We are currently looking for a Project Worker 2 to join our Early Help - Yardley and Hodge Hill Localities.
Initial Location of Post
Fox Hollies Children's Centre, 419 Fox Hollies Road, Birmingham, B27 7QA.
Objectives of the Early Help Service
Yardley and Hodge Hill Early Help are two of ten Early Help Localities across the city of Birmingham lead by Voluntary and Community Sector organisations (VCS) alongside Birmingham Children's Trust (BCT). The aim of the provision is to build capacity within local communities to ensure that children, young people and families have access to the right support at the right time before issues and concerns escalate.
Outcomes
Our Early Help Advisors provide “light touch work” with families. This can be one off interactions and on-going support/intervention for a suggested maximum of four to six weeks. The role can involve; some introductory and exit scaling work with parents (outcomes wheel), referral completion, signposting to families, building trusting relationships with families, children and young people – using mixture of remote (by phone and email) contact and direct work and home visits. Relationships are built through empathy, listening, sound knowledge and understanding of local and national resources and responses to be able to respond to need. You should be confident in meeting with families in community spaces, schools and their homes when needed.
You will respond effectively and in a timely manner to needs as identified in Family Connect Forms referred into the service and tasks set by team manager as well as those needs that arise directly from families. Where applicable you will assist with identifying and speaking with the most appropriate person (such as a school) to undertake Early Help Assessments and Our Family Plans, so you will need to build rapport with families and professionals working with them. You will record and report and concerns and explore any barriers with colleagues and manager. You will be able to make clear and meaningful case recordings.
You will work well remotely and independently as you do alongside Early Help colleagues in shared office space, and be able to manage your time well, whilst being motivated to make a difference to the families and children you support.
Initial Specific Responsibilities
- To assist parents and carers to engage with and utilise personal, professional and local community networks to develop solutions to meet their personal aspirations and needs.
- Offer meaningful contact (communication) with families whether by phone, email, or in person.
- Write high quality and timely case notes and assessments using ECINS and other recording systems – to evidence work completed and the story of families through Early Help.
- To be able to develop rapport and understanding with families using excellent phone manner and verbal communication.
- Speak to schools and other professionals supporting a family as part of a multi-agency approach, including, collaborating with schools to encourage them to complete an Early Help Assessment and to offer to contribute to this via your support of families.
- Make referrals to third party organisations to support a family's needs e.g. to Shelter, DWP or Early Help services such as Early Help Mentoring.
- Develop an informed understanding of the key issues within the local area for Children Young People and Families
- Ability to work independently on a day-to-day basis and use own initiative whether working from home or offices (role will involve a combination).
- Able to work closely with other Early Help Advisors.
- Work with an understanding of the importance of consent in Early Help and an awareness of safeguarding issues and procedures, following them as required.
- To support other professionals across the locality to find solutions and support for families.
- To cover the duty role and phone line to ensure that enquiries into the locality are responded to in a timely manner.
- To provide advice, information and guidance to families to enable them to access relevant support to meet their needs.
- Provide support to the Team Manager and other Early Help colleagues to promote the work of the Early Help partnership and share good practice.
- To attend if/as requested allocations meetings and provide relevant information to progress support to families.
- Attend relevant Early Help meetings and training courses in the course of the work.
- Keep up to date on support and funds available for families to be able to offer robust support and advice.
- Liaise with Early Help Locality Lead to identify priorities funding applications.
- Support the production of promotional and publicity materials as required.
- Support the evaluation strategy and identification of case studies which contribute to the monitoring of the Early Help Offer
- Have an understanding of the lived experience of individuals from Black, Asian and Minority Ethnic backgrounds.
- To support induction/training of new staff
- To support staff supervisions
- To support with case screening for TAFN (Team Around Family Network) meetings
- To support with note taking at TAFN (Team Around Family Network) meetings
Education/Knowledge (additional to the Person Specification)
- Relevant Professional Qualification in relation to working with children, young people and families e.g. Social Care, Youth or Community Work
- In addition to experience with Microsoft packages, prior experience with some or all of the following is considered highly desirable: OpenText – Content Server, ECINS, RMM, RIO, etc.
- An in-depth knowledge and understanding of issues and challenges affecting families, financial difficulties, non-school attendance, worklessness, offending, emotional well-being and mental health, domestic abuse, impact of trauma etc. and suitable responses to these.
- Good working knowledge of services, resources and support available for Children and Families in Yardley, Hodge Hill and Birmingham would be highly
- Driver with car and/or ability to travel around Yardley / Hodge Hill as well as wider Birmingham effectively would be important.
Please note due to the high volume of applications for some posts, this advert might close before the displayed closing date. We recommend that you apply for this role as soon as possible.
Pay & Reward Framework
We know that our colleagues go above and beyond in delivering our vital work, driven by their passion and commitment to Barnardo's values. We also know that we can only realise our ambitions and achieve better outcomes for more children, thanks to the talent, hard work and creativity of our people.
For all these reasons, we are committed to a new approach to pay and reward, to ensure it is fair, attractive and progressive, which was rolled out in April 2023. This is a positive change for the charity, and a part of our People & Culture Strategy. It will assist us in supporting colleagues to belong, thrive and grow in their colleague journey at Barnardo's and in time will offer clear routes of progression for colleagues in both their career and their pay.
Whilst the full pay band and salary range is advertised, our approach to starting salaries is to appoint between the minimum to mid-point of the pay band – this ensures that pay steps are available to reward our colleagues annually based on their contribution to excellence and alignment to our values and behaviours. More details on Barnardo's pay framework can be found upon application.
Benefits
Workplace Offer: What it means for you
Our hybrid working initiative is based on trust, flexibility and empowerment. We understand our workplace offer means different things to different people, and we encourage those conversations. This may mean working at one of our stores, services, working at home, in the community, at one of our Collaboration Hubs or depending on the role any combination of these. Please read through the advert carefully to understand the remits of hybrid working that will be specific to the role.
- Barnardo's believe in creating equality of opportunity in the workplace and supporting people to manage their work-life balance; we are therefore open to offering flexible working arrangements.
- Annual Leave entitlement for full-time colleagues is 26 days per annum, increasing to 27 days per annum, after 3 years Barnardo's service, 29 days per annum, after 5 years Barnardo's service and 30 days per annum, after 7 years Barnardo's service. Those working less than full time are entitled to the same level of holiday pro rata
- The ability to buy up to another 5 days annual leave via our Buy Your Leave scheme
- A host of family friendly leave options including company Maternity Paternity and Adoption pay; together with all family additional leave options
- Service related sick pay from day 1
- Access to a Group Personal Pension with a matched 4% or 6% contribution from Barnardo's. Ability to pay via salary sacrifice to garner both tax and NI savings on your own contribution
- Death in service cover of 4x annual earnings for all staff contributing to our Group Personal Pension
- Cycle2work scheme
- Interest free season ticket loans
- Discounts and cashback from at high street shops including major supermarkets, cinemas, gyms, leisure/theme parks, holidays and much more via our Benefit Portal
- 20% discount at Barnardo's stores
- Opportunity to purchase a health cash plan to claim towards dental, glasses, therapy etc
- Free access to round the clock employee assistance program for advice and support
- Access to Barnardo's Learning and Development offer
*T&C's apply based on contract
About Barnardo's
We are committed to being an inclusive employer and cultivating a culture where everyone can belong and thrive through inclusion and connectivity. We want our workforce to be reflective of the communities we work with, and for equality, diversity and inclusion to be embedded in everything we do. We are a Disability Confident Leader, are progressing our ambition to be an anti-racist organisation with Anti-Racism Commitments and actions in place and have networks for colleagues who are disabled, LGBT+, Black and Minoritised Ethnic and Women. We particularly encourage applications from Black and Minoritised Ethnic and/or disabled candidates who are currently underrepresented in our workforce. For disabled applicants, we offer reasonable adjustments throughout the recruitment process.
Our basis and values
The client requests no contact from agencies or media sales.
The Woodland Trust is looking for a Project Manager (Mourne Park) to undertake the successful delivery of The National Lottery Heritage Fund project, Mourne Park - 500 years of undiscovered natural heritage.
The Role:
- Achieve the targets agreed with the Estate and Projects Manager, based on the programme of works, and provide monthly progress updates.
- Maintain full project management control and budget responsibility across the programme, ensuring all Heritage Fund/WTNI reporting and recording systems are kept up to date, work programmes are delivered on time, and confidentiality is always maintained.
- Direct the project team delivering all access projects and on site interpretation, ensuring alignment with the Access & Interpretation Plans and the Diversity & Inclusion report.
- Oversee all procurement undertaken by the project team for access, interpretation, woodland creation and related projects, ensuring compliance with Heritage Fund/WTNI requirements and agreement from the Site Manager. Provide effective management and supervision of contractors and support the project team in doing the same.
- Coordinate and provide leadership to the project team, overseeing implementation of heritage conservation projects identified by the wider programme, including writing management plans when required. Promote good practice in landscape design and the conservation of landscape features.
- Liaise closely with partners, interested organisations, local communities, visitors and the media, fostering strong working relationships. Identify, review and meet with potential partners whose objectives align with the project, and attend meetings, forums and events to promote the project, the Woodland Trust and funders.
- Carry out data collection, surveys, research, appraisals and information gathering, producing monitoring reports as required.
- Support the Conservation Officer with practical “on the ground" work and assist the Community Development Officer with engagement activities such as events and volunteer tasks. Additionally, supporting the Community Development Officer in their work with children, young people and vulnerable adults across local community and educational settings.
- Develop an exit strategy for the project programme to enable the Trust to continue delivering at Mourne Park following the end of National Lottery Heritage Fund support.
- This is a homebased role, requiring regular travel to Mourne Park and around Northern Ireland, sometimes to remote locations. Occasional travel to regional offices and overnight stays will be required. You would be expected to live within reasonable travelling distance of your area of responsibility.
- This is a fixed term contract until December 2029.
The Candidate:
- You’ll have proven programme and project delivery experience across complex, multi disciplinary workstreams, coordinating internal and external expertise to deliver on time and within budget.
- You’ll be experienced in forestry or conservation land management, including volunteer coordination and community engagement.
- You’ll have a strong track record in land management and partnership projects, with strategic planning, long-term visioning and budget forecasting skills.
- You’ll be an experienced, motivating leader who is able to inspire, develop and hold accountable multi disciplinary teams while fostering collaboration across dispersed colleagues.
- You’ll be skilled in public facing communications, including consultations, media engagement, lobbying and event management.
- You’ll have demonstrated success delivering access infrastructure and interpretation projects on public and private land to enhance visitor experience.
- You’ll be commercially aware and opportunity focused, able to balance organisational benefit with cost, deliver value for money, and identify cost-effective ways to advance partnership aims.
- You’ll be innovative, collaborative and professionally qualified, preferably educated to HND/degree level in a relevant field, able to work across diverse teams. You will also hold a full driving licence for necessary travel across a wide area.
- The successful candidate will be required to undertake an Enhanced Background Check, as part of our pre-employment screening.
Benefits and Wellbeing:
Joining our team means you’ll be a big part of tackling environmental and climate issues. We take good care of our staff, offering support and training opportunities. We also offer:
- Enhanced Employer Pension
- Life Assurance
- Flexible & Hybrid Working Options
- Generous Annual Leave - 25 Days Plus Bank Holidays (pro rata’d for part-time)
- Buy and Sell Holiday Scheme
- Enhanced Parental Pay
- Employee Assistance Programme
About Us:
The Woodland Trust is the UK’s leading woodland conservation charity. We want to see a world where trees and woods thrive for people and nature. The Trust engages and inspires people to make their difference tackling the nature and climate crisis helping protect, restore and create our vital woods and trees.
Our Commitment to Diversity and Inclusion:
To achieve our vision of a world where woods and trees thrive for people and nature, we need to better reflect society and the communities we work in. All people, no matter their background, identity, ability, or circumstance, should benefit from trees.
People of colour and disabled people are currently under-represented across the environment and conservation sector. If you identify as a person of colour and/or disabled, we particularly encourage you to apply.
Please contact us to discuss any additional support or adjustments you may need to complete your application.
Application Advice:
For fairness we keep our candidates’ personal details hidden from the hiring managers, and we do not ask for your CV at application. Make sure that your Personal Statement clearly shows how your skills and knowledge link to the specifications in the job description and you share with us your passion for the role. Even if you don't meet every requirement of the role, we would encourage you to apply.
Acceptable Use - Artificial Intelligence (AI):
We understand that candidates may choose to use AI tools to support their job applications-for example, to help structure or edit written responses. We welcome the use of AI in this way, particularly where it helps improve accessibility, such as for neurodivergent applicants. However, we ask that any information submitted reflects your own experience, skills and understanding. During interviews, candidates are expected to respond independently without the use of AI tools.
Apply Now:
If you're ready to make a difference and grow with us, send in your application today. We might close the job opening early if we get a lot of applications, so it's a good idea to apply soon. If we do close the advert early, and you have an application in process, we will email you prior to closing to give you time to complete.
Interviews will be conducted via Microsoft Teams May 5th and May 6th.
The client requests no contact from agencies or media sales.
Job Title: Consultant Suicide Prevention Therapist
Salary: £65,000 per annum, plus 15% ILW if applicable
Hours: Full-time, 37.5 hours per week
Contract Type: Permanent
Location: Birmingham, Liverpool, London, or Newcastle, with travel to other centres when required
Reports to: Director of Clinical Services
THE CHARITY
Suicide is the leading cause of death of men under 35 and three quarters of those who die by suicide are men. James’ Place exists to save the lives of men in suicidal crisis through delivering clinical services. We are a charity currently offering free, life-saving therapy to suicidal men at our centres in Liverpool, London and Newcastle.
James’ Place was set up by Clare Milford Haven and Nick Wentworth-Stanley in 2008 after their twenty-one-year-old son, James, died by suicide ten days after a minor operation. James had no history of mental illness or depression and had sought urgent help for anxiety and suicidal thoughts but didn’t find it.
James' Place was set up to make the experience of finding help as easy as possible. We offer men who are experiencing a suicidal crisis a brief, intensive, therapeutic intervention in a safe environment. Men who walk through the door at James’ Place will be in a space where they feel valued and respected. We provide a calm and peaceful environment both inside the centres and in our outside spaces, accessible to men who visit us as well as their friends and families. We have so far treated over 5,100 men who might otherwise have been unable to access the support they desperately need.
In early 2026 we will be opening our fourth centre in Birmingham. Our new centre in Birmingham will be there to support suicidal men living in the West Midlands.
THE OPPORTUNITY
We are looking for Consultant Suicide Prevention Therapist to join our expanding clinical directorate. The Consultant Suicide Prevention Therapist is a senior clinical leader responsible for the delivery, governance, quality and continuous improvement of the organisation’s therapeutic suicide prevention model.
The Consultant Suicide Prevention Therapist reports to the Director of Clinical Services who retains overall strategic, executive and corporate accountability for all aspects of clinical services across the organisation.
Within this structure, the Consultant Suicide Prevention Therapist plays a pivotal leadership role in translating strategic direction into operational delivery of therapeutic services. The postholder ensures consistency, quality, safety and fidelity of clinical practice across centres, working closely with Heads of Centres and clinical staff to embed standards, manage risk and drive service improvement.
The role combines coordination and delivery of specialist clinical expertise, leadership, research and evaluation, clinical training and opportunity to deputise for the Director of Clinical Services in defined areas of delegated responsibility.
KEY RESPONSIBILITIES
Advanced Specialist Clinical Practice
- Provide expert consultation on cases involving increased risk
- Operate with high autonomy in complex, high-stakes clinical decision-making
- Model advanced formulation, safety planning and therapeutic engagement
- Support multidisciplinary decision-making in situations with significant clinical and organisational implications
- Hold a small, specialised caseload offering welcome assessment and interventions
Research and Evaluation
- Review existing research and literature to inform your own work
- Lead clinical audit and service evaluation programmes
- Initiate and oversee research activity in suicide prevention
- Develop academic partnerships where appropriate
- Disseminate learning internally and externally
- Analyse and interpret data and other information
- Comply with ethical, legal, and health and safety requirements when undertaking research
Clinical Training
- Lead on advanced clinical training frameworks
- Design and (co)deliver suicide prevention and risk management training
- Develop and maintain clinical competency frameworks
- Provide supervision to senior clinicians and specialist practitioners as required
- Embed reflective practice and continuous professional development structures
Service Performance, Quality Data Leadership
- Establish and monitor KPIs and clinical outcome measures
- Interpret complex clinical and operational data to inform service improvement
- Lead quality improvement initiatives across centres
- Ensure robust data governance and confidentiality standards
- Oversee digital safety and governance in remote or technology-enabled delivery
- Use evaluation findings to influence strategic and commissioning discussions
Strategic and Service Leadership
- Support implementation of the Director of Clinical Services’ strategic vision for therapeutic services
- Lead operational delivery of the organisation’s suicide prevention therapeutic model across centres
- Translate organisational strategy into clear clinical standards, competencies and delivery expectations
- Work collaboratively with Heads of Centres to ensure consistent standards of care, governance and risk management
- Provide professional leadership and clinical direction to Principal-, Senior- and Suicide Prevention Therapists
- Ensure fidelity to evidence-based suicide prevention frameworks
- Represent the organisation in multi-agency suicide prevention partnerships and regional forums
- Escalate systemic risks, quality concerns and strategic issues appropriately
Clinical Governance and Organisational Risk
- Lead and maintain the clinical governance framework for suicide prevention services
- Oversee serious incident review processes and ensure implementation of organisational learning
- Lead on governance, audit and risk reporting relating to therapeutic services
- Ensure safeguarding standards are consistently embedded across centres
- Develop and review organisational policies relating to suicide risk management and crisis response
- Ensure readiness for internal and external inspection and compliance within our agreed quality standards
- Manage high level clinical risks with potential organisational or reputational impact
Financial and Resource Responsibility
- Hold delegated responsibility for defined elements of the service budget (e.g., training, research or service development)
- Contribute to workforce planning and establishment modelling
- Ensure effective and efficient use of clinical resources
- Provide input into business cases and funding proposals
Leadership and Line Management
- Provide direct line management to designated colleagues
- Hold responsibility for appraisal, performance management and capability processes
- Provide professional leadership across all therapist grades
- Support Heads of Centres in managing complex clinical performance or risk issues
- Ensure safe caseload allocation and supervision structures
- Contribute to recruitment and workforce development strategy
Equality, Diversity and Inclusion
- Lead culturally competent and trauma-informed suicide prevention practice
- Address inequalities in access, experience and outcomes
- Promote inclusive, anti-discriminatory clinical standards and practice across services
PERSON SPECIFICATION
Essential
Qualifications
- Professional qualification in Psychology, Psychotherapy, Counselling, Psychiatry, Nursing, Social Work, or equivalent
- Current registration with relevant statutory body or accredited membership of recognised professional body (e.g., Health and Care Professions Council, NMC, UKCP, BACP, BABCP)
Experience
- Substantial post-qualification experience working with individuals at high risk of suicide
- Experience leading clinical governance frameworks
- Experience managing serious incident reviews and embedding learning
- Experience contributing to organisational strategy implementation
- Experience delivering advanced supervision and training
- Experience influencing service delivery across multiple teams or sites
- Experience interpreting complex service data to drive improvement
- Experience operating with significant professional autonomy
Knowledge
- Advanced knowledge of suicide theory, risk formulation and evidence-based interventions
- Knowledge of safeguarding legislation and practice relevant clinical governance frameworks
- Understanding of best practice models, and quality standards
- Knowledge of outcome measurement systems and quality improvement methodology
- Awareness of national suicide prevention strategies and policy landscape
Skills and Competencies
- Advanced clinical risk assessment and formulation skills
- Strategic thinking and systems leadership
- Ability to translate strategy into operational delivery
- Strong analytical and data interpretation capability, to design, conduct and evaluate research
- Skilled in influencing senior stakeholders
- High emotional resilience and professional integrity
- Excellent written, verbal and presentation skills
Desirable
Qualifications
- Leadership or management qualification
- Post Qualifying masters and/ or Doctoral level qualification
Experience
- Experience with delegated budget management.
- Experience representing services in regional or multi-agency forums
- Research publication or formal evaluation leadership
WE OFFER
- A 7% employer contributory pension scheme
- Family friendly policies
- Death in service insurance scheme
- 25 days plus bank holidays leave entitlement (FTE), including enhanced holiday allowance with incremental rises after qualifying period
LEARN MORE
If you would like to learn more about working for James' Place, sign up to our online recruitment information session on Wednesday 8th April at 6:30pm - 7:15pm.
HOW TO APPLY
To apply, please use the online application system to submit your CV detailing your experience, roles and responsibilities, and answer the two screening questions relating to the knowledge and skills you hold for this role. Please note, you do not need to upload a cover letter for this role. If prompted to upload a cover letter, please attach a copy of your CV instead.
Closing date: Wednesday 15th April, 12 noon
First round interviews are expected to be held on Wednesday 22nd April via MS Teams.
James’ Place is committed to promoting a diverse and inclusive community. Our aim is that no job applicant, temporary worker or employee receives less favourable treatment on the grounds of age, disability, gender and transgender status, race and ethnicity, religion and belief (including no belief), marriage or civil partnership status or sexual orientation.
If you have a disability or health conditions which means you'd benefit from any adjustments to the interview process to help you perform at your best, please do let us know in advance.
Any job offers made are subject to the receipt of two relevant satisfactory employment references. We expect this to include one from your most recent or current employer. Any job offers made are also subject to a satisfactory DBS check and a Right to Work in the UK check.
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