The Major Contractors Group鈥檚 strategy for giving the British construction industry a properly trained and regulated workforce has been achieved. Well, almost ...
New year鈥檚 resolutions 鈥 we all make them and most of us break them, but there鈥檚 one I鈥檓 pleased to report that鈥檚 holding up well. The Major Contractor鈥檚 Group (MCG) ruled last year that from 1 January 2007, everyone working on its sites had to have a skills card.
The MCG鈥檚 ambition is to employ a fully qualified workforce, so to see how close we are to that goal, we undertook an audit of all our sites on 1 February. That involved more than 600 locations across the UK and it showed that 86% of the people working there on that day did indeed have an appropriate skills card.
A good result? I think so, but inevitably there will be the knockers who point to the 13.9% who didn鈥檛 comply. There are also the critics who attacked the introduction of the basic skills card, saying we lowered our sights to be a carded, rather than a qualified, workforce.
It鈥檚 easy to stand on the sidelines and take a swipe at this figure but I believe the whole supply chain should be proud of it. Together we have achieved a seismic shift within the industry and we鈥檙e now a lot closer to mission accomplished than the doubters鈥 mission impossible.
And the pace of that change is picking up. Between October 2006 and February 2007, the take-up of skills cards rose by 6.1%, which is far and away the biggest increase since we began auditing our performance in January 2002. The figure for MCG direct employees holding an appropriate card was almost 89%, and nearly 85% among our subcontractors.
This is a tremendous result for our supply chain partners. Overall they increased compliance by 7.5% and in some trades by well over 10%. That truly reflects their commitment to a common cause.
Due credit for this success should also go to CSCS and CITB鈥揅onstructionSkills, which put two important measures into place to simplify and speed up the whole process of obtaining skills cards 鈥 the Skills Direct one-stop service and the new basic skills card, which is aimed at 14 trades and pitched at NVQ level 1.
We鈥檙e now a lot closer to mission accomplished than we are to the doubters鈥 mission impossible
Nor are we resting on our laurels. We certainly intend to tackle the errant few that did not have valid cards on 1 February. In this our clients are increasingly helping us. Most major private sector clients now demand that workers on their projects carry cards and the Olympic Delivery Authority is also insisting on CSCS cards or their equivalent. That鈥檚 a big step in the right direction and I hope it will be a spur to other parts of the public sector.
But if we are to make the most of these opportunities, our workforce must be more than card carriers; it must be qualified, too. There needs to be a similar effort and impetus given to vocational training and skills development, encouraging entrants to attain NVQs and motivating employers to offer proper training and apprenticeships.
In this respect, the government is setting a good example with its recently launched skills academies, the first of which is now up and running on the Bovis Lend Lease site at Broadgate Tower in the City of London. These academies are designed to give entrants to the industry a good grounding in their chosen trade and practical advice and instruction on working safely.
Attracting more recruits is vital to our future success, and initiatives like these are needed to persuade young people that construction does offer an attractive, safe and well-paid career. Two 鈥渘ot for profit鈥 organisations that are already doing that to good effect are the Prince鈥檚 Trust and Be Onsite. Both are helping to place disadvantaged and long-term unemployed people with sympathetic subcontractors and suppliers who are willing and able to provide the training that will give them a proper start in the industry.
In closing, I must make some mention of the Olympics and the outcry that鈥檚 surrounding the budget for the Games. In the grand scheme of government spending, the whole Olympic project 鈥 and let鈥檚 not forget, it鈥檚 also a catalyst for the long overdue regeneration of a blighted quarter of our capital city 鈥 is a flea bite.
So, instead of joining in the accusations and the angst, let鈥檚 grab this opportunity to make the Games an international showcase for our industry and a lasting legacy to the skills and abilities of a new generation of contract managers and craftsmen 鈥 all of them skills card carriers too!
Postscript
John Spanswick is chairman of the Major Contractors Group
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