If you work in HR in local government, especially in Children and Families Services you don’t need stats to tell you there’s a retention crisis, you feel it every time a valued social worker hands in their notice.
You’ve just trained up a brilliant team leader or first line manager and six months later, they’re gone. The pressure’s back on your stretched team, projects stall, and you’re back at square one.
But the hidden cost? That’s what’s quietly hurting your budgets, your teams, and your ability to deliver. And for anyone working in HR in local government supporting children’s social care, it’s the issue that won’t go away. Despite the best efforts of local agreements on use of agency workers, market supplements and golden hellos.
The financial impact of losing critical staff
Replacing a single employee in the UK can cost around £30,000, once you factor in recruitment, onboarding, lost productivity, and temporary cover. Now multiply that across an entire department, and the numbers become unsustainable. Forcing unavoidable year on year overspends.
Within local government, the scale is even more serious:
What your Council loses with every resignation
It’s not just about money. Staff turnover disrupts the achievement of great outcomes for children and families, long-term improvements to address this; it fragments team culture, and creates systemic instability.
Every time a skilled employee leaves, they take with them:
In HR in local government, these losses compound fast and create a never-ending cycle of recruitment that even the best marketing campaigns simply cannot fix.
How turnover affects morale and public services
When people leave, those who stay carry the weight. That means higher workloads, more stress, and less time to focus on quality, development and wellbeing. This pressurised environment chips away at low morale and often triggers a second wave of exits and the goal of achieving stability (critical to positive service user outcomes) seems further out of reach.
What councils can do right now to improve retention
There’s no silver bullet but there are steps councils can take today to address some of the system challenges that cause people to leave:
Final thought: retention Is the new recruitment
For HR in local government, this isn’t just a workforce issue it’s a strategic priority. High turnover doesn’t just cost more, first and foremost it undermines resident and community outcomes.
Fixing it won’t happen overnight, but the organisations that invest in systemic improvements i.e. development, wellbeing, and leadership will be the ones delivering outstanding outcomes for their communities and the generations to come.
At p3od, we’ve worked with councils and specifically children, young people and family services across the UK to build practical, people-first retention strategies that actually work without the nonsense. Just tailored support that helps you keep the right people in the right roles.
If you’re serious about getting a grip on turnover for once and for all, let’s talk.
Book your free consultation here www.p3od.co.uk
I’m Marc O’Hagan – Director for the Federation of Small Businesses (FSB) and Organisational Development specialist for my own HR consultancy, p3od. I specialise in organisational development,…
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