Marvin Rees says lack of EU construction workers and competition from Hinkley is āmajor challengeā
Marvin Rees, Bristolās powerful elected mayor, has warned that construction labour shortages caused by Brexit will prove āa major challengeā to his plans to build 2,000 homes a year.
Solving Bristolās housing shortage was one of Reesā main policy pledges when the Labour candidate (pictured) beat the incumbent mayor, former RIBA president George Ferguson, in last yearās election. Rees has vowed to hit the 2,000 a year target by 2020.
However, Rees told ŠŌ°ÉµēĢØ that he fears there will be fewer European Union construction workers, who have been a major source of labour for the industry over the past 15 years, available in the area.
A report by the Chartered Institute of Personnel and Development this week showed that more than one in four employers across the economy have noted evidence that non-UK nationals from the EU were considering leaving their firm or the UK by the end of this year.
Reesā comments come after ŠŌ°ÉµēĢØās survey of more than 2,000 readers, published last week, found that the sector wanted the government to protect it from the likely negative impact of a āhard Brexitā.
A high proportion put securing the maximum free movement of construction workers and protecting the import and export of construction products from tariffs as their two top priorities.
ŠŌ°ÉµēĢØ conducted the survey as part of its ŠŌ°ÉµēĢØ a Better Brexit campaign to highlight the specific needs of construction prior to the governmentās negotiations to leave the EU.
Compounding Reesā problem is that there is competition for skilled construction workers from nearby Hinkley Point off the Somerset coast, where the first in a planned new generation of nuclear reactors will be built for Ā£18bn. Led by French utility EDF and supported by a one-third stake from Chinese investment, Hinkley Point C is expected to create 25,000 jobs through the course of its construction.
Bristol has undergone huge regeneration in recent years, with its dilapidated docklands area now a vibrant cultural and social scene.
Rees said: ā[The lack of EU construction workers will] be a major challenge for us. Weāve had this construction boom in Bristol - unfortunately it hasnāt been on building houses. Weāve committed to getting 2,000 homes a year built by 2020, so weāve got to get our capacity up.
āNow weāve got Hinkley just down the road, part of that is about making sure that weāve got the skills available to us. Weāre going to be competing with Hinkley for that as well. Itās not ideal, letās put it that way.ā
Rees warned that the UKās Brexit negotiators must be pragmatic in their talks with EU counterparts to make sure they get a deal the regions need.
He argued: āAs we go into these negotiations and seek the British deal from our departure, we must make sure that the needs of the UK are taken fully into account and we donāt end up with hard-nosed [tactics].ā
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