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Liverpool foster mum celebrates an incredible 50 years of caring
6 months ago
Foster mum Sue Price is celebrating an incredible 50-year anniversary after caring for more than 400 children.
Sue, who lives in Old Swan, Liverpool, began fostering with her husband George when they were newlyweds back in the â70s before they started their own family.
They carried on offering a loving secure home to youngsters after having their own three sons â Georgie, whoâs 46, Gareth 42, and 36-year-old Kieran â and adopted Bryn, 22, who they fostered when he was just hours old.
Sue even continued when George was diagnosed with Parkinsonâs Disease and vascular dementia, looking after him at home with the support of her boys until he died five years ago.
Now 73 and waiting for a hip operation, she says she canât imagine life without her foster babies.
And, as Foster Care Fortnight celebrates the dedication of others like Sue and her husband, she says itâs given her so much happiness.
âWe do need more carers so badly, and I would say to anyone whoâs considering fostering that it is such a rewarding thing to do,â says Sue. âThere can be ups and downs and it isnât always easy but itâs a very satisfying job because you feel as though youâve done your best and given these children a really good start.â
Having been brought up with a mum and dad who fostered, Sue says sheâs always loved being around children.
âWe got married when I was 19 and I wanted a baby right away but the social worker who used to come and see my mum asked if weâd consider fostering.
âI used to work in Alder Hey as an orderly; Iâd be on the ward for 6am and I just liked feeding and helping to bath the babies so I always felt comfortable around them.
âGeorge and I both agreed on it, he had an adopted sister and loved kids, so when I was 23 we fostered our first two girls, sisters aged three and five. Even though we didnât have kids of our own at the time, it never felt daunting because it was just in my nature. They stayed with us until they were 19 and 20.â
For the last 30 years, Sue has fostered newborns. Their individual backgrounds vary, but many have birth mothers with drug or alcohol addictions, and the babies arrive straight from hospital.
âI never judge people, you donât know what their circumstances are, so I donât treat a person on drugs any differently to any other person, thatâs not my job,â stresses Sue. âMy job is the kids, to make their lives better, thatâs whatâs important to me.â
In the early years, Sue and George shared the responsibility of caring for their foster children.
âMy husband was a sheet metal worker by trade, and when he was made redundant he went on to the milk because it was local and the 4am start meant heâd be finished in time to take them to school.
âHe was always very much involved, although I was the one on rules and he was more of a soft touch!â
What sheâs learned over the years is that routine is crucial in settling little ones into their new environment.
âIâve kept the same routine from the start because thatâs what they need to give them stability. It usually only takes me two or three weeks to get them sleeping through the night.â
After fostering more than 400 children and babies â a figure thatâs still rising â Sue says she stays in touch with many of those sheâs given a temporary home to.
âAt Christmas, I always have a house full of cards and bouquets of flowers, and theyâll text me to wish me happy Christmas. A couple of them come to see me, including one lad whoâs 16 now. His mum brings him every year on my birthday in December and I have a photo with him.
âThere is that attachment there, and when they leave I do get emotional because to me itâs like losing a loved one. So I like seeing how theyâre getting on and a lot of the parents tell me theyâve stuck to my routine and theyâre doing brilliantly.â
After 50 years, Sue says she enjoys fostering as much as she ever did.
âItâs a job Iâve always wanted to do, itâs just built in me, and when every baby comes here I feel the same as I did with those first two.
âMy life would have been so different if I hadnât decided to do this at 23. This has been my whole life and I donât think I would have been anywhere near as happy without it.â
- Anyone who is interested in fostering should contact Liverpool fostering services via the website www.fostering.liverpool.gov.uk, phone 0151 515 0000 or email fostering@liverpool.gov.ukÂ