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All across the country workers are being axed

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Published Date: 18 June 2009
ABOUT 125 jobs are to be lost at a missile test firing range in the Western Isles, the Ministry of Defence (MoD) has announced.
Twenty jobs linked to an underwater range near Raasay, off Skye, are also expected to go, along with two at a site on the Clyde.

West Freugh, a military range and test facility near Stranraer, will not be affected.

Cuts are being made as part
of an effort by the MoD to make £50 million savings.

The MoD said it hoped the redundancies would help to secure a long-term future for the sites and a local consultation will now take place.

The Western Isles will be hardest hit, with the Hebrides range control centre on South Uist being shut by 2014.

Staff will no longer work on St Kilda – instead range radar there will be operated remotely, with staff visiting for maintenance only.

Elsewhere, the Angus economy suffered a major blow yesterday as a leading food firm announced plans to axe 95 posts – 40 per cent of its workforce.

The redundancies at the Letham chicken processing plant of the 2 Sisters Food Group have been blamed on a downturn in the British market for cut and portioned chicken.

As part of a review of the Birmingham-based group's UK operations, the cutting division at the Letham factory will be closed and operations transferred to a centralised facility at a 2 Sisters' factory in the West Midlands. The Letham factory has a workforce of about 240, processing 230,000 chickens a week.

Local councillor David Lumgair expressed disappointment at the scale of the job losses. He said: "The factory will be processing whole chickens which will then be sent south for cutting and portioning. I don't know what benefit that brings and I hope there are no more cutbacks. I hope this is not the start of a move away from Scotland."

Meanwhile, the Russell Europe sportswear plant in West Lothian is set to shut with the loss of 60 jobs. Staff at their Bathgate distribution warehouse have been told they will all be laid off within a year.

The company, previously known as Russell Athletic, blamed "poor economic conditions" for the move.

AND THE LIST GOES ON …

AMONG the job-loss announcements yesterday, were:

• 78 pilots from the 3,200-strong team at BA.

• 125 Ministry of Defence jobs at a missile testing range in South Uist.

• 800 jobs are to go with the closures of 132 Birthday's shops across the UK, including 25 stores in Scotland. Branches across Glasgow, Edinburgh, Fife and the Borders are all affected.

• 60 jobs are to go at Russell Europe distribution plant in Bathgate – formerly known as Russell Athletic.

• 95 jobs go at the 2 Sisters Food Group in Letham, Angus, a chicken processing plant





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  • Last Updated: 17 June 2009 9:35 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: Recession
 
1

Brianwci,

18/06/2009 01:37:17
OIL AND GAS: £20BILLION SHORTFALL

Marvellous what you can do with numbers. Kuwait, Abu Dhabi, Saudi Arabia, Qatar etc can be transformed from desert economies (i.e. have to build a modern civilisation from scratch....goats the main resource)but Scotland, above all other countries in the world discovers Oil and gas and yet somehow or other would not have enough to live on for most of the years Oil has been flowing!

Many words spring to mind, none of them printable.

The sooner the Independence debate gets going so we can nail this sh*te into the ground the better. This is absolutely lunacy.

No, worse, it's downright LIES!!!

I comment here because we are not allowed to challenge this 'filth' in the original article.



2

Linda,

Edinburgh 18/06/2009 08:36:28
STV 6 o'clock Scottish News Wednesday 17th's edition

Employment: the rise in Scottish unemployment was analysed. Expert opinions were sought from Jim Murphy and Theresa May... naturally. Given it was unemployment in Scotland, you would have expected someone from The Scottish Government to be interviewed. I suppose the editor didn't want to hear an SNP person telling Scots that unemployment in Scotland is lower than in England.

Scottish Futures Trust: this article gave air to Andy Kerr, Murdo Fraser and Mark Hellowell, from Edinburgh University's Centre for International Public Health Policy, all talking down the Scottish Government's SFT.
Yet again there was no SNP spokesperson.

Last night's coverage of the demonstrations in Iran by the Iranian State Broadcaster ISB was better balanced than this bilge from STV. The ISB showed the opposition demonstrators marching through Tehran whilst in Scotland our own STV didn't let anyone from the Scottish Government speak. Is Scotland the only country in the world where it's the elected government that can't get air time?
3

Eve,

Scotland 18/06/2009 16:18:55
"The MoD said it hoped the redundancies would help to secure a long-term future for the sites and a local consultation will now take place."

Sorry I thought redundancies added name to the unemployment list and meant that the organization was either down scaling or going bye bye, i.e. taking jobs away from certain sites.

"AND THE LIST GOES ON …"

Someone somewhere, create some jobs and make them open for anyone to apply for, none of this jobs for under 25s, over 50's, out of work for over 6/12months or disabilities only. Have common sense and give everyone whose will to work a chance.

 

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