Rotorua Daily Post

Hunger to succeed

New city centre cafe plans to revitalise the hospitalit­y industry, boost skills and help secure jobs

- Zoe Hunter

RWe want to be that connection

between recruitmen­t and revitalisa­tion of the industry

Bart Vosse, Toi Ohomai business design and

service industries faculty dean

otorua’s newest inner-city cafe hopes to help revitalise a hospitalit­y industry grappling with a nationwide staffing “crisis”. The Junction on Fenton — inside Fenton St’s isite building — will officially open to the public on Monday.

The Toi Ohomai and Te Pu¯ kengaled project, supported by Rotorua Lakes Council, will offer real-life training opportunit­ies for the next generation of hospitalit­y workers.

The project also hopes to help recruit and retain more people in an industry that has struggled with border closures and finding staff.

It comes as the number of enrolments in hospitalit­y courses at its Tauranga and Rotorua campuses continues to decline since the 2020 Covid-19 outbreak.

Toi Ohomai business design and service industries faculty dean Bart Vosse said The Junction on Fenton was not a training cafe but a full commercial business with the philosophy of showcasing the industry and supporting its students.

It was hoped that those in the industry would visit the cafe, witness the up-and-coming talent and eventually offer them a job after they graduate, Vosse said.

“We want to be that connection between recruitmen­t and revitalisa­tion of the industry.”

Vosse said the project had been four years in the making and followed discussion­s with industry leaders who wanted to raise standards across the hospitalit­y industry.

Feedback indicated graduates needed to be more employment­ready for the fast-paced world of commercial hospitalit­y, he said.

The new cafe will give students

from each of its campuses in Rotorua, Taupo¯, Tauranga, Tokoroa and Whakata¯ne a realistic, hands-on learning experience.

Junior staff will be able to complete industry apprentice­ships at the cafe, while Toi Ohomai students will gain work experience and training as part of their course. It will be managed and operated by experience­d senior staff.

Vosse said there had been a drop in domestic learners over the years and Covid-19 border closures meant there had been a significan­t reduction in migrants arriving in New Zealand to study hospitalit­y.

The industry needed more hospitalit­y staff than ever, he said.

“There is a crisis in hospitalit­y for staffing . . . ”

The polytechni­c was getting 15 to 20 calls a day from hospitalit­y owners as far as Auckland looking for staff, he said.

“The industry is dire. They have come out of two of their hardest business years. The community is feeling like a career in this industry is no longer viable. But we need hospitalit­y to flourish.”

The cafe will be able to showcase to hospitalit­y students what the industry offered, how vibrant it was, and the opportunit­ies within it, Vosse said.

“Because when the borders open up again . . . we need to show a career in hospitalit­y is a good choice.

“This is how we can revitalise the workforce.”

The council owns the isite building. In March 2021, it agreed to add an outdoor area to the site to ensure the successful establishm­ent of the cafe and the realisatio­n of associated benefits to the district and community.

District developmen­t deputy chief executive Jean-paul Gaston said partnering with Toi Ohomai was a great opportunit­y to “further embed council’s commitment to a thriving inner city by helping to activate our historic isite building and Jean Batten Square”.

“This is an exciting venture and I look forward to seeing the cafe used as a training facility to support our local hospitalit­y sector and the retention of local students in the long term.”

Toi Ohomai offers courses, including certificat­es and diplomas, in baking, cookery, food and beverage, and the art of coffee and barista services.

There were 19 students enrolled at its Mokoia campus in Rotorua, down from 23 in 2021 and 33 in 2020.

In Tauranga, there were 38 students enrolled at its Windemere campus. There were 36 students in 2021 and 50 in 2020.

Restaurant Associatio­n of New Zealand chief executive Marisa Bidois

said the cafe was a great initiative and a fantastic opportunit­y for people in the region looking to enter the industry.

“Our staff shortages are well documented and while we are working hard in partnershi­p with the Ministry of Social Developmen­t on training through our Hospostart and Springboar­d programmes, the reality is that we also need more public-private partnershi­ps like this to train people to be work ready.”

Bidois said to help create long-term changes, it has a road map guiding it towards the industry’s revival and to a stronger, more resilient industry.

“We know that no organisati­on can implement change alone, so we are engaging with key industry stakeholde­rs, including industry operators, business organisati­ons, training providers, unions, regional tourism organisati­ons and more, as well as a wider stakeholde­r network that includes ministers and govern

ment department­s.

“We need the support of others if we want to build a hospitalit­y sector that is truly fit for the future.”

Meanwhile, Hospitalit­y New Zealand has announced an “Emerging Leaders Programme”, which aims to engage workers as soon as they enter the industry and give them ready access to skills developmen­t, career pathways and progressio­n.

The objective is to provide current and future supervisor­s and managers

with insights, informatio­n, and ideas on how to develop their leadership skills. The courses will be delivered online.

Hospitalit­y NZ has partnered with renowned hospitalit­y expert Shane Green to bring the programme to the industry.

Chief executive Julie White said the industry needed people who were prepared for the future, valued for their skills, confident, engaged in their work and invested in remaining

in the industry.

“Our industry is renowned for training people on the job, and operators do a great job of that with the support of our online courses, and this takes it a step further.

“With huge skills shortages across the industry, and with limits on skilled immigrants, we need to increase the skills of those who want to make a career in this great industry, and the Emerging Leaders Programme is aimed at doing that.”

White said the programme format allowed teams to upskill together and will embed a culture of developmen­t and excellence.

“It is an exciting programme that I believe will go a long way to making our industry more resilient.

“It is an investment in the future of hospitalit­y’s people.”

From hospitalit­y students to teachers

Former Toi Ohomai students Alok Sharma and Bipin Scaria are serving up their skills and knowledge for the next generation of hospitalit­y workers.

The 33-year-olds graduated from the Waiariki Institute of Technology, now Toi Ohomai, and had returned to help run the new cafe.

Sharma will be the cafe manager and Bipin the head chef.

Sharma said it was a “dream come true” to be working for the industry he was once a student in and helping to train the next generation of hospitalit­y workers.

“It is a trade people should consider.”

He said he hoped to pass on the top customer service skills he had learned to the up-and-coming students.

Bipin said it was a good opportunit­y for students to learn and train under expert guidance and feel supported in a fast-paced environmen­t.

“I will also be encouragin­g aspiring chefs to experiment with food and create their own dishes.”

Daeshance Cooke was one of those aspiring chefs.

The culinary student was only months into his training and could not wait to show what he was made of.

“With food, it is about showing a part of yourself, your culture on a plate.”

The 18-year-old said he hoped to one day become a fine dining chef and travel the world with his food and flavours.

Cooke said he liked the adrenaline rush of a busy kitchen and the “passion that is put into food”.

He said he liked the new cafe as it would give students the opportunit­y to train with the full support of tutors on site.

“It is a free,

...weneedto show a career in hospitalit­y is a good choice.

Bart Vosse, Toi Ohomai business design and

service industries faculty dean

real-life experience.”

 ?? Photo / Andrew Warner ?? Toi Ohomai student Daeshance Cooke, 18, head chef Bipin Scaria, 33, faculty dean Bart Vosse, and cafe manager Alok Sharma, 33.
Photo / Andrew Warner Toi Ohomai student Daeshance Cooke, 18, head chef Bipin Scaria, 33, faculty dean Bart Vosse, and cafe manager Alok Sharma, 33.
 ?? ??
 ?? ?? Students are busy perfecting Tuscan-inspired meals for the awards.
Students are busy perfecting Tuscan-inspired meals for the awards.
 ?? Photo / Andrew Warner ?? Alok Sharma, 33, will be the cafe manager at The Junction on Fenton.
Photo / Andrew Warner Alok Sharma, 33, will be the cafe manager at The Junction on Fenton.
 ?? ?? Toi Ohomai business design and service industries faculty dean Bart Vosse.
Toi Ohomai business design and service industries faculty dean Bart Vosse.
 ?? ?? Toi Ohomai student Daeshance Cooke, 18, and head chef Bipin Scaria, 33.
Toi Ohomai student Daeshance Cooke, 18, and head chef Bipin Scaria, 33.

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