West Mercia PCC supports PEGS

Harriet Ernstsons-Evans • June 3, 2021
West Mercia’s Police and Crime Commissioner has stepped in to support parents experiencing abuse from their own children.

John Campion has awarded almost £30,000 of Ministry of Justice funding to PEGS, to help us work with families impacted by physical, financial, emotional or sexual behaviour displayed by children of any age.

The grant will be used to deliver 12 Empowering Parents in Crisis (EPIC) sessions, a group programme which provides emotional and practical support for parents, carers and guardians who are living with a child displaying abusive, violent or out-of-control behaviours.

The sessions focus on behaviour and communication, safety and risk, trauma response, advocacy and working with professionals, and aim to increase confidence, empower and inform those attending.

PEGS - which also trains professionals such as social workers and police officers so they can respond appropriately to CPA, as well as raising awareness and influencing national policy – became operational in April 2020 and has already supported nearly 500 families.

Founding Director Michelle John said: “We are hugely thankful to Mr Campion and his team for their support, which will positively impact the lives of parents experiencing CPA. As well as the grant itself, the PCC’s support brings awareness to the issue, which is often left in the shadows.

“Research indicates between 3% and 10% of families are impacted but many parents report a lack of support, so we aim to provide the assistance, advocacy and listening ear they so desperately need.”

Commissioner John Campion said “Victims are at the heart of everything we do, and my commitment as Commissioner is to ensure there are many different routes in place to help people cope and recover. This investment will provide dedicated, expert support to everyone who needs help, when they need it.”
By PEGS Admin March 27, 2026
Service Shoutout: A Better Tomorrow 
By PEGS Admin March 24, 2026
One of the things we hear most often at PEGS is: “They don’t hit me… but they destroy the house.” A door kicked through. A phone smashed. A hole in the wall. Personal belongings ripped up or thrown outside. Furniture overturned. Glass shattered. And almost always, the parent follows it with, “I don’t know if this counts.” It does. In our work, 91% of the parents we support tell us that their property has been damaged or destroyed as part of their child’s behaviour. That’s not a one-off loss of temper. That’s a pattern. And patterns matter. It’s rarely about the object When something gets broken in this context, it is rarely random. Parents say things like: “He knows exactly what to break.” “It’s always something important to me.” “When the door goes, I know it’s about control.” Property damage in Child to Parent Abuse is often about power. It can be a way of saying: I can reach you. I can frighten you. Nothing here is safe. You can’t stop me. Over time, it changes how parents live in their own homes. They hide things. They replace items with cheaper versions. They stop putting pictures on walls. They choose their words carefully. They walk on eggshells. It isn’t “just stuff”. It’s about intimidation, control and fear. The impact most people don’t see There is the obvious damage - the broken door, the smashed screen. But what often goes unseen is everything that comes with it. The financial pressure can be relentless. Replacing phones. Repairing walls. Fixing locks. Some parents go into debt. Others live with damage because they simply can’t afford to fix it. For families in rented accommodation, there is another layer of fear. We have spoken to parents who are terrified of eviction because of the state of their home. “I dread the landlord inspection more than the arguments.” There are safety risks too. Items thrown in anger don’t always land where they were intended. Siblings witness it. Younger children absorb it. Pets hide. And then there is the emotional toll. Parents describe the dread - the constant waiting for the next crash or bang. The way their body stays tense. The shame of not telling anyone what’s happening. The fear of being blamed. “It’s the anticipation. Listening for footsteps. Wondering what will go next.” When your home stops feeling safe, it affects everything. Why it gets minimised Property damage is often dismissed as “normal teenage anger” or “behavioural issues”. Parents are told they need stronger boundaries, better consequences, and different parenting strategies. But when property damage forms part of a pattern of intimidation, threats or emotional harm, it is not simply behaviour. It is part of Child to Parent Abuse. If we ignore it because it hasn’t yet crossed a criminal threshold, we miss the opportunity to intervene early. What might help The first step is recognising that this matters. If things are being broken in a way that feels frightening, targeted or controlling, trust that instinct. Safety planning can help - thinking about safe spaces, about who you could contact if things escalate, about reducing immediate risks where possible. Reducing isolation matters too. Shame thrives in silence. Speaking to someone who understands Child to Parent Abuse can shift that sense of being alone with it. Professionals also need to recognise property damage for what it can represent. It isn’t always about anger management. Sometimes it is about power, and that requires a different response. At PEGS, we believe parents deserve to feel safe in their own homes. If your belongings are being destroyed and it feels bigger than “just stuff”, you are not overreacting. You are responding to harm.  And you deserve support that understands that.
By PEGS Admin March 22, 2026
Six Years of PEGS: Reflection, Growth and Looking Ahead