In 2018 I made a Freedom of Information request to three different councils, all of who I know had a connection with Ashbank Remand Home in York. Requests were sent to East Riding of Yorkshire County Council, North Yorkshire County Council and City of York County Council as follows:
Could you please provide the following information under the Freedom of Information Act within the required timescale?
Q1: Since 1960, to its sale, when did *named council, occupy by ownership or rental, either sole or shared occupancy Ashbank House 1 Shipton Road. York YO30 5RE? Please provide dates to and from.
Q2: In answer to question one, please state what purpose it was used for and what “departments”, from when, until?
Q3: What, if any role did *named council play as Ashbank Remand Home for children, from when until?
Q4: Please consider any other names the council may have been associated by, within the time periods.
Their replies:
East Riding of Yorkshire County Council:
Shipton Road, York is not in the East Riding of Yorkshire administrative area nor that of any of the local authorities in existence before the East Riding came about in 1996
North Yorkshire County Council:
No response
City of York Council:
Q1: From 1960 to Local Government Reorganisation (LGR) in 1974 Ashbank was owned and occupied by York City Council. From 1974 to LGR in 1996 it was owned and occupied by North Yorkshire County Council. From 1996 the property has been occupied by City of York Council.
Q2: Prior to 1996 we do not hold that information. Since 1996 the property has been used as offices for the City of York Council’s Children’s Services. The property has been vacant since 1st April 2013
Q3: We do not hold that information
Q4: The property was marketed for sale in October and November 2017. The sale has not been finalised. When it is, approval will be sought from a member of the Council’s Executive. The sale price will be made public at the time
So, what can be made of their responses? I already knew East Riding of Yorkshire County Council had no direct occupancy or involvement in Ashbank, however, I needed this clearing up. What I did know as fact was, staff from East Riding of Yorkshire County Council would take children away from Ashbank or bring them to Ashbank on a regular basis and from time-to-time staff would stay over for this purpose.
Years later a House Master from Castle Howard Approved School was disciplined for unofficially removing boys from the abuse at Ashbank Remand Home taking them to Castle Howard Approved School as a personal mission of mercy. Castle Howard Approved School, a former Reformatory School, was under Humberside Children’s services, AKA East Riding of Yorkshire County Council and comes up on national databases as a place abuse did take place. The House Master left the service soon after.
North Yorkshire County Council broke the rules and legislation by not replying to my Freedom of Information request although my question was partially answered by City of York Council’s response, but they would not have known that.
City of York Council has confirmed they were the owners and occupiers, then known as York City Council, same council with a slight name change, from 1960 to 1974 encompassing the time I was there. I was told “off record” by a high positioned official in City of York Council Children Safeguarding Team, stating that all records had disappeared in 1974, this timescale now makes more sense to me. In the same conversation, she confirmed she had heard the rumours and gossip about the abuse of children from the older generation of Social Workers, parents, and grandparents, she was still working with.
Q4 was a consideration, although they kindly gave me details on the up and coming sale. In their reply there was no mention of Ashbank Remand Home, this along with no records kept, has simply wiped away all avenues of an abuse enquiry, allegations of abuse, the actual abuse, and abuse given out by staff on their payroll, in other words, Ashbank Remand Home never existed, I never existed so was never abused, which makes them not guilty, leaving me hanging on to life by the skin of my teeth throughout years.
In 2013 City of York Council Leader, James Alexander made a genuine offer to me to have Ashbank fully investigated, a kind gesture but a pointless task, but I do thank him for that.
We are led to believe that record keeping is robust and always there, this is simply not true, whatever the police tell you and proved in the preface of this book. In my Freedom of Information request, City of York Council confirmed: “Prior to 1996 we do not hold that information” then who the does? Searching the National Archive records there are only eight documents relating to Ashbank Remand Home, six if you except that two are the same document. City of York Council goes on to state they do not know what role they played at Ashbank, useless then and useless now or clever then and clever now? What no child health records, no court referrals, staff pensions, wage records or finances? For a start and reasons mentioned in the preface, records are falsified at the time or genuine mistakes are made. I have read many reports in my professional work with children where the most fundamental mistakes are made, i.e., parents’ names, family relationships to child, aunties as mothers and brothers as fathers, plus dates all wrong. The tragedy is these reports make the basis of safeguarding children or the deciding factor in wrongly removing a child from the family home or for that matter keeping a child in an abusive and dangerous situation. So, who was the one person who made the decision to destroy all the records from Ashbank and what was their motive? Could it simply be filing and space? There would have been a time the information was still relevant assuming cases would have been live one year, one month one week and one day before the 1974 Local Government Reorganisation, this brings me to the conclusion that the motive must have been to hide, coverup, dismiss and bury the history of abuse at Ashbank Remand Home at the stroke of a pen.
I have not been able to find out exactly when Ashbank closed as a Remand Home, my assumption has to be before 1974 when ownership transferred under the Local Government Reorganisation. What North Yorkshire County Council did with it between 1974 to 1996 is again unknown to me, I have heard it was part of the child and adult services or a maintenance department but recognise there may be no truth in either.
For me and all those who were at Ashbank, the most ironic thing, which was completely insulting, disgusting and a kick in the throat, and twist of fate, was from 1996 City of York Council made the disturbing decision to house their Children’s Safeguarding Services there.
When I worked with vulnerable, at risk and abused children there were many times I was requested to join a multi-agency meeting, I had to decline, making me feel guilty towards the child and family I was working with, not having a voice there for them. I can only apologise as I let them down. I did however send my reports in, but sadly I was often “out of the official loop”. However, the kids and parents couldn’t wait to tell me what happened, which was the more truthful version of what had been said or proposed by the Social Worker, my mistrust of Social Services still embedded deeply in me.
.*a forgotten boy