
- City of Portsmouth College set to receive part of Labour’s £307 million to repair and maintain colleges in England
- Fund will fix leaking roofs, broken windows and worn-out facilities, delivering national renewal
- Part of Labour’s £1.7 billion investment to modernise college buildings by 2030
Young people in Portsmouth will see major upgrades to the City of Portsmouth College, as the Labour government provides £1.6 million to the college as part of £307 million investment to turn the page on years of neglect.
From repairing leaky roofs and fixing broken windows to updating worn-out heating systems, City of Portsmouth College is one of 175 colleges that will benefit from the investment from the Government. The college will be given the flexibility to decide how the funding is spent, so it can be directed where it is needed most.
These upgrades will help restore pride in Portsmouth’s further education settings and break down barriers to opportunity for students, with fewer disruptions to lessons, more comfortable learning environments, and better spaces for students to focus and succeed.
Modernised colleges will be key to delivering on the Prime Minister’s target for two-thirds of young people to be taking a gold standard apprenticeship or heading to university by the age of 25.
The fund has been boosted by £5 million since last year, when Labour introduced it in response to colleges calling for a reliable annual allocation to plan and maintain their estates.
It is part of a £1.7 billion investment from Labour’s Industrial Strategy for colleges to modernise buildings by 2030.
Commenting, Stephen Morgan, MP for Portsmouth South, said:
“I’m delighted to have worked with the Labour government to secure vital investment for the City of Portsmouth College – the heart of further education in our city.
“I back the Prime Minister’s bold target to get two-thirds of young people to be taking a gold standard apprenticeship or heading to university by the age of 25. His ambition is matched in this funding.
“I know from my own time at this college when growing up in our city the important work they do to give young people the skills for work and the skills for life, so I am pleased this investment in one of our local colleagues will go some way to unlock opportunity for young people in Portsmouth.”
Skills Minister Jacqui Smith said:
“The young people in these colleges are the engineers, bricklayers and designers of the future, and they and the dedicated staff teaching them deserve the best possible environment to learn and succeed.
“This £307 million investment will repair and modernise facilities across all 175 colleges in England, giving young people the spaces they need to build the skills they need for good careers, helping to drive economic growth.”
It follows Labour’s announcement of £570 million to increase capacity in colleges to train the next generation of skilled workers.
More widely, Labour’s ambitious Post-16 Education and Skills White Paper set out plans to unlock opportunity for young people and drive growth for the country by improving the quality of further education.
This includes the introduction of structured professional development for further education teachers and an expectation that colleges deliver at least 100 hours of face-to-face English and maths teaching for those who haven’t passed those GCSEs.
Labour also announced the creation of V levels as a brand new vocational pathway to provide clearer, stronger options for young people, allowing them to mix and match academic and vocational subjects and setting them up for the jobs of tomorrow.