Restaurant: Celebrity chef Jamie Oliver's new restaurant in Cheltenham will create 90 new jobs for the town, according to This Is Gloucestershire. Staff are already being recruited for the venue, which is due to open in August. A spokesman for the celebrity chef said the restaurant is filling roles such as head chef, management, front of house and kitchen positions.
Graduate: One of the world's largest independent global fund administration businesses is taking on 50 new staff in Dublin. Apex Fund Services is already recruiting for the new positions, which will be mainly graduate roles in fund accountancy, compliance and IT, reports The Irish Times.
Construction: The renovation of a Lincolnshire landmark is expected to create 500 new jobs, according to This is Lincolnshire. The Bass Maltings in Sleaford, a series of six-storey Victorian red brick towers, will be turned into shops, office space and more than 220 apartments and houses. Work is expected to get under way in the autumn, reports the BBC.
Managerial: A cheese packing facility in Somerset is looking for more than 80 administration, managerial, technical and production staff. Dairy Crest, which is based in Frome, is expected to take on the extra staff from next month, reports FoodManufacture.co.uk.
Hospitality: Travelodge has estimated 550 jobs could be created by 2015 through its plans to open 36 new sites, according to the Press Association. The budget hotel chain has teamed up with pub companies, including Greene King, Marston's, and JD Wetherspoon, to look for new sites where where they can jointly fund new developments. There will be opportunities for entry-level positions, including cleaners and receptionists, and hotel management roles.
Telecoms: A Chinese telecoms firm has announced plans to create 500 jobs in the UK over the next three years. Huawei, based in Basingstoke, Hampshire, will be recruiting engineers and sales staff as well as increasing management positions. The firm said it also plans to generate a further 1,000 to 1,500 sub-contracting jobs over three years and announced it is developing a formal UK graduate programme, according to the Press Association.
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