One of our longer-serving employees, Ellis Smith has become our oldest apprentice at ripe old age of 32 as he gets to grips with a career change.
Ellis has swapped his office-based role as a production planning administrator to join our mechanical maintenance team, although it's not the leap it might first appear as he served four years in the Royal Engineers before joining us nine years ago.
He is now working on his Level 2 Maintenance and Operations Engineering Technician apprenticeship with Oldham Training Centre (OTC) before moving on to the Level 3 qualification - a plan that maps out the next three years for the dad-of-three from Fitton Hill.
"Doing the apprenticeship is fantastic opportunity to be given. I'm really looking forward to getting stuck in and learning more and more," says Ellis, who first joined us as an agency worker before securing a permanent role.
He adds: "I worked in both Board Production departments and then moved to Production Planning. But then Covid came along, and the role changed from planning big contracts to more of a processing role, which wasn't really my cup of tea. So, when the opportunity came up for the maintenance role about six months ago, I jumped at it."
Dan Mounsey, our Marketing and Business Development Director, says: "Apprenticeships are generally thought of as something for people straight out of college. But the world of work is changing and the traditional route into things is changing with it.
"For someone like Ellis with his army background and doing a skilled apprenticeship, this type of development is good for him and good for the business too."
Ellis' expertise from his army days has allowed him to hit the ground running in his new role in our five-man maintenance team fixing, servicing and checking on machinery throughout the plant.
He says: "The army trains you in a trade but you don't come away with any formal qualifications, which is why doing the apprenticeships is so good. But thanks to what I learned in the army, I'm being trusted to do jobs that someone so new to the team probably wouldn't be doing."
The day-release apprenticeship sees Ellis undertake installation, testing, servicing, removal, replacement, maintenance and repair of a range of equipment, sometimes in complex situations, as part of planned preventative and reactive maintenance programmes. He has 12 months to complete Level 2 and two years for Level 3, which will include a bespoke module - Hand Fitting Techniques - particularly relevant to his role here at HPP.
Last year, Ellis raised almost £600 for Tameside and Glossop Mind by completing the 33.3-mile Tour of Tameside running festival, prompted by his past battles with depression.
And he credits his new career for boosting his wellbeing. He says: "The move has done me a world of good, personally. I've been told by several people they've noticed a massive change in me. I don't think working in the office suited me as a person. It suits me much better getting around the site, being active and moving all day. I'm walking miles every day!"
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