Home Job Seekers Employers REC Community Contact

Recruitment Weston Super Mare
Tel: 01934 61 22 88
office@changerecruitmentservices.co.uk




A local independent recruitment agency providing Permanent and Temporary recruitment services exclusively to the accountancy and finance community in North Somerset, Somerset and Avon.

“We are determined to build our reputation based on the quality of the people we recommend”


We have been established since April 2006 and now operate two distinct business divisions of Accountancy and Business Support. Specialists in finance and accountancy recruitment, we have become one of the few independent recruitment agencies in the South West to be successfully awarded Audited Status by the Recruitment and Employment Confederation (REC).


We aim to become the accountancy and finance agency of choice, for companies and individuals in the North Somerset, Somerset and Avon area.

To see how we can help please contact us on 01934 612288 or email office@changerecruitmentservices.co.uk




Time Sheets
Company Literature

Register Pack


Community Sponsorship

Click logo for more details.

weston junior athletics club

 

 

 

 


Change Recruitment Services Limited
Maple House,
Winterstoke Road,
Weston-s-Mare, BS23 3YS

Tel: 01934 61 22 88
Fax: 01934 61 26 51
Email: office@changerecruitment services.co.uk

BBC News

 

Syria's army moves to reassert control in rebellious suburbs of Damascus in the worst fighting around the capital in the 10-month uprising, activists say.

Inspectors from the UN nuclear agency, the IAEA, begin a visit to Iran to try to determine the purpose of the country's nuclear programme.

Novak Djokovic attempts to defend his title against Rafael Nadal in the men's final of the Australian Open.

Burma's pro-democracy leader, Aung San Suu Kyi, draws crowds on a political tour ahead of by-elections in April.

Greek officials reject German proposals for a eurozone budget commissioner to oversee spending, as agreement nears on a second bailout for Greece.

Yemen's President Ali Abdullah Saleh arrives in the US to receive medical treatment for injuries he sustained in an assassination attempt last June.

The political leader of the Palestinian Islamist movement, Hamas, is due to visit Jordan, 13 years after it expelled Hamas leaders.

Soul and blues singer Etta James is remembered at her funeral by stars Stevie Wonder and Christina Aguilera, while President Obama pays tribute.

The Nigerian army shoots dead 11 members of the Islamist militant group Boko Haram in the north-east, a spokesman says.

A fire at a drug rehabilitation centre in the Peruvian capital Lima kills at least 26 people and injures 10 others, officials say.

Khartoum offers to release detained crude oil shipments belonging to South Sudan to help end a bitter dispute over transit fees.

The Royal Bank of Scotland chairman, Sir Philip Hampton, has given up a £1.4m shares reward he was due later this year.

The salvage firm which will remove fuel from the wreck of the Costa Concordia has been explaining its plan.

The African Union has inaugurated its newly built headquarters in the Ethiopian capital, Addis Ababa.

Around 20,000 passengers across Europe and Africa have been left stranded or forced to find new flights after the collapse of Spain's fourth-largest airline, Spanair.

Watch the latest news summary from BBC World News. International news updated 24 hours a day.

The Australian Prime Minister, Julia Gillard, has been forced to explain the actions of a staff member who leaked information which led to her being confronted by an angry mob last Thursday.

The Arab League says it is suspending its controversial monitoring mission in Syria because of the upsurge in violence.

A fire at a drug rehabilitation centre in the Peruvian capital Lima kills at least 26 people and injures 10 others, officials say.

LJ Rich investigates the possibilities of multimedia story-telling by getting dressed up for a starring role in a multimedia project.

Inappropriate spending cuts could "strangle" growth, so austerity measures should be tailor-made by each country, the head of the IMF warns.

The pace of US economic growth quickened to a 2.8% annualised rate in the three months to December, the Commerce Department says.

The social network and Washington State sue a marketing firm over claims that it deceived users by hiding 'Like' buttons. The firm denies the charge.

A European Parliament rapporteur has stood down in protest as a controversial anti-piracy agreement is signed by several countries.

Demi Moore suffered convulsions after smoking an undisclosed substance, according to a tape of an emergency call made on Monday.

Europe's largest bell will ring to start a £27m Olympic opening ceremony inspired by Shakespeare and featuring NHS nurses and 900 local pupils.

Microscopic plastic debris from washing clothes is accumulating in the marine environment and could be entering the food chain, a study warns.

Graphene, often described as a "miracle material", can be used to distil alcohol, according to a new study in the Science journal.

Fake drugs dispensed to NHS patients in 2007 have never been found and patients remain unaware of the incident, BBC investigation reveals

The owner of a French breast implant maker at the centre of an international safety scare faces charges of "involuntary injury", his lawyer says.

Police arrest a 59-year-old man over an alleged gesture at an FA Cup tie between Liverpool and Manchester United.

New Zealand amateur Lydia Ko makes history by winning the New South Wales Open at the age of 14.

Uggie, the 10-year-old canine star of Oscar-nominated hit The Artist, is 'getting tired'.

A Romanian auction house sells a leopard skin, silver doves and a bronze yak that belonged to the late communist dictator Nicolae Ceausescu.

The African Union inaugurates its newly built Chinese-funded headquarters in the Ethiopian capital, Addis Ababa.

The US defence secretary says he is concerned about a Pakistani doctor arrested for providing intelligence for the US raid that killed Osama Bin Laden.

Preparations to pump fuel from the wreck of the cruise ship Costa Concordia are suspended, as divers find a 17th body.

Cuba's ruling Communist Party holds its first-ever national conference to consider changes in the way it runs the country and how to renew the ageing revolutionary leadership.

The BBC hears accounts from prison inmates in Libya suggesting that supporters of former leader Col Gaddafi are being tortured in detention.

Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney pulls away from nearest rival Newt Gingrich in Florida opinion polls, although his national lead slips.

Few people believe that top bosses should be paid more than £1m a year, according to a survey.

Desert Island Discs celebrates its 70th anniversary with 44 different versions of the radio programme across the BBC's entire UK network.

A man is charged with murder after the death of an 18-month-old boy in Stoke-on-Trent.

Homes in Salford are evacuated after police raid a flat and find two suspicious devices.

Photos from around the world this week

24 hours of news photos: 27 January 2012

Buildings fall in city centre

Severe storm hits the US state of Alabama

Vintage prints of fashion photographer on show

24 hours of news pictures: 26 January

24 hours of news photos: 25 January 2012

Brazilian officers storm an illegal settlement

Is Chongqing really the world's biggest city?

An edible dowry for an Australian bride in Papua New Guinea

Did Germany sow the seeds of the euro crisis?

BBC readers' pictures on the theme of frozen

Who is the real Margaret Thatcher behind the public image?

The Ethiopian town that is the khat capital of the world

Why ending the lost generation 'disaster' matters

Feelings run high in Lahore as heart pill deaths mount

E-shots
Click to view

  • REC
  • Temp Market Growth
  • Protecting Your Assets
  • Celebrating 3 Years
  • New Website
  • Winners