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Western Sydney Airport exceeds employment targets in first year

written by WOFA | September 24, 2019

Earthmovers at Badgerys Creek for the building of Western Sydney Airport. (WSA Co)
Earthmovers at Badgerys Creek for the building of Western Sydney Airport. (WSA Co)

Western Sydney International (Nancy-Bird Walton) Airport says it has exceeded all its employment targets for local, indigenous and learning workers in its first year of earthworks projects.

Since construction began on 24 September 2018, about $37 million worth of work had been subcontracted to 24 local businesses, ranging from plumbers to fencing and demolition contractors, concrete pumping operations and plant equipment suppliers, Western Sydney Airport chief executive Graham Millett said on Tuesday.

Local workers living in a catchment from Narellan to Norwest, and Blacktown to Bringelly presently made up 54 per cent of the airport’s total workforce – almost double the construction phase target of 30 per cent.

Learning workers, such as apprentices and trainees, accounted for 34 per cent of the workforce at 30 June 2019, 14 per cent above target, while workers, classed under diversity accounted for 32 per cent (target, 10 per cent) and indigenous workers, three per cent (target, 2.4 per cent).

Millett, who grew up in the region, said that as the airport entered its second year of construction, the size of the project’s workforce would ramp up considerably.

“Western Sydney International will be the catalyst for the transformation of the region, creating jobs closer to where people live and delivering the infrastructure needed to make a growing Western Sydney an even better place to live and do business,” Millett said.

Construction of the proposed airport at Badgerys Creek began in September 2018, when bulldozers arrived to move about 1.8 million cubic metres of earth to prepare the ground for the eventual runway and terminal construction.

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This work, covering about six per cent of the 1780-hectare site was expected to be completed by the end of calendar 2019.

Looking ahead, major earthworks involving shifting about 25 million cubic metres earth werew set to begin in early 2020.

A 2019 indicative timeline of key milestones during the construction of the Western Sydney Airport at Badgerys Creek.
A 2019 indicative timeline of key milestones during the construction of the Western Sydney Airport at Badgerys Creek.

Western Sydney Airport’s workforce at June 30, 2019:

Workers

Target (%)

Achieved (%)

Learning

20%

34%

Diversity

(Indigenous)

10%

(2.4%)

32%

(3%)

Local

30%

54%

Source: Western Sydney Airport

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