National Post

ServiCom staff told of possible buyer

- MICHAEL MACDONALD

HALIFAX • The sudden closure of a Cape Breton call centre continued to reverberat­e Monday, with about 450 former employees briefed on a potential buyer — and sympatheti­c members of the public warned to be careful about where they send their donations.

“We haven’t really authorized or endorsed anyone to do fundraisin­g for us,” said Tanya Wilneff, a former manager at the ServiCom Canada facility in Sydney.

Wilneff said Monday she had spotted at least six GoFundMe sites that purported to be raising money for the almost 700 ServiCom employees — all of whom lost their jobs last Thursday as part of a bankruptcy protection process involving the company’s U.S. parent.

The sites may have been set up by well-meaning people, but it is often difficult to tell if they are legitimate, said Wilneff, a former human resources manager who worked at the centre for 15 years.

Later in the day, many former employees gathered for a meeting in Sydney, where they learned about short-term assistance from the provincial and federal government­s, as well as the prospects for an unnamed buyer to reopen the facility in the New Year.

Todd Riley, the call centre’s former director, said a meeting is scheduled for Tuesday between the U.S. judge handling the bankruptcy proceeding­s and the parent company’s creditors, as well as the potential buyer.

“We truly believe we’re going to have a deal in principle very, very soon,” he said.

Cecil Clarke, mayor of the Cape Breton Regional Municipali­ty, and Nova Scotia Business Minister Geoff MacLellan have both indicated the centre was in the process of being sold when the bankruptcy proceeding­s interrupte­d the sale.

MacLellan, who attended Monday’s meeting, repeated his claim that a buyer is keen to reopen the call centre early in the new year. He said the sale can’t go ahead until the American judge completes bankruptcy proceeding­s.

“There’s nothing (stopping the sale), from my perspectiv­e,” he said. “There’s no show-stoppers.”

Riley said the former employees decided Monday to set up an employee-management committee devoted to fundraisin­g. “We do not want anybody setting up a fraudulent account to reap benefits from this situation,” he said after the meeting. “We’ll focus on one account that we will put out there.”

In particular, she said volunteers at the local food bank — operated by the Salvation Army — have stepped up to make sure every former ServiCom employee has enough provisions to make it through the holiday season.

As well, a local pizza joint — Alexandra’s Pizza in Sydney — has handed out $3,000 in gift cards, she said.

ServiCom provided customer support to major firms such as GM’s OnStar, Sirius XM, AT&T and Allstate.

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