To assist customers in their understanding and completion of relevant documents forms, applications and registrations, over the telephone, including where appropriate addressing their special needs (disability, translation, interpretation requirements etc)
To process referrals and apply agreed eligibility criteria.
The role
To deal with telephone, written, emailed enquiries and respond appropriately to customer enquiries, complaints, requests for information and service requests.
To use strengths-based approaches to assess, monitor and review the social care needs of service users and informal carers and find appropriate solutions and make appropriate referrals to external agencies within a preventative, enabling and rehabilitation framework and universal services in accordance with the Care Act eligibility criteria.
Take responsibility for managing casework with the supervision of a qualified senior practitioner within an outcome focussed approach and within the teams expected performance targets and outcomes, whilst promoting independence and assessing and managing risk.
To hold an individual caseload of varying degrees of complexity excluding casework that requires the expertise of a qualified professional.
Posted by NonStop Consulting Ltd • £40/hr to £42/hr
Nonstop care is currently working with a local authority in the South of England who are looking for an experienced worker to join their young people exploitation service team.
The Young People's Service includes Youth Offending Service, Exploitation and Edge of care for Children and Young People aged 12 and MET.
Based in the Civic Centre, with a new young-people friendly hub.
Housing for Women is a registered charity and independent housing association.
We champion female empowerment by providing and promoting affordable homes for women and gender-specific support services.
Since 1934, we have been working to build a more equal society for women, a world where everyone has a safe roof over their head regardless of circumstance, where violence against women is no longer tolerated.