23 October 2025, 20:37
Media66
By Furniture & Joinery Production Oct 21, 2025

Construction coalition warns apprenticeship reforms could derail 1.5m homes pledge

More than 20 senior leaders spanning the UK’s construction, woodworking and built environment sectors have co-signed an open letter to the Prime Minister warning that Government plans to reform apprenticeships will weaken skills standards, damage employer confidence and undermine the delivery of 1.5 million new homes. 

The coalition - led by the British Woodworking Federation (BWF) – argues that proposals from Skills England, including reducing apprenticeship duration to just eight months and introducing “sampling” assessments rather than full competency checks, will create a fast-track system that prioritises cost-saving over capability. 

With an estimated 250,000 additional workers required to meet the Government’s housing targets, the signatories warn that construction employers will no longer trust apprenticeships under the proposed system, putting both workforce growth and building safety at risk.

“The Government’s proposed apprenticeship reforms risk dismantling the foundations of competence and safety in our industry," says Helen Hewitt, Chief Executive of the British Woodworking Federation. 'By shortening the duration of apprenticeships and replacing rigorous, impartial assessments with lighter-touch alternatives, these changes threaten to dilute skills, undermine confidence and create dangerous inconsistencies across the construction sector. 

“At a time when the country urgently needs more skilled workers to meet housing and infrastructure demands, cutting corners on training is a short-sighted and dangerous path. We strongly urge Skills England and the Government to listen to employers, training providers and industry bodies before it’s too late. 

“Should these changes go through, all apprenticeships delivered in England will be impacted meaning other industry sectors should also be taking keen interest in the progress of these reforms.” 

www.bwf.org.uk

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