The New Zealand Herald

Greg Lowe, Beca

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Predicting start times for design work on large projects is an ongoing challenge. Across many sectors there is a long delay from being advised of bidding success, to then getting contracts in place and work starting. This can leave people intended for projects sitting “on the bench” for longer than needed.

With low unemployme­nt and a need to bring more resources into the sector to ensure projects get to constructi­on as early as possible, staff capability growth is key. We focus heavily on graduate recruitmen­t, staff developmen­t and attracting Kiwis back to New Zealand, but longer term this won’t be enough. We will need more skilled labour from offshore to augment staff developmen­t here.

Border restrictio­ns are still a challenge with high demand on managed isolation and quarantine. We have three main challenges — getting overseas Kiwis we have recruited a confirmed place in MIQ, getting critical workers needed for projects who are not Kiwis through MIQ, and getting a plan in place for our people who are needed on site on our overseas projects.

Overseas sites have considerab­le restrictio­ns in place and it’s tough work, meaning people want to know they can get home for a break. This is important because this is export services revenue for NZ — we do work here on overseas projects, then need to send Kiwis overseas to the site for implementa­tion. This generates export revenue, which is currently on hold. We need a way to book people into MIQ say six months out so our staff have the confidence to go on overseas assignment­s.

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