GTS Scaffolding Set For CITB Levy Hearing

ADVERTISEMENT
Getting your Trinity Audio player ready...

A Manchester-based scaffolding company is preparing for a court case that could have serious repercussions across the industry.

GTS Scaffolding is refusing to pay the annual levy imposed upon them by The Council and Industry Training Board or CITB, citing the company will receive nothing in return. As a result, they face proceedings at Guildford County Court on December 10th.

The CITB Levy is a payment made by employers reinvested back into the construction industry to support the development of skills and training of the workforce. It facilitates company access grants to support the delivery of apprenticeships and upskilling the existing workforce.

Levy’s are passed by Parliament of course, and so a legal requirement. But GTS argue they sometimes aren’t made for the real modern world.

“We’ve been asked to pay a total of £8,000 and I feel they have not provided an adequate service to my company”, says Graham Tulet from GTS. CITB in effect subsidises The National Access and Scaffolding Confederation (NASC), but what if you don’t want to join the NASC? We are a highly reputable company always trying to keep standards as high as possible.

“We have always tried to reward commitment by training labourers up to become fully fledged scaffolders, but of course they need certification. On five occasions when trying to book candidates on courses we were turned down as the courses were full, and at the time they could not offer an alternative date or course. On the few occasions in the past when we have sent candidates on a course, we have paid the full course fees and not been offered any grants which are supposedly available. And yet I could go to an agency and get 50 or 60 scaffolders quite easily.

“How can I justify going to my Directors for £8,000 when we’ve literally got nothing in return? It just doesn’t make sense. why is it that we should pay a levy when other companies within the building sector are not paying because the CITB are unaware of them, therefore they cannot monitor or even police the levy properly. This also creates an uneven platform when quoting in competition against the non-levy paying companies.

“I’d be interested to know if any other scaffolding companies have encountered the same problems or in fact, feel the same way given we are preparing our defence.”

ScaffMag will be following the case very closely, as the final ruling could set a precedent going forward within the industry. Graham can be contacted at [email protected]

ADVERTISEMENT

Popular Categories

Latest posts

Final 20 teams confirmed for ScaffChamp 2026

The final 20 teams competing at ScaffChamp powered by Layher 2026 have been confirmed, with the last place secured after a qualification event in...

£27bn road strategy opens major pipeline for specialist contractors

The government has confirmed Roads Investment Strategy 3 (RIS3), a £27 billion programme covering England's motorway and A-road network through to 2031. A record £8.4...

NASC expands regional leadership as membership rises 40%

The National Access and Scaffolding Confederation (NASC) has announced a series of new regional chair and vice chair appointments as part of a wider...

Layher UK launches ‘Sizzle & Learn’ open morning series for 2026

Layher UK has announced a series of open morning events aimed at giving customers and partners direct access to its latest systems, product developments...

Two taken to hospital after building collapse in Oldham

Two people have been taken to hospital after a building partially collapsed in Oldham town centre. Emergency services were called to King Street at about...

Scafom-rux delivers Manchester’s tallest ground-based scaffold

In the heart of Manchester’s financial district, a major high-rise development is setting new benchmarks for construction scaffolding in the UK. For this complex...

Teen scaffolding labourer dies after fall through shaft on London site

A construction company has been fined after a teenage scaffolding labourer died in a fall from height on a London building site. Renols Lleshi, 19,...

Government launches consultation on plan to merge CITB and ECITB

The UK government has launched a consultation on proposals to merge the Construction Industry Training Board (CITB) and the Engineering Construction Industry Training Board...

Robotics firm KEWAZO secures $35m backing to scale industrial lifting technology

KEWAZO, a robotics company focused on heavy industry, has raised $35m in funding to accelerate the rollout of its lifting robot across global industrial...

Pay gap pushing scaffolders from New Zealand to Australia

Construction firms in New Zealand are facing a growing shortage of scaffolders as experienced workers move to Australia in search of higher wages and...

Latest news

Magazine

Spring Issue #29 | Past issues >>

Trending now ⚡︎

Teen scaffolding labourer dies after fall through shaft on London site

A construction company has been fined after a teenage...

Two taken to hospital after building collapse in Oldham

Two people have been taken to hospital after a...

Government launches consultation on plan to merge CITB and ECITB

The UK government has launched a consultation on proposals...

NASC expands regional leadership as membership rises 40%

The National Access and Scaffolding Confederation (NASC) has announced...

Layher UK launches ‘Sizzle & Learn’ open morning series for 2026

Layher UK has announced a series of open morning...

Related articles

Latest topics

JMAC completes first acquisition with Tees Site Support deal

JMAC Industrial and Access Group Ltd has acquired a...

Final 20 teams confirmed for ScaffChamp 2026

The final 20 teams competing at ScaffChamp powered by...

£27bn road strategy opens major pipeline for specialist contractors

The government has confirmed Roads Investment Strategy 3 (RIS3),...

NASC expands regional leadership as membership rises 40%

The National Access and Scaffolding Confederation (NASC) has announced...
ADVERTISEMENTS