Thursday, February 12, 2009

More automotive cuts

Hat-tip to Dan Ashby from Left Biz...

160 jobs are at risk atNorthern Automotive Services in Gilwern.

The company has just entered a statutory 90 day consultation period.

99 redundancies were made three months ago. It's thought there will be about 200 workers kept on at the site.

Echoes of Merthyr

Hoover isn't the only company considering moving it's washing machine manufacturing operations abroad.

Indesit's Bodelwyddan site is thought to be at risk after the company opened a washing machine plant in Poland, potentially putting 300 jobs at risk.

Nothing confirmed by the company yet, but the Unite Union are saying the plant is subject to a 'citiical review'.

Wednesday, February 11, 2009

Make that three...

A bad day for North Wales as a furniture maker in Gwynedd announces it's closing at a cost of 65 jobs.

Gleneagle Furniture, who have a plant in Dublin which will stay open, blamed a problem with their bank and the weakness of the pound for the decision to close. Council officers working on the region's economy and regenration service were unable to safegard the jobs.

Jobless figures

Figures released today show the number of people claiming job-seeker's allowance in Wales has gone above 100,000.

During 2008, the number of new claimants rose by 28%.

It means 7% of the working population of Wales are now signing on.

It's worth bearing in mind that these figures have a lag to them, as they only go up to the end of 2008, and they only take account unemployed people who are actually claiming job-seekers, so the actual figure is likely to be significantly higher.


Worth remembering the figures are being tracked on my job loss map.

Two more companies make cuts

Makro has confirmed it's considering closing its Swansea store as part of a cost-cutting excercise. It's believed more than a hundred jobs could be at risk as a result.

And cheese-maker First Milk, who made 93 redundancies before Christmas, have announced a further 52 jobs are at risk at the plant in Maelor.

Monday, February 9, 2009

Last week's snow seems to have slowed the flurry of job losses (no pun intended), but today it seems they've picked up from where they left off.

This morning it was announced that 70 jobs could be lost at International Rectifier Limited, an electrical components manufacturer in Newport. These losses would be on top of the 54 redundancies made just three months ago.

And in Cardiff, MP Julie Morgan's campaign to keep the International Baccalaureate's UK HQ in the city looks to have failed, at a cost of about 300 jobs. The education standards body will be relocating many of its head office functions to Amsterdam, and keeping on just 40 of it's staff at the Cardiff base.

In a press release explaining the decision the company said:

"The locations had to meet a set of criteria deemed necessary to bring about organizational effectiveness and efficiency. Management considered criteria that included overall economical cost structure for the long-term, employment legislation and practices, attractiveness for staff relocation and transport links. Finally the locations’ ability to satisfy the global perception of the IB as international was also considered."

Many have taken this to be a slight on Wales, and Cardiff in particular, as it implies that we're not an 'international city'.

Thursday, February 5, 2009

The Assembly gets ProActive...too little too late?

As the number of redundancies on my Job Loss Map tips 10,000, the Welsh Assembly announces:
"100 staff at the Japanese-owned automotive component manufacturer, Shimizu, based in Welshpool, could receive up to £2,000 of funding per individual for training and a wage subsidy of £2,000 each"

It's part of the new £48m ProAct scheme which aims to help employers keep their work force while orders drop-off. While they're not needed for their normal roles they'll be trained in up-to-date skills so that when orders pick up again the company will be well placed to meet demand.

Unfortunately the new programme is too late for the 500 steelworkers at Corus in Llanwern who learnt their fate a fortnight ago, the 200 workers at Sun-Juice who got confirmation of theirs today, or the Hoover workers who will get confirmation of theirs in the next couple of weeks, but it will be interesting to see if this is enough to protect the jobs in Welshpool, and indeed elsewhere when it's rolled out.

Ironically, today also saw Fforwm, the body representing Further Education colleges in Wales, claim that a £3m cut in Assembly funding will put 450 jobs at risk. So while 100 manufacturers in Welshpool will be offered training and job protection, the very people providing that training could face redundancy themselves.

One hand other, give and take...?