Skip to content
Government NSW, National News Current Affairs

Chris Minns’ $250 million for apprenticeships in local government a great move

United Services Union < 1 mins read

The union which represents local government workers welcomes the Minns government’s commitment today to inject $252 million into the state’s 128 local councils to employ 1,300 apprentices and trainees to fill gaping skills shortages.

 

The next generation of mechanics, engineers, early childhood educators, plumbers, civil construction workers, and planning cadets will begin work early next year across the state thanks to the announcement.

Councils are experiencing declining workforce numbers with a large portion of experienced professionals who have worked in local government for decades due to retire within the next five years.

Many trainees and apprentices who start their career at councils under this funding boost will go on to work in local industry building the new housing and infrastructure across NSW which is currently threatened by the nationwide tradie shortage.

United Services Union General Secretary Graeme Kelly OAM says the $252 million funding boost is desperately needed.

“Over 1000 young people across NSW will soon start their first job thanks to this scheme, and in the bush that’s especially valuable as it means they’ll stay put rather than move to our swollen cities looking for work or training opportunities,” said Mr Kelly.

“You can’t have ‘rhyme time’ at the local library, or a nice clean pool to swim in in summer or freshly mowed ovals on the weekend unless you have highly skilled, hard-working council workers providing these front line services seven days a week.

“The Minns government didn’t create this skills crisis, but they’ve rolled up their sleeves and fixed it.

“The previous government wasn't listening when councils from Armidale to Albury were crying out about skills shortages and their aging workforce, to their credit Chris Minns and Ron Hoenig have heard them and taken decisive action,” said Mr Kelly.

Contact: Tim Brunero 0405 285 547

More from this category

  • Government NSW, Mental Health
  • 12/12/2025
  • 11:40
Australians for Mental Health

Workers’ comp deal “punches down on people whose workplaces made them ill”: Australians for Mental Health

Workers’ comp deal “punches down on people whose workplaces made them ill”: Australians for Mental Health Grassroots mental health organisation Australians for Mental Health has warned a deal between the Minns Labor Government and the Coalition on workers’ compensation laws will kick vulnerable workers off support when they are still too sick to return to their jobs, while also further embedding stigma. The Coalition and Labor announced an agreement yesterday, which would see workers’ compensation become harder to access for people with psychological injuries. Under the deal, the whole person injury threshold for receiving income support will be raised to…

  • Government NSW, Women
  • 11/12/2025
  • 16:22
PSA

NSW Gov’s DV strategy has glaring omission

The Public Service Association of NSW (PSA) has welcomed the aims of the NSW Government's new strategy to address domestic and family violence perpetration, but has warned it will fail without tackling the privatised mess of frontline DV services. The strategy, launched yesterday by Minister Jodie Harrison, is focused on disrupting perpetrators and holding them accountable. But it says nothing about addressing the fragmented patchwork of underfunded community organisations responsible for keeping women and children safe. PSA General Secretary Stewart Little said the strategy was a missed opportunity. "You cannot be serious about keeping women safe while leaving their protection…

  • CharitiesAidWelfare, Government NSW
  • 11/12/2025
  • 08:56
Barnardos Australia

Small steps taken but more must be done to protect children from domestic and family violence

Small steps taken but more must be done to protect children from domestic and family violence Barnardos Australia strongly welcomes the NSW Government’s landmark strategy to acknowledge children as victim-survivors of domestic and family violence (DFV) in their own right, but more must be done to protect them. The NSW Government today released its Building Better Responses: NSW Strategy to Respond to the Use of Domestic and Family Violence 2026–2030, which recognises children are often exposed to DFV which can lead to worse health, social and educational outcomes and difficulties with emotional regulation, aggression and mental health. Major funding, including…

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.