• Welcome to the LegalBeagles Consumer and Legal Forum.
    Please Register to get the most out of the forum. Registration is free and only needs a username and email address.
    REGISTER
    Please do not post your full name, reference numbers or any identifiable details on the forum.

Chain's 28,000 workers told to expect the worst

Collapse
Loading...
X
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Chain's 28,000 workers told to expect the worst


    Some 28,000 Woolworths staff are set to join the growing ranks of Britain's unemployed after being told yesterday that all stores are to close by early January.
    Talks with potential buyers of the stricken chain continue, but administrators Deloitte told the group's remaining 28,275 employees yesterday to prepare themselves for the worst.
    Workers had learned the news in an email from head office yesterday morning. The first 200 of the group's 807 stores will close on 27 December, followed by subsequent waves on 30 December and 2 January. The final stores will open their doors to the public for the last time on 5 January, ending nearly a century's trading at the high-street institution.
    "Some people have worked at Woolworths for 10, 20 years and it really means something to them," said one head office worker, who said colleagues had cried when the decision was announced. "Woolworths has been around for 99 years so it is almost a heritage brand."
    Last-minute bids for the chain were said to be in the offing from groups in the UK and overseas, but hopes of a deal being struck look forlorn.
    Administrator Neville Kahn, a partner at Deloitte, conceded that it looked as if the brand would disappear from the high street: "Quite a few people have looked at the business and decided not to proceed."
    He said buyers were finding it difficult to secure financial backing because of the credit crunch. In any case, potential buyers only want to take on a fraction of the stores, meaning any sale would still result in thousands of job losses.
    Deloitte was appointed as administrator to Woolworths' retail business and distribution arm EUK, which supplies CDs to Zavvi and supermarkets,last month after the management failed to agree new financing terms with its banking syndicate.
    It has already made 1,200 staff redundant as operations were trimmed behind the scenes at its head office and the EUK warehouses.
    The government yesterday distanced itself from intervening in the group's plight. "We are disappointed that the administrators have been unable to find a buyer," said a Downing Street spokesman.
    A break-up now looks inevitable, with 300 stores already pledged to rival groups including frozen food chain Iceland and discounters such as Wilkinson.
    If buyers are not found for the remaining 500 stores, the keys will be handed back to landlords in the new year. However, the government may have to pick up the bill for the collapsed group's pensioners. The Pension Protection Fund is in talks with the company about taking the scheme, which has an estimated £100m deficit, under its wing.
    Administrators said the store staff are entitled to statutory redundancy terms which means a week's pay for each year of service. The retail chain has 27,000 staff while another 1,275 are employed by EUK as well as in its warehouses and head office. However, as last-ditch talks continue, the administrators stressed staff had not yet been put on notice.
    The main beneficiaries of Woolworths' demise have been cash-strapped shoppers who have flocked to its stores to buy cut-price toys and CDs for Christmas. Such has been the frenzy that last Thursday was a record trading day for the retailer. It has used tactical promotions to pull in shoppers and expects to be the biggest seller of X Factor winner Alexandra Burke's Christmas single, a version of Leonard Cohen's Hallelujah, after undercutting the rest of the high street.
    Store shelves will be restocked with 50m new items this week, but as warehouses empty, "closing down sale" hoardings will soon replace Christmas banners in the shop windows.
    Some staff will have the depressing task of working on after the official closing date of January 5, readying the stores for their new owners - or, as looks likely, preparing them to lie empty if the high street downturn means no new tenant can be found.
    Parent company Woolworths, which is quoted on the stock exchange, owes banks close to £400m, and as secured creditors they are first in line to get their money back. Woolworths suppliers will not be so lucky. It emerged yesterday the collapsed group owes 500 companies tens of millions of pounds. They stand to receive only a fraction of what they are owed, with Deloitte warning it would take several months to tot up the amount available to return to them.
    Although Woolworths is unlikely to survive in its current form, there was hope that the brand could retain a presence on the high street. "I think Woolworths will come back on to the high street," said Kahn. "Whether it is in early 2009 is uncertain, but I'm confident it will reappear."



    guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2008 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds

    More...

  • #2
    Sharp increase in jobless figures as time runs out for Woolworths


    Unemployment looks certain to rise to 2 million in the new year after the number of people out of work increased by the largest amount since the early 1990s, and amid warnings that the onset of recession will push the number even higher.
    The once-booming British services sector has borne the brunt of the job losses, the figures reveal, especially financial companies, hotels, restaurants and retailers. The figures also showed big rises in youth unemployment, particularly men, and long-term joblessness.
    One of the few growth areas was public sector recruitment, thanks to hiring by the National Health Service.
    With the numbers yet to include the thousands of job cuts announced in the wake of the deepening financial crisis, and with 27,000 Woolworths staff set to join dole queues next month, ministers admitted that the problem was going to worsen and announced a series of measures to help people get back to work, including providing more personal job advisers.
    The Office for National Statistics said the number of people claiming jobless benefit leapt by the biggest amount since March 1991, rising 75,700 in November to 1.07 million. October's increase was revised up to 51,800 from the 36,500 reported a month ago.
    The new level took the jobless rate to 3.3%, the highest since January 2001.
    There was also bad news from the broader Labour Force Survey measure which showed a rise of 137,000 in unemployment in the three months to October to 1.864 million, the highest level since December 1997. The jobless rate rose to 6% for the first time since mid-1999.
    The Bank of England labour market expert, David Blanchflower, predicts that the total on that measure will top 2 million by Christmas, rising to 3 million next year.
    The TUC general secretary, Brendan Barber, said: "These figures show the awful human cost of the financial crash feeding through into the real economy. The government's number one priority must now be getting these people back to work." The figures also showed that employment fell by 115,000 in the period, with job losses particularly heavy among business service firms in the three months to September, as well as restaurants and the manufacturing sector, where employment hit an all-time low.
    With the banking sector meltdown of September and October, however, experts expect big job cuts in the City such as those at Lehman Brothers, HSBC, Santander and Barclays to enter the headline figure soon. The only sectors where employment held up were among the over-65s and in the public sector, where NHS hiring led to an overall increase of 14,000 jobs in September to 5.76 million.
    The Tories seized on the poor figures at prime minister's question time where deputy prime minister Harriet Harman, standing in for Gordon Brown, was forced to defend the government's economic record. The Conservatives warned of "soaring unemployment, rocketing debt, good businesses going to the wall".
    William Hague, standing in for David Cameron, added: "If this is the prime minister saving the world, God help us when he moves on to the rest of the solar system. How many people are going to have to lose their job before the prime minister justifiably loses his own?"
    Harman said the government would be announcing a small business loan guarantee scheme in January. Ministers were taking effective action to help families and businesses and would never, unlike the Tories, say that unemployment was a "price worth paying", she added.
    The employment minister, Tony McNulty, admitted that unemployment would get worse next year but he pledged a "robust" response, including extra support such as personal jobs advisers. "We have put in place extra help and support that will ensure everyone who becomes unemployed stands the best chance possible of getting back to work, including making available £79m of additional European social fund money to support people."
    Unemployment rose in 10 of the United Kingdom's 12 regions, with falls only seen in the east Midlands and the East.
    The ONS said the trends were worsening everywhere in the figures. The number of vacancies in the economy fell to 562,000, the lowest since comparable records began in 2001. Similarly, the number of redundancies rose by 41,000 to 180,000 in the three months to October. Graham Turner, head of GFC Economics, was alarmed at the upward revisions to the claimant count in recent months, which almost certainly meant November's rise was higher than the 75,700 reported yesterday.
    "There is a lack of staff in benefit offices, and claimant counts are being processed late. This is a very persistent pattern. So, as bad as this number looks, it will almost certainly get revised higher - up 90,000? - and we will then surpass the 100,000 mark soon, eclipsing the 1991 high."



    guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2008 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds

    More...

    Comment

    View our Terms and Conditions

    LegalBeagles Group uses cookies to enhance your browsing experience and to create a secure and effective website. By using this website, you are consenting to such use.To find out more and learn how to manage cookies please read our Cookie and Privacy Policy.

    If you would like to opt in, or out, of receiving news and marketing from LegalBeagles Group Ltd you can amend your settings at any time here.


    If you would like to cancel your registration please Contact Us. We will delete your user details on request, however, any previously posted user content will remain on the site with your username removed and 'Guest' inserted.
    Working...
    X