Updated
Updated · Fenland Citizen · May 20
Bristow Unveils 80% Employment Plan for Cambridgeshire and Peterborough
Updated
Updated · Fenland Citizen · May 20

Bristow Unveils 80% Employment Plan for Cambridgeshire and Peterborough

3 articles · Updated · Fenland Citizen · May 20
  • Cambridgeshire and Peterborough Combined Authority launched the “Get Cambridgeshire and Peterborough Working Plan” in Huntingdon, setting a regional employment target of 80% from the current 78.1%.
  • More than 68,000 residents are on out-of-work benefits, including 22,500 people classed as economically inactive because of long-term sickness, shaping the plan’s focus on removing barriers to work.
  • More than 60 representatives from the NHS, Jobcentre Plus, councils, skills bodies and businesses joined the rollout, which will be delivered with the integrated care board and Jobcentre Plus.
  • Workshops highlighted sharp local disparities, with Fenland and Peterborough facing higher inactivity than Greater Cambridge, as the strategy moves into a phased rollout tied to local growth and skills plans.
This strategy bets on devolved power, but does the region truly have the funding to fix deep-rooted employment barriers?
As a new plan targets 90,000 residents, will it create quality careers or just feed the gig economy?
With long-term sickness fueling unemployment, can a jobs plan solve what is fundamentally a regional health crisis?