Jobs In Dounreay
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Air Traffic Control Officer
AdPosted by Highlands and Islands Airports Limited£30,918 to £45,073 per annumFull TimeHighlands and Islands Airport Ltd. is one of the largest Air Navigation Service Provider in the UK with operations at 11 Scottish Airports. We have an amazing opportunity for you to join us to train as an Air Traffic Control Officer (ATCO).
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Director (unremunerated)
PromotedPosted by Caithness & North Sutherland FundPart TimeThe Caithness & North Sutherland Fund is a community fund established by the Nuclear Decommissioning Authority and Dounreay Site Restoration Ltd to distribute a £4M funding package to community projects that will increase the attractiveness of Caithness & North Sutherland as a place to live, work and invest.
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Environmental Clerk of Works/Environmental Advisor
PopularPosted by Redstart UK£30,000 to £40,000 per annumFull TimeWe are delighted to be supporting our client, Stagfire Ecological Surveys, to recruit an experienced Environmental Clerk of Works/Environmental Advisor with an ecology and/or construction background.
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Site Construction Manager
Posted by SSE£40,600 to £61,000 per annumFull TimeAbout the Role Base Location: Perth, Aberdeen, Inverness or Orkney with regular travel on-site to Caithness and Orkney Salary: £40,600 - £61,000 + car allowance + performance-related bonus + a range of benefits to support...
Living in the area around Dounreay
Dounreay is synonymous with the British nuclear industry, with the Dounreay Nuclear Power Development Establishment formed in 1955 primarily to pursue the UK Government policy of developing fast breeder reactor technology. The workforce there today is working on decommissioning.
The north coast of Caithness is a spectacular place to live, with some of the wildest coastline in the UK. Scrabster, Wick and Thurso are the main communities.
Inland are the flat peat bogs and moorlands of the Flow Country, considered to be one of the last true wilderness areas in Europe with a wide range of wildlife and rare plants.
The old county of Caithness holds a lot of history which is exciting to take in when you are exploring the area. Today Caithness is one of the eight regions of Highland Council.
When it comes to transport, the Wick John O’Groats Airport has flights to Aberdeen and Edinburgh, the Far North Railway line link with Inverness is one of the most spectacular routes in the whole of the UK, if not Europe, and the short crossings to Orkney make it easy to take a weekend break on the islands.