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Heathrow Skills Taskforce seeking independent views on the airport's future talent strategy

Heathrow

6 min read Partner content

The Heathrow Skills Taskforce, chaired by Lord David Blunkett, has opened a six week, UK-wide online forum to gather independent views on the airport’s future education, employment and skills strategy.  


  • New online forum now open for six weeks to seek independent ideas on the skills and employment strategy for major UK infrastructure projects including Heathrow expansion
  • Feedback will shape the once-in-a-generation opportunity of up to 180,000 jobs and 10,000 apprenticeships to be created with expansion
  • Forum launched at the start of TUC conference so key union stakeholders can take part

The Heathrow Skills Taskforce, chaired by Lord David Blunkett, has opened a six week, UK-wide online forum to gather independent views on the airport’s future education, employment and skills strategy.  Launched to coincide with the start of the TUC Annual conference,  Heathrow has called for union members to continue their close working relationship with the airport by having their say. An expanded Heathrow could be the largest unionised workforce in Britain.

The 14-member strong Skills Taskforce, including a representative from the TUC, is looking for the best ways to capitalise on the once-in-a generation careers and skills opportunities to be created through Heathrow expansion. With as many as 100,000 of these jobs expected to be created outside of London and the south east, Heathrow wants to encourage the widest range of educational stakeholders and those with experience in building infrastructure across Britain to have their say.   

The Taskforce will use feedback from the online forum to help identify the best teaching, employment and career progression opportunities to make the airport a role model for social mobility and diversity.  To increase diversity and promote opportunity, the Taskforce will also be looking at ways of encouraging returners or those seeking new opportunities including older workers.  Good examples of best practice elsewhere will be particularly welcome.   Ideas will be incorporated into the Taskforce’s  final set of recommendations which will be given to Heathrow by the end of 2018.

Earlier this year, Lord Blunkett convened senior leaders in major infrastructure projects including Tideway, HS2, Crossrail and Hinkley Point to discuss the need for collaboration on skills and the co-ordination of timetables to ensure a steady jobs pipeline for generations of workers to come. In a joint response to the Government’s Green Paper “Building our Industrial Strategy”, the Skills Taskforce and other infrastructure projects have stressed the importance of this overarching skills strategy.  Coming ahead of what is to be period of uncertainty in which major infrastructure projects will provide crucial stability, the Taskforce and other infrastructure projects have called on the Government to ensure the right level of investment is in place to boost the UK construction workforce.  

The Rt Hon, Lord David Blunkett, Chair of the Heathrow Skills Taskforce and Former Secretary of State for Education and Employment, said:

“Heathrow has an important role to play in developing the talent needed now and for the success of future projects and enable Britain to become a world leader in infrastructure developments. The Taskforce have been working closely with Heathrow and other major infrastructure project groups, to share best practice and find ways to address fluctuations in labour supply and demand – but we need to cast the net wider, both geographically and in engaging SME’s.

We want to hear from those in the community and on the frontline who help to support our young people to transition successfully from education into sustained employment and a fulfilling career. It is only by working together that we can fully understand the challenges and opportunities that exist to deliver a lasting economic legacy for future generations.”

The Skills Forum builds on the five commitments the airport has already made with to the Unions. These include:

  1.        Delivering expansion to create up to 180,000 new jobs spread across the country, including 10,000 apprenticeships.
  2.        Providing high quality careers for local people, ensuring all our direct Heathrow employees earn London Living Wage
  3.        Supporting British industry by working with trade unions, UK steel producers and SMEs across the country
  4.        Meeting tough environmental and noise requirements, enforced by new independent regulators
  5.        Securing a lasting legacy for future generations, with the TUC represented on the new  Heathrow Skills Taskforce.

Paul Nowak, Deputy General Secretary of the TUC said:

“Unions are committed to working with Heathrow to put well paid, high-skill, sustainable jobs at the heart of the expansion programme. And we want to see the benefits of expansion spread right across the country. Expansion will help link up all the regions and nations of the UK to opportunities to trade across the globe. It will secure jobs in the UK steel industry. And it will help to train up Britain’s next generation of engineers and construction workers.”

Gail Cartmail, Assistant General Secretary (AGS) Unite, member of the TUC Executive Committee and General Council, and Skills Taskforce member said:

“The Heathrow Skills Taskforce has brought forward centre stage the scale of the challenge in meeting the skill demands to deliver major infrastructure projects. Pivotal is the role good quality ‘earn as you learn’ apprenticeships will play in shaping the UK’s future workforce and the role major projects play in ensuring delivery through their supply chains.”

Heathrow airport already supports one in five local jobs (22%), making the airport one of the largest single employment sites in the country. Heathrow expansion will deliver up to 77,000 additional local jobs, and create 5,000 new apprenticeships doubling the number that will be provided by the project to 10,000 by 2030

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