News

Construction should view ageing population as an opportunity, says CIOB

Story for CM? Get in touch via email: [email protected]

Comments

  1. This is a great read. I’m new to HR and the construction industry – my first 2 clients are small developers – I think it’s interesting and diverse. I’m also nearly 50 and started my business because I felt unemployable. I’m proud to have become a Construction Ambassador – I’d welcome the opportunity to help builders demonstrate their skills and be recognised – apprentices can only learn from those already having the experience they need – collaboration is key.

  2. This has been a concern for some time on the sites, but no one seems to want to lift their head out of the sand and acknowledge it. I am currently a tutor in my local college lecturing (full time served Joiner on sites) on building trades, I personally see the academic level of student very weak.
    The old chestnut the Government are to blame but I feel strongly in this case that they are, students have been pushed towards higher academic studies and trades are below them, hence place them in a trade out of the way for a period till they get benefits. This has resulted in the trend of poor apprentices we put out today and resulting in no young apprentices in the trades.

  3. A number of useful recommendations in this report, but the nub of the difficulty comes down to identifying the right competence mix required for unknown future requirements. Dynamic Knowledge has been working on this for 15+ years and now has a tool that members, firms & professional bodies can use to inform their own resource planning. Anyone interested in finding out more, do get in touch.

  4. I’m sure that the reliance on asking for qualified staff and workers to have to keep re-applying for the like of CSCS ID cards and various alphabet soup ‘qualifications?’; When the cards expire an experienced worker then has to consider whether to pay for annother card for getting back into employment. It probably is not worth the hastle nor the fifty or so quid, unless a job is already offered.

  5. There is absolutely no need for meaningless cards as proof of competency. They prove nothing. If the CSCS card scheme were a private company it would be considered a scam. I am a 60 yr old brickie. My card has expired. To renew my card I am told I must now hold a Skilled worker card. I have to send in my qualifications, plus payment, and the card will be issued. My problem is that I have no qualifications, apart from 43 years experience from when I was site trained by a COMPETENT bricklayer. I am told I can’t obtain a card but must be assessed either in a college or possibly on site. For the pleasure of this insult I will also have to pay around £700 for the privilege. It is a sick joke and indicative of the society in which we now live. A society which deems a worthless card or piece of paper to be more valuable than a lifetimes experience. Why is everyone shocked that we have a shortage of skills in our industries. The likes of myself in construction, be they brickies, plumbers, joiners etc, came into the industry because we were’nt that good at school. Why then would you put them back in a classroom to learn their trade. On the job experience is the ONLY way to learn your skills. If I were to apply for this card it would last at best 5 years, WHY ? The answer ?, to steal more cash off you in order to employ more box tickers. The Health and Safety industry will argue that if it saves ONE life then its worth it. The trouble is it has changed nothing. Major scaffoldings still collapse, people still fall off ladders, who is incompetent then, the scaffolder or the Safety officer who inspects it. The truth is that the HSE have interfered so much that most workers don’t listen to site inductions or tool box talks because they are sick and tired of being spoken down to by tinpot nobodies in bright yellow jackets who have no knowledge and produce absolutely nothing. People will always do stupid things and the more you take away their ability to think for themselves, the more accidents they will have. On a job I attended the other day there were 7 people in the site offices punching away on their laptops, and fewer than that actually producing out on site. The company was working for the council who of course have to be seen to be conforming. This is madness and I would love to think it can’t continue, but I’m not holding my breath.
    Will I apply for the new card ? Not if I can secure enough work for myself and my team with builders who still have a modicum of common sense. If there are enough of us who will stand up and fight this nonsense, please let me know and maybe we could lobby Parliament. After all, there is no point bleating about a shortage of experienced men if you are forcing them out with overbearing nannying. I know there are hundreds of thousands like myself who share my thoughts on this. Its about time we stood up for ourselves and returned to sanity.

  6. Thank you Phil Dews, at last some sense to read on this forum. Our industry should be proud to offer the simple chance to work for those who are not academic. In my 52 years in the industry the greatest pleasure was to see people develop and improve where no other industry gave them a chance. Some of the roughest diamonds became great leaders and achievers. The card schemes need to be overhauled and the onus placed back with the employer to take care of his workforce with variable approaches to suit the infinite number of choices that will turn up at the gate looking for a job. BTW no employer would train me in the new technologies at 60+ as they could not see the investment “paying back”.

    Roger Blackmore-Squires (Blackjack)

  7. Brilliant Phil I agree

  8. Very eloquently and persuasively put by Phil Dews. He has my wholehearted concurrence. Everyone in the ‘business end’ of the industry knows that the skill quality of the up and coming generation (for many years now) bears no comparison (through no fault of theirs – but the fault of the bureaucrats) to the skill quality of the 50-60 year old lifetime tradesman (and probably professionals also, who took degrees when the content warranted a degree being awarded).

  9. To Penelope McNeile, I would love to be learn more about Dynamic Knowledge. Please contact me on the following address, [email protected]

    Thanks Adrian

    I cant leave without mentioning Phil Dews, Sir you are the last of a dying breed, unfortunately we have no one like you in construction today. I take my hat off to you.

Comments are closed.

Latest articles in News