HRreview Header

Three Sector Skills Councils relicensed

-

Business Secretary Lord Mandelson has announced that three more Sector Skills Councils (SSCs) have been relicensed.

These are GO Skills, Financial Services Skills Council and the Skills for Care and Development Council.

Lord Mandelson said: “The government is committed to having a flexible skills system which serves the whole economy. Employers can be confident that these organisations have all been rigorously assessed and will offer employers the highest quality service in meeting their skills needs.

“Government Skills will continue to work closely with the UK Commission and Sector Skills Councils to improve the delivery of public services across the public sector.

“I am grateful to the work of the UK Commission and particularly to Charlie Mayfield for leading on this.”

Sector Skills Councils were established to enable employers to exert influence on the UK’s education and skills systems to ensure they meet their needs.

Go Skills, Financial Services Skills Council and Skills for Care and Development have each gone through an assessment process led by the UK Commission for Employment and Skills.

For the fashion and textiles sector, the UK Commission for Employment and Skills has received and accepted a proposal from Skillset to cover this workforce. Ministers have accepted the proposal with Skillset taking responsibility for the fashion and textiles sector from the start of April.

The relicensing process is overseen and managed by the UK Commission for Employment and Skills through a panel chaired by Charlie Mayfield, who is also chairman of the John Lewis Partnership. He said: “Sector Skills Councils are the principal mechanism by which employers can exert influence over the UK’s education, skills and training systems. As such, it is vitally important that they operate effectively.

“The relicensing process has been designed to ensure just this, and the announcement that a further three SSCs have reached the required standards is an endorsement of their effectiveness.

“This process also gives confidence to the government that each of these organisations is truly backed by its industry, has the support of employers and is properly equipped to identify the skills needs of its sector.”

Latest news

James Rowell: The human side of expenses – what employee behaviour reveals about modern work

If you want to understand how your people really work, look at their expenses. Not just the total sums, but the patterns.

Skills overhaul needed as 40% of job capabilities set to change by 2030

Forecasts suggest 40 percent of workplace skills could change by 2030, prompting calls for UK employers to prioritise adaptability.

Noisy and stuffy offices linked to lost productivity and retention concerns

UK employers are losing more than 330 million working hours each year due to office noise, poor air quality and inadequate workplace conditions.

Turning Workforce Data into Real Insight: A practical session for HR leaders

HR teams are being asked to deliver greater impact with fewer resources. This practical session is designed to help you move beyond instinct and start using workforce data to make faster, smarter decisions that drive real business results.
- Advertisement -

Bethany Cann of Specsavers

A working day balancing early talent strategy, university partnerships and family life at the international opticians retailer.

Workplace silence leaving staff afraid to raise mistakes

Almost half of UK workers feel unable to raise concerns or mistakes at work, with new research warning that workplace silence is damaging productivity.

Must read

Steve Herbert: Amazon’s term-time only working contracts: Is this the new flexible?

Retail giant Amazon has recently announced the introduction of term-time-only working contracts. Is this the next level for flexible working practices?

Joshua Wöhle: Why 73% of AI usage is still happening outside of work

OpenAI recently released the largest study of ChatGPT usage to date - 1.5 million conversations analysed. The headline? Less than 30% of usage is work-related.
- Advertisement -

You might also likeRELATED
Recommended to you