Opinion

Skills shortages are hurting construction output – and quality

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Comments

  1. Unfortunately over the last 25 years, not only has the skill base been reduced with every recession but the commercial incentive to ever more sub-contracting and the educational push away from apprenticeship to degrees has prevented trade skill replenishment in the quantity needed; despite ‘voice in the wilderness’ warnings. The industry really must get together with the CITB, pull out all the stops and take advantage of the current government’s apparent desire to reinvigorate apprenticeships, although preferably at an higher level than cooking burgers!

  2. While agreeing with much of what Janet has said, I would point to some genuinely joined-up responses to promoting apprenticeships – and the whole spectrum of opportunities available in the industry. Working with the CITB, public authorities, Housing Associations and ethical training providers Durkan and other contractors are actively pooling resources and working together to engage new entrants – across the diversity spectrum – map out potential career paths (see the newly launched CITB http://www.goconstruct.org) and direct learners through ‘joined up’ training programmes. We still face an anti-apprenticeship bias from many schools but this appears be changing at last.
    As for the governments ‘desire to reinvigorate apprenticeships’ – we can only hope this translates into increased resources and not a dumbing down of our excellent quality standards in order to achieve the necessary ‘outputs’.

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