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Games boost for apprenticeships | Games boost for apprenticeships |
(about 1 hour later) | |
All school leavers in Glasgow are to be offered an apprenticeship by the city council next year. | All school leavers in Glasgow are to be offered an apprenticeship by the city council next year. |
It is hoped that about 2,500 youngsters will take up the opportunity of training in trades like plumbing and joinery. | |
Financial assistance will be given to businesses to take on trainees. | Financial assistance will be given to businesses to take on trainees. |
The move is being made possible by the construction boom from the 2014 Commonwealth Games, which are to be held in the city. | The move is being made possible by the construction boom from the 2014 Commonwealth Games, which are to be held in the city. |
The council hopes the move, the first of its kind in Scotland, will help to address the country's skills shortage. | |
Boosting the number of construction trade apprenticeships in the city will be a massive legacy for the city's economy Steven PurcellGlasgow City Council leader | |
Council leader Steven Purcell said more pupils could benefit from similar schemes in future years. The £30m cost will be met by the council's budget for next year. | |
Mr Purcell told BBC Scotland's Politics Show: "This is specifically related to the Commonwealth Games but there will be other opportunities such as the M74 extension and the continued school building programme in Glasgow. | |
"So it is the first of what I hope will be many positive announcements in the run-up to the Commonwealth Games. | |
"The Commonwealth Games will come and they will go, but it will mean nothing to the people of Glasgow if there is not a genuine legacy. | |
"Boosting the number of construction trade apprenticeships in the city will be a massive legacy for the city's economy." | |
'Radical scheme' | |
Pupils will need to pass a basic practical assessment before they will be able to begin an apprenticeship. | |
Those who do not meet the required standard will be given extra tuition on literacy and numeric skills to help them meet the entry requirement. | |
Willie Docherty, managing director of construction firm City Building, said: "There's tremendous skill shortages, not just in construction but in the utility and infrastructure industries. | |
"I believe this is the most radical scheme ever in terms of training, in terms of jobs, that I have heard of anywhere. | |
"This is going to, if you like, blow people's minds. It is going to say to every single pupil 'you have got a future in Glasgow' and I don't think any other authority can say that." |
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