A TOTAL of 41 new apprentices have joined railway maintenance teams in depots across the West to start their on-the-job training after successfully completing their first year of the award-winning Network Rail Advanced Apprenticeship Scheme.

They are among almost 200 apprentices across Britain who have recently finished their first year of training at Europe’s largest engineering training facility at HMS Sultan in Gosport, Hampshire.

Their apprentices specialise in track, signalling, telecoms and electrification.

During their second and third years they continue to earn while they learn and experience work on the rail network’s frontline, gaining vital experience as they train to become maintenance technicians.

Joe Milne, 20, a third-year telecoms apprentice based in Bristol, said: "My cousin did the apprenticeship and is now working as a signal engineer.

"I was attracted to the scheme as it has really good career prospects if you work and are determined, you’ve got prospects and a future."

Neal Lawson, maintenance and operations services director at Network Rail, said: “We are investing £38bn building a better railway for Britain and to meet this challenge, we need highly capable people.

"By developing the enthusiasm and talent of our apprentices, we are creating the skilled workforce vital to our future success. I wish all of them good luck as they continue to build their skills and knowledge and help us move more than four million people across Britain every day.”

Eleanor Lawrence, 18, is a signalling apprentice who has just joined her team in Basingstoke and is enjoying learning from employees who do the job day-in-day-out.

She decided to apply for the apprenticeship scheme having spent eight years volunteering on a heritage railway.

“You earn as you learn and you come out with professional qualifications," she said.

Network Rail’s Advanced Apprenticeship Scheme is open to applicants over 17 years of age and has no upper age limit. Apprentices come from all over the nation and range from those who have just left school or college to those changing careers. All share an interest in engineering.

John Cheasley, a 30-year-old third-year apprentice from Petersfield, Hampshire, said: “It’s a nice job and one where you can actually feel proud of yourself and know that you children will be proud of you in the future. This has changed my life and shown me my potential.”