Runcorn & Widnes Weekly News

Sci-Tech out to bring local people aboard

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EAST Runcorn MP Mike Amesbury supports the ambition for more young people in Halton to join a world-class science and innovation campus on their doorstep.

Sci-Tech Daresbury is home to around 1,600 employees and nearly 150 high tech companies, with huge expansion plans in the pipeline.

As a partner in the campus, The Science and Technology Facilities Council (STFC), part of UK Research and Innovation, is keen to attract more local people to work there by improving engagement with nearby schools.

STFC, which itself employs 500 people at the on-site Daresbury Laboratory, says about 10% of the current campus workforce is from Halton.

Mr Amesbury, who recently visited the site within his Weaver Vale constituen­cy, said: “I was pleased to learn there is an ambition to do more in persuading local young people to consider a career at Sci-Tech Daresbury.”

“And I was delighted to hear STFC talk about the continued success of its apprentice­ship scheme, having met some of the young people on previous visits.”

The Labour MP is proud that the original Daresbury Nuclear Physics Laboratory, which led to the developmen­t of Sci-Tech Daresbury, was officially opened by then Prime Minister Harold Wilson in 1967.

He added: “What is going on at Daresbury is of global significan­ce. For example, supercompu­ters and artificial intelligen­ce at the Hartree Centre are driving progress across a range of sectors including green technology and healthcare by drawing on massive databases of informatio­n.

“The site’s long history with particle accelerato­rs has been helping to develop new cancer therapies that target malignant cells more effectivel­y with less collateral damage to healthy cells.

“And as part of the European Space Agency Business Incubation Centre, Daresbury has helped incubate more than 100 companies over 10 years.

“This is world-leading science in action at a site that could eventually employ thousands of people in highskill jobs.”

The MP promised to lobby for improved public transport to the site, to help raise the profile of Sci-Tech Daresbury’s work and to champion the cause for better recruitmen­t and retention in the science sector.

Paul Vernon, executive director of business and innovation for STFC and head of Daresbury Laboratory, said: “Daresbury Laboratory is the national laboratory in the north and is an important part of the Liverpool City Region and Halton landscape.

“We are always striving to help the local community in bringing profile and by providing employment opportunit­ies for our residents. I’m personally passionate about encouragin­g local young people to pursue science as a career so that we can build our future workforce from local communitie­s.

“I welcome the continued interest and support from Mike and am looking forward to working more closely with him to increase our impact on the local and regional economy.”

The MP also met trade union representa­tives Dr Lee Jones and Mark Hancock, chair and vice-chair of the Daresbury section of Prospect, who both work for STFC.

Lee said: “The laboratory is the jewel in the crown of the region’s scientific infrastruc­ture, and it is a matter of record that it is cheaper to do science and business here than in other areas of the country. We have space to expand, and a pool of scientific and technical staff ready to engage in new projects.”

 ?? ?? ● Far left, Mike Amesbury MP with, left to right, research scientist Dr Lee Jones and control systems engineer Mark Hancock – on site union reps – together with Paul Vernon, executive director of Business and Innovation for STFC and head of Daresbury Laboratory
● Far left, Mike Amesbury MP with, left to right, research scientist Dr Lee Jones and control systems engineer Mark Hancock – on site union reps – together with Paul Vernon, executive director of Business and Innovation for STFC and head of Daresbury Laboratory

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