Construction firms in Liverpool are inviting 200 local subcontractors to bid for contracts worth hundreds of millions of pounds in a unique new partnership.
In what is believed to be a first in the UK, nine contractors involved in major regeneration projects in the city such as new schools and hospitals are holding a special event at Liverpool Town Hall, at which they will inform local businesses about opportunities over the next 12 months.
It has been organised by the Liverpool Regeneration Contractors’ Group, which is aimed at maximising the number of jobs and apprenticeships created in the city, so that as much of the work on projects in Liverpool goes to local businesses.
The Supply Chain Engagement Event at Liverpool Town Hall will see BAM, Galliford Try, ISG, Kier, Laing O’Rourke, Morgan Sindall, Seddons, Wates and Willmott Dixon coming together with the City of Liverpool College and the city council’s employment arm Liverpool in Work to showcase what is on offer.
In total, the contractors represented at the event have work on their books worth in excess of £260 million over the next three years – a total that is set to rise as they secure more contracts.
The event will be split into three zones – planning, employment and skills and the supply chain – giving firms an overview of the projects happening in the city and how they can bid for work.
Deputy Mayor Cllr Ann O’Byrne, who will open the event, said:
“In recent years the council has had great success in insisting that firms we issue contracts to meet tough targets around local spending. With some of our new schools, more than 85 percent of the contract has been spent with firms based in the city region, securing their future and enabling them to take on more staff.
What we are now doing is taking that a step further and bringing together construction firms working on a range of private and publicly funded schemes in Liverpool and putting them in the same room as local companies who can bid for work on their schemes.
We are proud to be the first council in the country to do this and I believe it is a blueprint that will be taken up by other towns and cities. At a time when public sector funding is being squeezed massively, it is more essential than ever that the money we do spend is pumped back into the local economy, putting money into the pockets of local workers.”