There's always been tension between the public sector and private companies in construction, but in the booming field of regeneration both sides are coming together to work as partners – and that means amazing opportunities are opening up for workers on both sides of the fence.
Things are changing quickly. Only last October experts told ¾«¶«Ó°ÊÓ that more co-operation between the public and private sectors was needed. "The most difficult thing is trying to communicate," said Albert Golding, Broadway Malyan's head of regeneration. "The private sector finds it hard work getting the principles of investment over to the public sector, and the public sector has a similarly hard time making their work understood. The two have got to come together."
And now they're doing just that. By employing former public sector workers, private sector companies are educating themselves about local authorities' and housing associations' ways of working, their concerns and the political climate behind their decision-making.
The private sector finds it hard work getting the principles of investment over to the public sector
Albert Golding, Broadway Malyan
PFI can’t succeed without business and the public sector working together very closely
Sonia Ennals, United House
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Beginning of a beautiful friendship?
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