Thomas Wiser Haus offers what is known as educational support if the parents are not or no longer able to take on this task themselves or are overstretched, or if there is a risk to the child’s age-appropriate development. “A child can also stay here voluntarily, but often that isn’t the case. It’s the classic scenario: Neighbours, teachers or other people notice something’s not quite right, and then the youth welfare office gets involved,” explains Lorenz Dineiger, Regional Director of Thomas Wiser Haus for Regenstauf/Regensburg.
In all, 250 children and young people currently have a substitute family in the home. “The everyday life is geared very closely to family structures, it’s just that we have more (expert) people here and things are probably organised a little more systematically,” says Dineiger. There are fixed rules, but they try to offer as much normality as possible. “Our occupants can, of course, also receive visits from friends, join sports clubs and go wherever they like in the local area. We attach a lot of importance to integrating the kids here into the social sphere.”