New seafood training
group joins National Skills Academy
20 February 2007 [first
published by Improve Ltd 20/2/2007]
With only a few weeks to go before the April opening of the
National Skills Academy for Food and Drink Manufacturing, a
seventh major training organisation has joined the network of
Academy Training Centres, to specialise in seafood processing.
The Seafood Training Academy is a new partnership between Seafish
and four leading seafood training centres – at Billingsgate,
Fleetwood, North Shields, and Leeds. The partnership aims to
provide the highest standard of advice, information, and training
for all onshore sectors of the seafood industry by collaborating
on training and learning opportunities, sharing best practice,
and achieving economies of scale.
Within the National Skills Academy, the partners in the Seafood
Training Academy will also collaborate to support the fish processing
sector with the Academy Training Centre at Grimsby Institute
of Further and Higher Education, and on management and leadership
training with the whole of the academy network.
Jack Matthews, chief executive of Improve, the food and drink
sector skills council, which is providing the initial management
resource for the academy, said: “The new Seafood Training Academy
is a terrific initiative by some of the leaders in the field
who are coming together to form a powerful partnership. Their
aim is to keep pushing up standards, and that is exactly what
the National Skills Academy is about.”
John Rutherford, chief executive of Seafish said: “Becoming
part of the National Skills Academy will provide a great opportunity
for our new academy to make its training programmes more widely
available within the food industry as a whole. ”
The partners in the Seafood Training Academy are: the Sea Fish
Industry Authority, Hull; Billingsgate Seafood Training School,
London; Seafood Northwest Training Centre, Fleetwood; Seafood
Training Centre, North Shields; the National Federation of Fish
Friers’ Training School, Leeds.
The National Skills Academy for Food and Drink Manufacturing
aims to have up to 35 Academy Training Centres in place within
three years. The status of Academy Training Centre can be earned
by existing training organisations, both public and private,
which are acknowledged as leaders in their field, and where
pioneering research and development in training is constantly
undertaken. They must be organisations in which the delivery
of training is second to none.