Somerset’s foster care recruitment campaign 'Highly Commended' in national awards

By Emma Dance

2nd Aug 2022 | Local News

From left, Matthew Randles, Operations Manager Fostering, Somerset County Council; Michelle Mitchell, Communications Officer, Somerset County Council and Ray Marett – AdIQ
From left, Matthew Randles, Operations Manager Fostering, Somerset County Council; Michelle Mitchell, Communications Officer, Somerset County Council and Ray Marett – AdIQ

Somerset County Council's foster care recruitment campaign 'Theo's Story' was highly commended at a prestigious national awards ceremony last month.

Theo's Story was recognised in the 'Campaign of the Year' category at the Local Government Chronicle Awards, with judges describing the entry as 'incredibly creative, passionate and hard to criticise'.

The focus of Theo's Story was a short 40 second video which ran online and via Sky advertising over an eight-week period with the aim of encouraging more foster carers to step forward.

It tells the story of a young bear called Theo who struggles alone in the forest until he is 'fostered' by an adult bear, helping him thrive once more.

Over 500 children and young people in Somerset are currently looked after by Somerset County Council. Foster carers play an important part in changing and improving their story, but many more are needed.

The film was supported by outdoor and radio advertising with further promotion via Somerset libraries, a creative writing competition and hidden pebbles across Somerset with QR codes with a chance to win Festival tickets.

The success of the campaign led to an increase in foster care enquiries, a 44% increase in foster carer approvals, 48% increase in website traffic and 26 new foster carers recruited.

Cllr Tessa Munt, Executive Lead for Children's Services at Somerset County Council said: "Our foster carers are our unsung heroes who nurture, support and inspire our children and young people when their own families are unable to. We need more foster carers and are always looking at new ways to promote the benefits of fostering – for both children and carers. 'Theo's Story' is a great campaign which brought real results, transforming the lives of many young people in need and saving taxpayer's thousands of pounds. I'm delighted that 'Theo's Story' and the campaign's success has been recognised at the highest level."

Foster carers need to be aged 21+ with a spare room. If you are interested in finding out more about fostering in Somerset, check out www.fosteringinsomerset.org.uk or phone 0800 587 9900.

     

New glastonbury Jobs Section Launched!!
Vacancies updated hourly!!
Click here: glastonbury jobs

Share:

Related Articles

Police in Glastonbury are focusing on community safety following a rise in public order offences, despite an overall drop in crime rates. (LL)
Local News

Crime rates drop in Glastonbury, but police continue to monitor anti-social behaviour and violent crime

This Sunday, as Glastonbury joins the nation in marking Remembrance Sunday, Ray Tillbrook will march with pride at the Cenotaph.
Local News

Glastonbury RAF veteran to march in memory of family at Cenotaph on Remembrance Sunday

Sign-Up for our FREE Newsletter

We want to provide glastonbury with more and more clickbait-free local news.
To do that, we need a loyal newsletter following.
Help us survive and sign up to our FREE weekly newsletter.

Already subscribed? Thank you. Just press X or click here.
We won't pass your details on to anyone else.
By clicking the Subscribe button you agree to our Privacy Policy.