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Agenda for ACTION

How the sport and physical activity workforce can help the next government drive health, wellbeing and economic value for our nation.

During the 2024 General Election campaign, The Chartered Institute for the Management of Sport and Physical Activity (CIMSPA) called on all political parties to commit to harnessing the potential of physical activity and sport, and in particular the power of the sector workforce, to address key issues that the country is facing.

We believe that the government can reduce demands on and the cost of NHS services, improve the economic potential of individuals and communities and build greater social cohesion by developing policies which enable collaboration between government and the sport and physical activity sector.

We published Agenda for Action in June 2024 which sets out five key asks of the government.

We look forward to working with the government to help them harness the power of our profession.

We ask the government to:

We ask the government to formally embed our sector within its health policy planning to relieve pressure on the NHS and improve the health of the nation.

With high demands on the NHS, there is a need for a national policy to harness the unique ability of the sport and physical activity sector. This will deliver better health and wellbeing through our sector’s work to support prevention and management of chronic conditions, rehabilitation and recovery, mental health, and community engagement.

There are great examples of where our sector’s workforce is already helping to address the challenges faced by the NHS. Sport and physical activity already generates £9.5bn in savings by preventing serious physical and mental health conditions and our proven value here now needs to be scaled.

The evidence base shows our sector’s impact in the prevention of long-term health conditions: reducing avoidable GP visits, appointments and treatment waiting time.

Real-world partnerships between our sector and the NHS demonstrate how health sector professionals value the positive contribution that sport and physical activity professionals make to local health outcomes through the unique skill set and expertise that our workforce delivers.

We ask the government to formally embed our sector within its health policy planning to relieve pressure on the NHS and improve the health of the nation.

We ask the government to support flexible skills development in our sector to bolster economic growth and generate career and learning opportunities for our workforce.

The development of highly skilled professionals across sport and physical activity is integral to our contribution to the UK economy.

Our sector employs almost 600,000 people in businesses that generate a turnover of £53bn. These enterprises rely on a workforce trained and developed with a service-orientated skill set that both delivers to local and diverse customer needs and drives bottom-line success.

Our workforce, with its ability to engage broad communities and participant groups in physical activity, also makes a significant contribution in enabling people to be economically active.

Through their work to promote physical activity and wellbeing, including in communities where there are high levels of economic inactivity, sport and physical activity professionals already support individuals who may not be working due to ill health to improve their wellbeing with the potential of gaining greater financial independence.

It is flexibility in skills development that enables our sector to respond to changing needs that is key to unlocking the true potential of the sport and physical activity workforce.

Existing funding routes, such as the apprenticeship levy, can be restrictive to many employers who need to strike a people development balance between staff technical training and micro-credentials, versus longer programmes and qualifications.

We ask the government to support flexible skills development in our sector to bolster economic growth and generate career and learning opportunities for our workforce.

We ask the government to continue with a place-based approach to local skills delivery so that the significant impact being achieved by the sport and physical activity sector can be sustained and grow.

The place-based approach to skills development enables our sector to both engage local communities and positively impact local health and economic development priorities by aligning learning in local colleges to employer and public sector needs.

This is most important in areas of the country facing the greatest health inequalities. A focus on meeting local sport and physical activity needs, best delivered by a workforce that reflects its community, helps drive greater engagement and stronger outcomes, particularly in communities with a history of low participation in physical activity.

Our local skills pilot projects have shown the value of aligning further education courses with a data-led understanding of local employer skills gaps and ensuring that students are truly prepared for work and life when they leave education.

A place-based approach also supports the ongoing career development and progression of a locally representative workforce, making an important contribution to tackling community inequalities. At the same time, increasing workforce skills enhances the economic stability of individuals and their communities.

CIMSPA are already bringing together education providers, employers, local authorities, health commissioners and government agencies, such as the Department for Work and Pensions, through our growing network of local skills accountability boards across England, Scotland and Wales.

Our work here is translating skills development investment into great employment and career opportunities for local learners, enabling their contribution to health, wellbeing and social value in their communities. By continuing with this place-based skills approach, the government will help scale the positive impact this work is having across our nation.

We ask the government to continue with a place-based approach to local skills delivery so that the significant impact being achieved by the sport and physical activity sector can be sustained and grow.

We ask the government to make a commitment to supporting the sport and physical activity sector’s planning for a future workforce registration scheme.

Our current work to research and evaluate a potential sport and physical activity workforce governance and registration scheme is an important sector-wide undertaking.

The objective here is supporting, safeguarding and regulating the workforce to allow everyone taking part in sport and physical activity to enjoy safe and high-quality experiences and to be helped in achieving their goals in a positive environment.

Working together, the sector is developing a solution that uses regulated best practice and showcases the excellent impact of our frontline workforce. This sector-wide approach is addressing the recommendations from the reports and inquiries which have sought to eradicate harm and poor practice within sport and physical activity.

The sector is united in finding a solution and has positively engaged in the discovery stages of this project with a mature approach to maintaining ownership through self-regulation.

We ask the government to make a commitment to supporting the sport and physical activity sector’s planning for a future workforce registration scheme.

We ask the government to implement practical measures to support the success and resilience of the small businesses that keep our communities active.

At the heart of sport and physical activity are the independent operators, micro and small businesses that make up 91% of our sector.

These are driven by professionals committed to getting their communities more physically active and enabling people to live healthy lives. They are agile and able to engage people “on home turf” through their understanding of local diversity and needs.

The entrepreneurial nature of the professionals running these enterprises also helps them move quickly to respond to changing consumer and societal needs.

These businesses have huge potential to enable communities across the country to become more physically active and reap the wider benefits of improved health, sustainable economic activity and stronger community connections.

However, support to sustain and scale these enterprises through business skills development is essential to realising this.

We ask the government to implement practical measures to support the success and resilience of the small businesses that keep our communities active.

Download the Agenda

Agenda for Action

06/06/2024

Download our Agenda for Action.

Resources

Find out more

Social and Economic Value of Physical Activity in England

Sheffield Hallam University / Sport England

September 2020

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CIMSPA Workforce Insights Report 2023

September 2023

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Data Lens

Data includes: Sector core industries – Exercise and Fitness; Leisure Operations; Community Sport; Health and Wellbeing; Performance Sport; Adventure Sport. Data excludes: Sector bodies and training, development and education organisations.

Our strategy

Individual and collective professional recognition for the sport and physical activity workforce.