Tees Valley Skills Bootcamp brings together a powerful partnership to tackle construction skills shortage 

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A partnership between housing, industry and education leaders is helping tackle the construction skills shortage across the Tees Valley, as Thirteen Housing Group, RE:GEN North East and RE:GEN Academy deliver a Skills Bootcamp funded through the Tees Valley Combined Authority (TVCA).

Part of TVCA’s wider Skills Bootcamps programme, the initiative is designed to strengthen regional skills pipelines, support employers and create sustainable employment opportunities across the Tees Valley.

At the heart of the collaboration is Thirteen Housing Group, whose commitment ensures regeneration investment benefits the communities it serves. The current cohort of learners are residents from Thirteen communities, gaining practical construction skills and working towards employment in the sector.

Working closely with Thirteen as its leading regeneration partner, RE:GEN North East plays a key role in delivering housing improvements across the region. Through this partnership, regeneration is not only improving homes but also creating pathways into employment for local residents.

Supporting this ambition, RE:GEN Academy operates alongside RE:GEN North East as a connected but distinct organisation, focused on turning social value commitments into lasting outcomes through skills, training and employment.

RE:GEN Academy was founded on a simple principle: skills provision only works when it is employer-led. Acting on this early, RE:GEN have so far invested over £500,000 to establish the Academy, ensuring training is shaped by real jobs, real demand and real opportunity.

This approach is already delivering considerable results. Across RE:GEN Academy programmes, 74% of learners progress into employment, demonstrating the impact of connecting training to live industry need.

Following this success of delivery across the North East, the Academy is now expanding its employer-led model into the Tees Valley, working with partners to replicate this success and support local workforce development.

Delivered through Education Training Collective, the Skills Bootcamp brings together partners from across the construction supply chain, including manufacturers Wienerberger / Sandtoft and Dakea Windows, as well as employer partners Barclays Roofing and RE:GEN Green.

During the most recent practical workshop, learners gained hands-on experience using a mobile roofing rig, learning installation techniques and working with industry materials, building the practical, site-ready skills needed to move directly into employment.

The initiative highlights how housing providers, contractors, manufacturers and training partners can work together to tackle one of the sector’s most pressing challenges: attracting and developing the next generation of skilled workers.

 

Cheryl Campbell, Academy Director at RE:GEN Academy, said:

“This programme demonstrates the real power of partnership. With the support of the Tees Valley Combined Authority Skills Bootcamp programme and our collaboration with Thirteen Housing Group and industry partners, we’re creating genuine opportunities for local people.

What makes RE:GEN Academy different from traditional training providers is that we are employer-led. Because of RE:GEN’s strong and longstanding partnerships with housing providers like Thirteen, we have clear visibility of the work ahead and the skills needed to deliver it.

RE:GEN North East is delivering regeneration on the ground, and RE:GEN Academy ensures that investment leaves a lasting legacy, connecting people from those communities to the training, skills and sustainable careers that regeneration creates.

Ultimately, this is about more than training. It’s about creating pathways into long-term employment and making sure the people living in these communities can benefit directly from the investment happening around them.”

 

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The programme also supports wider regional priorities, including the Tees Valley Local Skills Improvement Plan and the Government’s wider ambition to strengthen skills pipelines across key industries.

By combining public investment from Tees Valley Combined Authority with employer-led regeneration and industry collaboration, the Skills Bootcamp shows how partnership working can build the skilled workforce needed for the region’s future homes, while creating real, lasting opportunities for local communities.

Tees Valley Mayor Ben Houchen said: “We’re all focused on making sure people across Teesside, Darlington and Hartlepool can access the opportunities being created.

“This is why our Skills Bootcamps are connecting local people with the training and employers they need to move straight into work, while helping businesses find the skilled workforce they’re crying out for.

“It’s good to see this bootcamp delivering results – jobs. By backing partnerships like this, and listening carefully to what employers really need, we’re tackling a construction skills shortage in a practical way and making sure local people are first in line for jobs being created.”

Cllr Lisa Evans, TVCA Cabinet Member for Education, Employment and Skills and Leader of Stockton-on-Tees Borough Council, said: “Skills Bootcamps play an important role in how we respond to the needs of our employers while opening up opportunities for more residents.

“This programme shows how an employer-led approach can deliver, with training shaped around the skills in demand and offering clear routes into work.

“By working with Thirteen and RE:GEN, we’re backing them to make sure people can develop the skills they need to progress, while supporting the construction sector with what it needs to deliver vital projects across the Tees Valley in the years to come.”