£4.5m training centre opens doors to engineering employers

A new £4.5m apprentice training centre in Hull has opened its doors to engineering firms across Yorkshire and the Humber.

Maintenance team leaders from Reckitt Benckiser (RB) visited the facility to see how their new recruits are progressing at the new home of Humberside Engineering Training Centre (HETA).

Delegates from the Bradbury Group in Scunthorpe revealed that they were looking in HETA’s shop window for new apprentices to support their expansion drive.

In total, around 100 visitors including representatives from the Humber LEP and Hull City Council’s economic regeneration team toured the centre in Dansom Lane South.

Iain Elliott, HETA’s chief executive, said: “This event is about giving employers an opportunity to see the new site and the improvements we have made. You will see dramatic change to the facilities. There’s no comparison. It’s also a chance to see the improvements that we have made to the learning experience.

“We have about 85 apprentices and trainees in Hull this year and that’s a good start. We are privileged to do this job because we see them coming in a bit green and shy and lacking confidence and they really progress during this first year as we give them those technical skills and employability skills.”

HETA, which also operates training centres at Stallingborough and at Foxhills in Scunthorpe, relocated to the new headquarters from Copenhagen Road on Hull’s Sutton Fields Industrial Estate.

RB has two apprentices at the new site with five more already working at its nearby science and innovation centre and others pursuing degree courses. HETA also trains some of the company’s adult learners.

Dean Richmond, one of the RB delegates, said: “It’s good to come here and see the standards that HETA has now. It’s a different level compared to the previous facilities and all the apprentices have only good things to say about HETA in terms of contact time and quality of learning.”

Aimee Burman, HR and payroll technician at Bradbury Group, said the company, which provides physical security solutions, continues to expand having grown from 10 people when it started in 1992 to around 190 now.

She said: “We have had apprentices from HETA before and that went really well. They are still with us, and we are looking at taking more as we expand. Our apprentices came through HETA’s Scunthorpe division but we wanted to see the new Hull site and it’s an impressive facility.”

Malcolm Joslin, chair of HETA, highlighted how the company is now welcoming its largest intake of female apprentices, with 19 joining last month.

He said: “It’s something we always seek to remember – providing the people that you need with the right engineering skills but also with broader people and employability skills.

“Our old site reached capacity and was not fit for the future. With this investment HETA is reflecting a confidence and belief in the economy of the Humber that is shared by organisations including the LEP and the local authorities.

“There are some incredible opportunities for these young people to provide the engineering skills and the talent that we need for the future. HETA is now set up to support them throughout their careers as we offer training packages to go from engineering apprenticeships through higher and further education into a number of adult engineering courses. Getting core engineering skills and then building and adapting those skills for whatever the future holds.”

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