Every setting has one person who carries the decisions everyone else is quietly relieved not to make. Whether a bruise pattern crosses a threshold. Whether today is the day to ring children’s social care. What happens in the twenty minutes after an allegation is made about a colleague. That person is the Designated Safeguarding Lead, and since September 2025 the role is no longer informal.
The job nobody else in the building can do
The EYFS reforms formalised what good settings were already doing: a named DSL with defined responsibilities, deputy cover for the days the lead is on leave or elbow-deep in the baby room, and oversight of the whole-staff training cycle. On paper that’s a list. In practice it’s a weight, and it lands on one person’s shoulders at unpredictable moments.
We hear it from DSLs on our courses all the time: the loneliest moment isn’t the obvious emergency. It’s holding a concern that sits just below the line. A child’s odd comment at the snack table. A parent who smells of drink at pickup, once. Nothing that screams. The DSL is the person who has to decide whether it whispers.
From first concern to child protection plan
Good training gives that moment structure. A consistent triage ladder helps: immediate danger first, medical need second, then the pattern check, then your local thresholds. It isn’t a formula that makes the decision for you, but it stops the decision being made by mood or workload.
Structure protects the DSL as well as the child. A decision made against a consistent ladder, recorded with its reasoning, stands up months later when a case reviewer asks why the setting acted as it did, or why it waited. “It didn’t feel right” is not a record. “Pattern check completed, thresholds consulted, advice sought” is.
The role doesn’t end at the referral, either. Strategy discussions, section 47 enquiries, child protection conferences, core groups and review conferences all follow, and the DSL is the setting’s voice in every one of them, as well as the person servicing the plan between meetings. Add leading early help for families below the threshold, managing allegations against staff through the LADO route (with suspension treated as a neutral act, not a punishment), keeping confidential safeguarding files, and overseeing safer recruitment and ongoing suitability, and you have a role that deserves training with genuine depth.
There’s a modern edge to the job too. Device and imagery policy, staff online conduct, radicalisation concerns arising in a family context, and now AI-generated imagery. The risks a DSL oversees in 2026 look meaningfully different from five years ago, and the training has to keep pace.
Then there’s the quieter, ongoing work: leading a safeguarding culture rather than just responding to incidents. That means safeguarding woven into induction, the two-yearly training cycle actually managed rather than hoped for, standing safeguarding questions in every supervision meeting, and the honest self-audit that asks what this setting would miss. Culture is the part of the role that never appears in a referral, and it’s the part that prevents most referrals being needed.
Training that matches the weight of the role
Our Designated Safeguarding Lead (Level 3) course was written for exactly this. Eleven in-depth lessons work through the whole architecture of the role, from receiving the first concern to servicing a child protection plan, before three worked case scenarios and a 15-question assessment put your judgement to the test. It’s built for DSLs, deputy DSLs, and the managers and owners who appoint them.
Mid-June is a sensible moment to think about this. If a deputy needs appointing before September, or a newly promoted manager is inheriting the lead role with the new intake, summer gives them time to train properly rather than learning the job during their first difficult referral.
Step into the DSL role with judgement you can defend.
Level 3 training across eleven lessons and three worked case scenarios, with an NFAQ-accredited certificate evidencing the formalised role for inspection.
Someone in your building already carries these decisions. The only question is whether they carry them with the training the role now formally demands, or without it.

