Quote:
Originally Posted by welshgit I applied for funding from my local council along with a start up grant to help me buy my essential testing equipment and pay to join a part p scheme. I also stated that I needed some essential hand tools and equipment to complete my job on a day to day basis.
Truth is that I already had alot of these items except my tester and part p registration. I was hoping for a cushion for lean times and to develop myself further with more courses i.e. C&G 2330 1&2.
Local council has informed me that they will not support me as I am not qualified!! 
I have passed a domestic installers course and have had 2391 training (hoping to sit exam later this year). I am operating as a domestic installer and work is just ticking over ok. Therefore I am a viable startup and feel that I am qualified for this. |
What the furk?? you sound like exactly the sort of voter that the much vaunted schemes from the Learning & Skills Council, Urban Renewal Funds, LEGI funding (Local Enterprise Growth Initiative) are directed towards?? Excuse the hell out of me but is there a skills shortage or isn't there?
Quote:
|
Apparently thier electricians say that my qualification means nothing!
|
Would be interesting to see their rejection letter. Am I missing something here? what the hell have "their electricians" got to do with funding decisions?
I'd be straight down the council house thumping the desk of the Director of Education and Skills or whatever job title he/she's appropriated to themselves.
Quote:
Am I going mad or are they correct? If they are correct I have just put my mortgage at risk!!!!?!!! |
No you're probably not going mad! Having to deal with the local govt. state meatgrinder is enough to drive anyone to a prescription for a broad based, robust anti-depressant. They are a shower of box ticking pencil pushers whose only field of competence is and will only ever be the cozy little piece of the buearacratic machine they've been set to mind. Chap I've been here and may be able to help.
First up a lot can depend on your postcode, does it lie within a designated "deprived area" my guess (from a quick google) is that it does.
from
http://www.biglotteryfund.org.uk/er_...ull_report.pdf (table12)
Quote:
Communities First area, Objective 1 area. In receipt of multi-million funding
9 wards in worst 10% in Wales, + a further 9 in worst 10-20%
|
From there start hitting your local equivalent of Chambers of Commerce, Learning and Skills Council, do the research on exactly what funding streams are available, find out who sits behind the big desk and bypass as far as poss all the wonks between you and them.
Try the Construction School at Neath/Port Talbot College
Welcome to Neath Port Talbot College : Faculties - Construction
they might have a route to funding support.
Quote:
Help please as my enthusiasm is waning! |
It's going to require some persistance mate, local govt. civil servants are expert at not taking ownership of a problem being content to pass you around six or seven departments trying to palm you off. Never expect their right hand to know what the left hand is pulling! Seriously these people would not last ten minutes on site or in the real world. The only way I've found of cutting through their B.S. is to amass an overwhelming body of evidence in your favour to the point that they can no longer deny the validity of your request without embarrassing themselves.
Good, good, keep it up mate; it's useful practice 'coz you'll find yourself doing a lot of it over the next few months if you decide to take them on and ask them to justify/explain themselves.
Quote:
A little more info.
I am a 30 yr old with a young family and a misspent youth who should have trained as a spark after school but instead went to university for nothing.
I wish I could go back and do an apprenticeship but that wont even touch my bills or mortgage.
|
...on that subject they might pull a stunt like trying to intimate that their "skill development program" are "targetted at the under 25s or school-leavers. In which case inform them of their responsibilities under The Employment Equality (Age) Regulations 2006. Two can play at that game!
Quote:
I know I am doing this the wrong way round and that it frustrates the true time served sparks out there but please its my only chance.
Welshgit
|
Forget what's gone before chap, we are continually regailed with tales of the legendary "flexibility of the UK labour market" and informed of the "need to retrain for the skills required to service the ever changing global market place" bo!!x, well call their bluff, get them to put their money where their mouth is!
Alongside that goes the need to invest in yourself as you seem to be doing. I don't think there's going to be any 'soft landings' this time around. What we're seeing here are the tremors of a rolling decline unless individuals take the responsibility to equip themselves with the skills they think they (and their kids) will find most useful to survival in the post oil, post easy-energy society that's stomping remorselessly into focus on the near horizon. Sorry to sound all apocolyptic but I just don't see an easy resolution to the euphamisticaly titled "credit crunch". The lack of credit is merely a symptom of far deeper and fundamental issues.
On the upside....
Sparks will always be needed in some form though no matter what shape the work place and wider society evolves (or devolves?) into.
Let me know how you get on fellah.
Guv.