If you read our earlier piece on the Social Care Standards Authority (SCSA), you’ll know it isn’t just about licensing and inspections. A big part of the Authority’s work happens before anyone steps on site: writing the standards that services are expected to meet in the first place.
Turning guidance into rules that actually stick
During 2025, the SCSA pushed forward with regulatory standards in key areas, especially services supporting people experiencing gender-based and domestic violence. After public consultation and internal review, these standards were strengthened to be legally solid, culturally aligned to the Maltese context, and genuinely workable on the ground. The next step is major: moving them towards subsidiary legislation, meaning they can shift from “recommended guidance” to legally enforceable requirements.
Built with the sector, not just written behind a desk
To make sure standards reflect real-life challenges, SCSA carried out on-site engagement and research, speaking directly with service operators. This helped identify operational gaps and demographic needs, so the end result is both aspirational and achievable. In other words: standards ate grounded in evidence not just theory.
Updating older standards, future-proofing new ones
The Authority also flagged that several standards first issued in 2018 now need revision. The new drafting approach is smarter and more flexible: build standards that can adapt to changing service models and legal updates and refer to existing laws rather than copying long legal text that might change later. That keeps the standards clear and easy for the service providers to follow.
Listening platforms that actually shape decisions
Finally, SCSA’s Collaborative Platforms remained an important space for sector dialogue, not just talk, but a way to gather insight, track emerging trends and steer future regulation.
Because good regulation doesn’t start with a clipboard, it starts with clear, fair standards that protect people and help services improve.