Ad
Thursday, February 19, 2026

C.I.T.B cuts ties with the C.S.C.S

ADVERTISEMENT

Move marks end of 16-year tie-up with the Construction Skills Certification Scheme

The future of the industry’s skills card scheme was thrown into question this week after the CITB revealed it is cutting its ties with the scheme.

CITB-ConstructionSkills – which administers the Construction Skills Certification Scheme (CSCS), used by over 1.6 million workers – revealed it has put its contract on notice.

The move, prompted by commercial differences, ends an often turbulent 16-year partnership. Sources close to the situation claimed personality clashes and disputes over how income had been divided between between the two bodies had contributed to the schism.

The news has sparked fears that the CSCS card scheme will be damaged by the end of its association with the industry’s government-backed skills council.

CSCS cards are demanded as proof of occupational competence by most major clients and contractors on sites.

James Wates, chairman of CITB, admitted the relationship had been difficult but dismissed any suggestion of a recent falling out.

He said: “It’s been a challenging relationship because it’s been a difficult contract for both sides to work within. But I don’t think there’s been real dissonance.
“The [recent] disagreement was around detailed terms of the contract, which I won’t go into because they’re commercial.”

Mark Farrar, CITB chief executive, said: “CITB continues to fully support the scheme for the duration of our agreed contract.”

The notice period will last five years unless the two parties terminate the contract earlier by mutual agreement.

The CSCS indicated it will consult on how best to administer the scheme.

The falling out between two bodies has provoked dismay from the industry.

One source close to the CSCS said: “You’ve got to ask questions when two boards that are drawn from the same organisations can’t agree.”

Via: www.building.co.uk
ADVERTISEMENT

Popular Categories

Latest news

IASA launches annual International Scaffolding and Access Day

The International Access & Scaffolding Association has formally launched International Scaffolding and Access Day, which will be celebrated each year on 14 May. The initiative...

Bilfinger wins long-term scaffolding services deal with Sweden’s Söderenergi

Bilfinger has signed a long-term framework agreement with Söderenergi AB to deliver scaffolding services across the Swedish district heating producer’s facilities. The companies said the...

NASC and CISRS expand globally with Malaysia national deal

The National Access & Scaffolding Confederation and Construction Industry Scaffolders Record Scheme have signed their first-ever national licensing agreement with an entire country, marking...

NASC President David Brown takes on IASA Chair role

The International Access and Scaffolding Association (IASA) has announced the appointment of David Brown as its new Chairman. The appointment follows the death of former...

umdasch Industrial Solutions expands global scaffolding footprint with Catari acquisition

umdasch Industrial Solutions (UIS) has acquired Catari in a move that accelerates its ambition to create a leading global scaffolding group. The acquisition, announced today,...

AFIX Group secures German approval and opens new branch near Munich

AFIX Group has taken a significant step in its European growth strategy with the opening of a new German subsidiary and the award of...

Twenty teams confirmed for ScaffChamp 2026 in Vilnius

ScaffChamp powered by Layher has confirmed all 20 teams for its 2026 competition, following nearly five months of registrations and enquiries from around the...

Safety crackdown follows boy’s death caused by unsecured scaffolding

New safety standards covering the transport of scaffolding and other construction materials have been introduced following the death of a schoolboy killed by an...

Scaffolding demand expected to rise as construction returns to growth

UK construction activity is expected to recover in 2026 after a subdued year, with growth forecast to strengthen through to 2027, according to a...

Global demand to push scaffolding market to $16bn by end of decade

The global scaffolding and accessories market is expected to grow to $16.3bn by 2030, adding more than $4bn in value over the next four...

Latest news

Magazine

Winter Issue #28 | Past issues >>

Popular

IASA launches annual International Scaffolding and Access Day

The International Access & Scaffolding Association has formally launched...

NASC and CISRS expand globally with Malaysia national deal

The National Access & Scaffolding Confederation and Construction Industry...

Brace Yourself podcast launches with aim to lift scaffolding’s global voice

A new scaffolding-focused podcast has launched today with a...

Bilfinger wins long-term scaffolding services deal with Sweden’s Söderenergi

Bilfinger has signed a long-term framework agreement with Söderenergi...

NASC President David Brown takes on IASA Chair role

The International Access and Scaffolding Association (IASA) has announced...

Related articles

Latest topics

Brace Yourself podcast launches with aim to lift scaffolding’s global voice

A new scaffolding-focused podcast has launched today with a...

IASA launches annual International Scaffolding and Access Day

The International Access & Scaffolding Association has formally launched...

Bilfinger wins long-term scaffolding services deal with Sweden’s Söderenergi

Bilfinger has signed a long-term framework agreement with Söderenergi...

NASC and CISRS expand globally with Malaysia national deal

The National Access & Scaffolding Confederation and Construction Industry...
ADVERTISEMENTS