Government joins employers and training providers in praising skills development in Hull and East Yorkshire

16/07/2025
The body set up to tackle skills shortages in Hull and East Yorkshire by bringing together employers and training providers has been praised by partners after publishing its latest report.
The Local Skills
Improvement Plan (HEY LSIP) earned plaudits from the government for its “leadership
and commitment” in helping to ensure that learners and businesses “have the
skills they need to thrive”.
Employers and training providers told of the value of the project in a video produced to help build more partnerships - HEYLSIP YouTube. They also updated in person at the latest HEY LSIP quarterly forum, hosted by INEOS Acetyls at Saltend Chemicals Park.
HEY LSIP was formed
in September 2022 under the leadership of the Hull & Humber Chamber of
Commerce as the Employer Representative Body (ERB) working closely with
businesses, training providers and local authorities and paving the way to
support skills development with the new Hull and East Yorkshire Combined
Authority.
In delivering her
annual progress report for 2024-25 to the Department for Education, HEY LSIP
Project Lead Hannah Crookes highlighted progress on a number of fronts and
notably with the Local Skills Improvement Fund (LSIF), which was available
until March 2025 to help the development and implementation of cutting-edge
training solutions to support future skills needs.
Hannah said: “The LSIF
over-achieved on the majority of its key performance indicators, and has been a
game-changer in enhancing the knowledge of the FE workforce, allowing learners
access to updated technologies, and creating opportunities for further provider
and employer collaboration.”
Hannah reported that collaboration
between LSIPs nationwide has grown, with the result an increased sharing of
best practice and exploring new opportunities.
In Hull and East
Yorkshire, partners are deriving direct benefits from the LSIP’s programme of quarterly
forums and its series of working groups specific to the target sectors of construction,
engineering construction, manufacturing, agri-skills and health and social
care.
Hannah said:
“Training providers and employers have been responding to the LSIP and
delivering their own initiatives, for example encouraging more staff to have
days in industry.
“During the last year
we’ve attracted around 300 delegates to our forums and representatives of more
than 100 businesses, public sector organisations, voluntary and community
sector organisations and providers to our working groups.
“The LSIP website enables
us to respond to priorities across all our themes, demonstrating how we are
listening to business and young people by providing a resource they requested
to better support their understanding of provision, funding and opportunities
available in our region.
“The LSIP team has
been invited to over 40 external groups and is recognised as a conduit between
schools and colleges and other stakeholders. We have also used our networks to
provide input into local strategy and framework development.”
In the video which
has been posted on the HEY LSIP web site various stakeholders talk about the
benefits which they have experienced as a result of the partnership.
Rob Fergie, Site
Manager at INEOS Acetyls, said: “The challenge that faces all of us is keeping
the right people and ensuring we have a pipeline of the right people coming
into our business. A number of businesses working together with the LSIP can
help us give the right emphasis to local, regional and national government.”
Viki Foster, Careers
Lead at Withernsea High School, said: “The LSIP has been really beneficial for
us as a school to see the wider picture and see what’s going on and also to
make those links with the different businesses.”
Iain Elliott, CEO at
Humberside Engineering Training Association (HETA), said: “These forums are
vital. They are really, really useful because the opportunity to network with
people is incredibly valuable. People are interested in what we are doing and
we are always happy to hear what the employers want.”
Jamie Green of TEC
Partnership told how his organisation, which operates at eight locations from
Scarborough to Skegness, has invested around £1.2m of LSIF investment in seven
projects across the region.
Hannah added: “It’s
clear that the LSIP, backed by investment as part of the LSIF, is enabling the
development and implementation of cutting-edge training solutions to support
future skills needs across the Hull and East Yorkshire region."
Skills Minister
Jacqui Smith said: “I am pleased to see the progress being made to bring
these Local Skills Improvement Plans to life.
“We remain committed
to the LSIP model as part of our Plan for Change, and have strengthened the
role that Mayors and Strategic Authorities will play in identifying and
addressing the local skills issues in the plans.
“Skills England
will work hand-in-hand with businesses, education providers, Mayors and
Strategic Authorities, unions, and other bodies to tackle skills shortages, co-
creating solutions to ensure more opportunities for young people and existing
workers wherever they are based in the country.”
Sarah Maclean and
Tessa Griffiths, job share CEOs of Skills England, said: "We congratulate
every ERB and their partners for their leadership and commitment to delivering
these progress reports. This key work is helping to ensure that
learners and businesses across England have the skills they need to
thrive.”
[Photo caption: From left, Rob Fergie of INEOS Acetyls, Rod Chambers of HEY LSIP, Edwin Turay of Barclays, Jamie Green of TEC Partnerships, and Hannah Crookes of HEY LSIP.]