More than 40,000 future builders, bricklayers, electricians, carpenters and plumbers are to be trained across the country by 2029 in a bid to foster homegrown talent.
The government hopes the £100m investment in ten colleges across England will reduce reliance on overseas tradespeople at a time when nearly one million young people are out of work.
Education secretary Bridget Phillipson said: “We need skilled workers to deliver the homes, schools and hospitals that communities across the country are crying out for.
“Construction technical excellence colleges will enable us to invest in people and give them the skills they need to break down barriers to opportunity in an industry which is essential to delivering growth through our plan for change.”
Exeter College is one of the ten educational organizations picked to offer the training. Principal John Laramy, who began his career in construction, said it was a privilege to be selected.
“We look forward to working with our college, stakeholder and employer partners across the region to turbo charge construction training,” he said.
Other places selected to be construction technical excellence establishments: Derby College Group, West Suffolk College, New City College in Greater London, City of Sunderland College, Wigan and Leigh College, North Kent College, Bedford College, Dudley College of Technology and Leeds College of Building.
They will operate on a ‘hub and spoke’ model, working with local training providers and employers to boost training standards and share expertise.
Colleges aim to get students ready for work
Fewer than half of further education learners who get a qualification go on to work in a relevant industry. The government hopes investment in these colleges will help to ensure students are ready for work when they complete their qualifications.
The building industry has stressed the importance of government departments and the Construction Industry Training Board, CITB, collaborating to ensure employer demand-led skill strategies.
National Federation of Builders, NFB, policy and market insight head Rico Wojtulewicz said: “Specialist colleges will not only train the tradespeople of tomorrow but serve as a reminder that university is not the only or best route into further education, learning or an amazing career.”
The NFB is pleased that the government has pledged more money for apprenticeships and recognized that SMEs train eight out of ten construction apprentices. Government statistics show the percentage of firms funding or offering training has fallen from 57 per cent in 2011 to 49 per cent in 2024.
“We will know if this strategy is beginning to work in 12 months when new projects begin and we find out whether SMEs are winning enough of a work pipeline to enable sufficient apprentices to be trained and ultimately retained,” said Mr Wojtulewicz.
Brokers Hank Zarihs Associates said development finance lenders wanted to see a more efficient and quicker planning process as this would be key to giving SMEs the confidence to take on apprentices.
The £100m for technical excellence colleges builds on the £625m, announced in March, to train up to 60,000 more skilled construction workers by 2029. This will pay for new foundation apprenticeships, skills bootcamps and industry placements for school leavers.
The National Homebuilding Council said the investment boosted the £100m they were ploughing into a national training programme funding 12 new multi-skill training hubs across the UK. The hubs offer immersive on-site learning for apprentices on key trades including bricklaying, groundworks and site carpentry.
The CITB has estimated that 61,000 new workers a year are needed if the government is to hit it star get of 1.5m new homes by 2029.
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