The Post

Putting numbers on constructi­on’s needs

- Catherine Harris

Work is under way to get a better picture of the number of constructi­on and infrastruc­ture workers needed over next 15 years.

The project will forecast workforce demand to cover residentia­l and commercial constructi­on as well as civil infrastruc­ture like roading, hospitals and schools.

Greg Durkin, the Building and Constructi­on Industry Training Organisati­on’s (BCITO) interim chief executive, said infrastruc­ture was an integral part of the post-Covid-19 recovery.

‘‘The brief is to determine the workforce needs of the entire constructi­on sector, not just the people ‘on the tools’.

‘‘We’ll be looking at all aspects of the constructi­on workforce, and the skills required from the drawing board to the building site including architects, environmen­tal consultant­s, engineers planners, surveyors.’’

Before Covid, constructi­on consultant Rider Levett Bucknall was projecting a looming shortage of about 57,600 workers.

And in September, a survey by recruiter Hays showed most constructi­on companies were finding it easy to find entry-level workers, and leading hands, foremen, health and safety managers and and site engineers were in reasonable supply.

But nearly 70 per cent of firms were finding it difficult to recruit senior managers, and at least half were having difficulty attracting project managers, constructi­on managers, estimators, quantity surveyors, site managers and project engineers.

The new forecastin­g work being done by BCITO and other agencies builds on one done for Otago, which is enjoying a building boom.

More than 120 major constructi­on projects are earmarked for the region, and the report found that between 1500 and 2500 extra workers would be needed at any point in time in the next five years.

 ??  ?? North Shore apprentice builder Haylee Lemon. There has been huge uptake in apprentice­s since the Government gave the sector a boost.
North Shore apprentice builder Haylee Lemon. There has been huge uptake in apprentice­s since the Government gave the sector a boost.

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