Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
Evening Standard
Evening Standard
Entertainment
Sami Quadri

Kirstie Allsopp says social services contacted her about son’s interrailing trip

Kirstie Allsopp said she was contacted by social services for allowing her teenage son to go on an interrailing trip.

The Location, Location, Location presenter, 52, said she allowed her 15-year-old son, Oscar, to go interrailing across Europe with his 16-year-old friend this summer but had since been contacted by a social worker who informed her that a file had been opened after child protection concerns were raised.

Allsopp said officials did not understand that she had been targeted by someone falsely alleging neglect.

She told The Mail on Sunday: “I just felt sick – absolutely sick. Then I was cross. I was very, very cross.

“It was just so extraordinary. I was in a parallel universe where they were actually taking this seriously.

Kirstie Allsopp said she did not want her son to be left behind by his peers (Ian West/PA) (PA Archive)

“I have broken no law and nothing about allowing my child to travel around Europe is neglectful.”

Allsopp said she was not told how the referral had been made or by whom, with the social worker insisting every referral must be looked into and questioning what safeguards were put in place for her son’s trip.

They also confirmed a file had been opened on Oscar, and the Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea (RBKC), her local council, could keep the file open “in case there was another referral and we needed to come to your house and look into this further”.

She told the Mail: “For me, that was the sucker punch – the idea this file might continue existing.

“What (the official) said to me was, ‘if in six months there was another referral and we needed to come to your house and look into this further, it would be important that we had kept a note of the first referral’.

“That was the Orwellian moment. The fact it was maliciously done wasn’t coming home to her.”

A spokesperson for RBKC told the paper: “Safeguarding children is an absolute priority. We take any referral we receive very seriously and we have a statutory responsibility for children under 18 years of age.”

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.