obtained by The Irish Times, reveals the agency raised serious concerns over the failure to report the matter.
Tusla chief executive Bernard Gloster told Extern he was âappalledâ at the âmajor failureâ in not notifying the agency.
Tusla refers significant numbers of young people to Externâs services, and the charity receives about â¬7 million in funding a year from the agency.
Extern deemed 21 children âhigh-riskâ of having been potentially affected by the former staff member, seven in the Republic, and 14 in Northern Ireland.
Tusla later said there was no indication any child it referred to Extern was affected by the incident. It stopped referring children to Externâs services for several months following the controversy.
The case was only reported to Tusla following the appointment of CiairÃn de Buis as Externâs interim chief executive in August 2020. She informed the agency of the issue in a meeting the following month.
In a letter dated September 25th, Mr Gloster said it was clear there had been âa major governance breakdownâ at the charity.
Despite children who had been referred to Extern being âaccessible to the alleged perpetrator,â he noted, neither Tusla nor the Garda were notified.
Mr Gloster said Extern had âmisled this agency and concealed matters of substantial and significant child protection concernâ.
In a letter dated October 27th, Gerry Campbell, chair of Extern Groupâs board, said any sanction of the charity âmust stand up to public scrutinyâ, and would carry significant âreputational risk for Tuslaâ.
In response, Mr Gloster said he found the statements âastonishingâ given what had occurred.
Governance expert Jillian van Turnhout completed an initial review of the situation last November, which found Externâs approach to the incident âwas one of containment rather than safeguarding and transparencyâ.
Safeguarding expert Marcella Leonard was later commissioned to conduct a full review, with her report expected imminently.
In a statement, Mr Campbell said Extern has âzero tolerance for any form of abuseâ, and works with children to bring about positive changes in their lives.
Externâs priority was to ensure âthe mistakes made were correctedâ, and it had worked closely with Tusla âto bring about assurances on our protocols, policies, and practicesâ, he said.
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