Apprenticeships to tackle skills shortage

January 29, 2008

In December of last year, Building magazine reported that a combined taskforce has been formed to double the number of construction apprenticeships to 14,000 by 2012.

Snappily titled the Cross-Industry Task Force on Apprenticeship Numbers, it hopes to encourage more employers to give apprentices a chance of a full qualification.

Not only is this an opportunity to begin to address the industry skills shortage, but could be integrated into programmes to employ people from communities in which we work.

On the theme of the skills shortage, the Guardian reported earlier this week that the government wants to see one person in five on an apprenticeship scheme by the end of the next decade. That’s up from one in 15 among 16 to18-year-olds at the moment.

Gordon Brown is hoping that more apprenticeships and other initiatives to get the unemployed into work will “help Britain to compete in…the new global skills race”.

Of interest to contractors involved in PPP/PFI, the government could start to consider a business’s apprenticeship record when awarding public procurement contracts.

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