This is a trade facing website. Visit the ACT's consumer site thecyclingexperts.co.uk for information and advice on cycling and find your local independent cycle retailer.

Search News

Results: 1-10 of 846


10 Apr 2026

It’s easy to forget the moment your love for bike shops began. Mat Clark, owner of BRINK - a UK-based business specialising in cycling retail, brand strategy, and industry insight -...

8 Apr 2026

Bike frame and fork protection specialists BikeWrap has confirmed its sponsorship of the Cytech Pub Quiz, part of the build up to Local Bike Shop Week next month.

2 Apr 2026

Bikebook has announced a new integration with Shopify

1 Apr 2026

An awards scheme celebrating independent bike shops that go above and beyond for their communities launches this week.

30 Mar 2026

ACT parent company Bira has warned that falling retail sales in February are an early sign of consumers reining in their spending amid growing economic uncertainty.

26 Mar 2026

A flagship cycling borough in outer London is poised to lift its eight-year ban on dockless e-bikes, with Waltham Forest Labour Party pledging to introduce a scheme if it retains control of...

26 Mar 2026

Bira has welcomed the government's £319 million investment in high street revitalisation, while warning that without reform of business rates and action on overseas imports, many high...

19 Mar 2026

This one's sobering: 42% of small businesses reported a cyber breach in 2024, according to the National Cyber Security Centre. And it's not just massive corporations being targeted. It's small,...

19 Mar 2026

The Chancellor held a roundtable discussion on a future high street strategy last week, with Bira the sole voice representing smaller retail businesses. Read an update on Bira's place at a...

18 Mar 2026

An independent bike shop is refusing to sell or repair e-scooters over concerns about how they are being used, with the area’s police force backing the call and urging others to follow...

Back to news menu

Bike mechanic apprenticeship scheme for prisoners nears first anniversary of success

Posted on in Business News , Cycles News

A pioneering prisoner apprenticeship scheme is being highlighted after almost a year of successful operation, offering participants hands-on training and professional qualifications to prepare for life beyond the prison gates.

Bike Mechanic Repair

The programme, run by the Oswin Project charity in collaboration with Cytech training provider Activate Cycle Academy and local bike shop Changing the Cycle, targets detainees who are granted Release on Temporary Licence (ROTL), helping them build skills and confidence while still serving time.

Based just a few hundred yards from HMP Northumberland, Changing the Cycle is open to the public and functions as both a working bike shop and a training hub for prisoners including “Jack,” a pseudonym for one of the current participants.

The initiative provides structured, accredited training in bike maintenance and repair, with the goal of helping detainees achieve industry-recognised Cytech qualifications, such as the Technical 2 accreditation, which Jack recently passed with distinction.

Activate Cycle Academy, a member of the ACT, delivers the technical training element, while the Oswin Project supports prisoners into employment and training as they near release.

Fiona Sample, CEO of the Oswin Project, said: “We are excited about this new partnership with Activate Cycle Academy and appreciate the support given by the team at HMP Northumberland. Organising such initiatives is always a challenge and I am delighted the prison is working with the Oswin Project to make this happen. I hope Changing the Cycle will flourish, and that many bikes and lives will be rebuilt.”

Jack, 26, is the first person from HMP Northumberland to take part in the apprenticeship, attending the shop four days a week under ROTL, then returning to his cell in the evening.

The national newspaper Inside Time recently featured Jack’s story as part of its series on prisoners preparing for life after jail, underlining the positive impact of such schemes.

Jack said: “Working for the Oswin Project has made me use my time in custody constructively, it gives me something to look forward to every day, instead of sitting in my cell wishing time would go faster. I am now learning to fix and refurbish bikes in the bike shop, which gives me four days out of prison, and I can escape my reality for a little while.”

Back to news menu

Useful links

If you have any other queries please contact us.