Skillset calls for increased film and TV training investment
Skillset’s response to an all-party House of Lords
Select Committee on Communications report, The British film and
television industries - decline or opportunity?, which was
published earlier today (January 25, 2010).
Skillset is the Sector Skills Council for the Creative Media
Industries (TV, film, radio, interactive media, animation, computer
games, facilities, photo imaging and publishing).
Skillset Chief Executive Dinah Caine said: “Skillset very
much welcomes the fact that the House of Lords has given proper
recognition to the significant training and skills issues facing
the British film and television industries.
“The Committee is absolutely right in its assessment that one
of the major strengths of the British film and television
industries is their highly skilled workforce. Skillset
wholeheartedly agrees that a reduction in training budgets and
patchy training provision is against the long term interests of the
industries. It is essential that our current and future workforce
is fully equipped to remain a world leader in film and
television.
“Skillset welcomes the Committee’s recognition of our
role, in particular our efforts to promote dialogues between
education and training providers and the industry.”
Skillset broadly supports the Committee’s recommendations,
including:
- The Department for Business, Innovation and Skills should
encourage the Higher Education Funding Council to deploy some of
its funding to support high-level, post-graduate training in the
postproduction and animation sectors
- The Higher Education and Funding Council should encourage closer
relationships between universities and the creative
industries
- Skillset’s work on a code of conduct for internships. We
are encouraged by the Committee’s support and we will soon be
able to publish Guidelines for the industry that cover
apprenticeships and other on-the-job training, as well as
internships
- The film and television industries should provide more equal
access to training and skills-based career development through
greater use of apprenticeships and graduate internships
- Welcoming the continuing role played by the BBC and the
BBC’s willingness to make its training more widely available
through the launch of the BBC Academy
- Understanding the current pressures on the budgets of UK
commercial public service broadcasters, but highlighting that a
reduction in training budgets threatens the future competitiveness
of the UK television industry and urging the Government to
encourage them to revive their investment in training
- Regret that the UK Film Council should be forced to reduce
significantly its funding for training for the next three years, at
a time when training should be a priority. Skillset backs the
Committee’s call for the Government to make sure that the UK
Film Council is adequately funded to allow it at least to restore
its former level of support for training
- Accepting that in an industry so dependent on freelance working
and informal training, there is an urgent need to clarify the
uncertainty around statutory definitions of training and asking the
industry regulator to take a long term view
- Welcoming Ofcom proposals to develop co-operation within the
regulatory framework for training in TV and recommending Ofcom to
publish guidance to clarify the roles of the organisations
involved.”



