CILT provides evidence at Transport Select Committee
CILT (UK) appeared before the Transport Select Committee today regarding its inquiry into the road freight supply chain. Kevin Richardson FCILT, Chief Executive at CILT(UK) called on government to help raise the profile of the profession and to better understand and communicate the opportunities available.
Kevin Richardson, Chief Executive at CILT (UK) said:
âThe knowledge of the road freight supply chain sector as a career of choice is lacking, and that is something both the profession and government need to address.
âIn the most recent options week in schools, the logistics, transport and supply chain sector was not included, yet there are 2,7 million people employed across this sector in the UK.
âWhile the government has begun to engage with the profession to understand labour availability and diversity in the transport, logistics and supply chain sector. Current DfT work on the Future of Freight recognises âthe importance of the freight sector to economic wellbeing and [its] role in realising core Government strategic objectivesâ, but the CILT has raised a number of challenges with the DfT approach.
âFirstly, government needs to understand what supply chains are, and they currently do not. The term âfreightâ is used by officials to cover everything that is not passenger transport. This suggests a lack of understanding of the differences between âfreightâ as the commodity transported, âfreight transportâ as the movement of goods, âlogisticsâ (the timely positioning of resources), and supply chains. CILT has argues that a holistic approach to supply chains is fundamental in overcoming many of the challenges that the sector faces.
âCILT is calling on government to support modal shift, work collectively across ministerial departments and businesses across the sector, to further support industry with initiatives such as the Year of Logistics and to build better facilities for drivers.
âWe also recommend that the Apprenticeship Levy needs be restructured to allow the creation of more flexible schemes, deliver greater benefit to the sector and ensure the majority of revenue is returned to the sector.
âTo achieve a step change, there needs to be clear career pathways and a recognition of the breadth of roles and opportunities available across a profession that employs over 2.7m people. The CILT see a clear requirement for a concerted, joint effort by Government and operational businesses across the sector to raise the profile and societal value of the transport, logistics and supply chain profession.â
The Committee's objectives are to explore the immediate and systemic challenges to the effective operation of the road freight supply chain and to assess the effectiveness of the Governmentâs policies to meet them and todayâs session covered driver retention, recruitment and the wider challenges facing the road freight supply chain.