Construction industry Brexit manifesto
On 29 November 2017, seven of the UK’s major construction trade bodies joined forces to publish the Construction Industry Brexit Manifesto. Warning the government not to jump over a Brexit ‘cliff edge’ on the matter of EU workers, the bodies set out their vision of the sector’s responsibilities and requirements in a post-Brexit labour market.
The manifesto calls for a transition period of at least 2 years, followed by a migration system that serves and provides the required skills. The manifesto commits the trade bodies to recruit and retrain more UK workers, but it recognises that this is a slow process and skilled EU construction workers will continue to be needed in the meantime.
The seven trade bodies are:
- Federation of Master Builders.
- Association for Consultancy & Engineering.
- Build UK.
- Civil Engineering Contractors Association.
- Construction Products Association.
- Home Builders Federation.
- National Federation of Builders.
The manifesto makes 12 recommendations to the government and industry:
- Communications campaign to make clear current EU workers will be able to gain settled status.
- Message presented clearly by industry bodies and construction employers.
- Government should state the cut-off date will be the date of the UK’s actual withdrawal.
- Industry should work with CITB to conduct a census and other research.
- Government should agree a transition period of at least two years.
- Government should introduce a transitional regime for EU workers.
- Construction sector should agree realistic achievements in terms of increased training and recruitment of UK workers over the next five years.
- Any future migration visa system should be based on key occupations in short supply rather than arbitrary thresholds.
- Government should ensure the work visas are attractive enough to ensure quotas can actually be met.
- Government should take into account the centrality of self-employment models within the industry.
- Introduce a post-Brexit immigration system that takes into account small and micro firms.
- Create a more flexible regime that can work for small employers and self-employed firms.
[edit] Related articles on Designing Buildings Wiki
- Brexit articles.
- Brexit still unclear for some in engineering services sector.
- Brexit - the case for infrastructure.
- CLC publishes Conformity Marking of Construction Guide.
- Construction sector deal.
- Industrial Strategy: building a Britain fit for the future.
- Overcoming the challenges of Brexit.
- Skills shortage and Brexit.
- The commercial implications of Brexit.
- UK Digital Strategy.
- What does Brexit mean for construction?
Featured articles and news
International Electrician Day, 10 June 2025
Celebrating the role of electrical engineers from André-Marie Amperè, today and for the future.
New guide for clients launched at Houses of Parliament
'There has never been a more important time for clients to step up and ...ask the right questions'
The impact of recycled slate tiles
Innovation across the decades.
EPC changes for existing buildings
Changes and their context as the new RdSAP methodology comes into use from 15 June.
Skills England publishes Sector skills needs assessments
Priority areas relating to the built environment highlighted and described in brief.
BSRIA HVAC Market Watch - May 2025 Edition
Heat Pump Market Outlook: Policy, Performance & Refrigerant Trends for 2025–2028.
Committing to EDI in construction with CIOB
Built Environment professional bodies deepen commitment to EDI with two new signatories: CIAT and CICES.
Government Grenfell progress report at a glance
Line by line recomendation overview, with links to more details.
An engaging and lively review of his professional life.
Sustainable heating for listed buildings
A problem that needs to be approached intelligently.
50th Golden anniversary ECA Edmundson apprentice award
Deadline for entries has been extended to Friday 27 June, so don't miss out!
CIAT at the London Festival of Architecture
Designing for Everyone: Breaking Barriers in Inclusive Architecture.
Mixed reactions to apprenticeship and skills reform 2025
A 'welcome shift' for some and a 'backwards step' for others.
Licensing construction in the UK
As the latest report and proposal to licence builders reaches Parliament.
Building Safety Alliance golden thread guidance
Extensive excel checklist of information with guidance document freely accessible.
Fair Payment Code and other payment initiatives
For fair and late payments, need to work together to add value.
Pre-planning delivery programmes and delay penalties
Proposed for housebuilders in government reform: Speeding Up Build Out.
High street health: converting a building for healthcare uses
The benefits of health centres acting as new anchor sites in the high street.