Fears are growing for apprenticeship ‘hubs’ after ministers slashed a key post-Brexit funding stream, triggering warnings of closures and lost brokerage support for small businesses and young people.
The government scrapped the UK Shared Prosperity Fund (UKSPF) in March, a programme created by the Conservatives following the loss of about £1.5 billion per year in European Union social and regional development funding.
In a joint open letter to work and pensions secretary Pat McFadden this week, several sector bodies warned the cuts would threaten England’s network of ‘apprenticeship hubs’, partially funded by the UKSPF, that aim to boost recruitment, particularly among SMEs.
They wrote: “Without mitigating action, the loss of this funding stream will result in local brokerage services being scaled back or closed entirely, a loss of service that cannot easily be reversed because of the contacts and trusted relationships they have built up.”
The signatories – including Engineering UK, Logistics UK, Edge Foundation and Skills Federation – call for a “sustainable funding stream” for the estimated 27 apprenticeship hubs that exist across England.
The hubs most at threat are those outside mayoral areas that stand to be left out of a £140 million apprenticeship brokerage pilot to be funded through the government’s apprenticeship budget.
This appears to be the first time that apprenticeship levy funds have been used to fund initiatives outside of training and incentives.
Double whammy cold spots
The UKSPF’s partial replacement, the Local Growth Fund, could help keep apprenticeship hubs open but will only be targeted at 11 mayoral strategic authorities in the North and Midlands which have the “highest productivity catch-up and agglomeration potential”.
This excludes local authorities, often rural counties and smaller cities, facing “unprecedented risk” to their apprenticeship hubs and employment support.
English cold spots lacking both Local Growth Fund and apprenticeship brokerage pilot funding include counties in south west and central England, county councils in the West Midlands, and Cumbria and Lancashire in the North West.
Several areas have voiced concerns about the impact this will have on flexible employment support offered by councils, small charities and training providers.
Although details have been limited since its announcement five months ago, the government’s apprenticeship brokerage pilot is expected to offer help and opportunities to potential apprentices, including candidates who missed out on their first-choice applications.
This is similar to the offer provided by some of the apprenticeship hubs currently under threat.
Brokerages ‘already exist’
According to the Edge Foundation, the hubs offer brokerage support such as promoting the apprenticeship training route to young people and SMEs, connecting employers with training providers, and helping with recruitment and bureaucracy.
The letter’s authors urged McFadden to match the ambition of his apprenticeship brokerage pilot with support for the “many pockets of great practice” that already exist.
Norfolk County Council argued that its hub, Apprenticeships Norfolk, had helped grow apprenticeships year on year, including by 18 per cent in 2021-22, which was more than double the 8 per cent national rate.
Apprenticeships Norfolk also runs a levy transfer scheme that has moved over £4.5 million in just over two financial years to around 220 businesses, supporting 440 apprentices, and provides financial incentives for hiring.
A variety of hubs with various brand names have sprung up across England since the late 2010s, set up by local enterprise partnerships, local authorities and training provider networks using a combination of funding that often included UKSPF and EU development funding.
While some are run by combined authorities such as in the North East, Liverpool City Region and West Midlands, others are run by councils and training provider networks such as the Western Training Provider Network.
Local employment services hit
The Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government, which is responsible for UKSPF, did not assess the impact of it being scrapped, arguing it was always a “time-limited” programme.
Jude Day, employability programme manager at the Sussex Community Development Association, said the cuts had resulted in its employment-focused staff body being halved to 13 this year, with further potential redundancies to come.
The association works with people “furthest from the job market” across East Sussex, helping them into work, volunteering, education and training programmes.
Day said that at its peak it employed about 40 people via DWP, EU and UKSPF programmes.
She told FE Week it takes years to build employment advisors’ knowledge of local businesses and how to work with economically inactive and unemployed people.
“These skills are being lost at the very time it is getting harder to find work, use AI appropriately, to attend interviews and secure the job,” she added.
Lancashire Combined County Authority, which had a £22 million UKSPF allocation last year, has warned the loss of funding creates “unprecedented risk” for local authorities, training providers and local charities.
A report by the authority noted that £3.5 million is spent on local people and skills projects, and that national programmes offering employment support fail to offer the “breadth or the locality” of UKSPF-funded provision.
It added that the “long-term sustainability” of local voluntary and social enterprise organisations may make continued delivery of skills projects “unviable”.
UKSPF history
Covering an initial three years, the UKSPF was devised by the Conservative government under Boris Johnson, who pledged in his 2019 manifesto that post-Brexit funding would “at a minimum” match the size of EU funding, which was distributed in seven-year cycles.
However, its delivery was plagued by delays, tight spending timelines and complex rules.
It was replaced with the £225 million-per-year Local Growth Fund which was worth 75 per cent less than the UKSPF in 2024-25 and, as the government confirmed in the autumn budget, will only go to 11 devolved mayoral strategic authorities in the North and Midlands.
It meant that as of April this year, more than 150 local authorities have lost annual allocations of between £327,000 and £61 million, depending on their size and deprivation levels.
A government spokesperson said: “Our growth and skills L=levy reforms, backed by £1 billion additional investment, will support 50,000 more young people into apprenticeships over the next three years, giving them a vital route into skilled work.
“This funding includes £140 million to explore how mayoral strategic authorities can best use their expert local knowledge and expertise to connect more young people with local apprenticeship opportunities.
“We are taking significant steps to transform how local growth is funded, which is an important part of our long-term goal. This is alongside making local government finance more sustainable and allowing funding to be targeted where it is needed most.”