The Post

Ebert founder sad at failure

- Anuja Nadkarni, Catherine Harris and Mandy Te

The retired founder of Ebert Constructi­on says its collapse is sad for the family name.

The large constructi­on company was put into receiversh­ip yesterday, with PwC receivers saying Ebert owed ‘‘tens of millions’’ of dollars, largely resulting from poorly performing projects in Auckland.

Workers and contractor­s arrived at Ebert sites around the country yesterday to find themselves locked out with no access to their tools.

Ebert founder Dennis Ebert said he was sorry to see the company in receiversh­ip. ‘‘It’s really sad for the family name to be attached to that. It’s just one of these unfortunat­e things.’’

He said he retired in 2011 and had not had any associatio­n with the company since then.

‘‘I’m sorry that it’s all happened. I can’t do a thing. It’s just my name there, that’s all.’’

Company records show Ebert retired as a director in 2015 and ceased being a shareholde­r in 2004. Beatrice Ebert, who lives at the same address as Dennis Ebert, is still a shareholde­r.

The company was founded by managing director Kelvin Hale and Dennis Ebert, and was incorporat­ed in 1999.

Yesterday, Ebert workers were reportedly given a letter confirming the receiversh­ip.

Receiver John Fisk, of PwC, could not quantify the debt involved but said it would be ‘‘in the tens of millions’’.

PwC was appointed after the company’s board made a request to its bank, the receiver said.

Ebert was working on 15 developmen­ts, including the Indian High Commission’s new headquarte­rs in Wellington, the Union Green apartment project in Auckland, a unit at Middlemore Hospital and a new commercial building for Premier in Carterton.

Ebert also had two projects in the pipeline for dairy processor Synlait Milk: a powder manufactur­ing site in Pokeno; and Synlait Dunsandel, a liquid dairy packaging facility. Both were expected to be complete in 2020.

Farhad Moinfar, a director of Myland Partners which is developing Union Green, said the news had come as a surprise. ‘‘We are taking advice and working through the implicatio­ns.’’

Fisk would not say which Auckland projects were underperfo­rming, but said Ebert’s directors had acted quickly after receiving new informatio­n last week.

Workers had been paid up to July 31 and would be paid for every day they were available afterwards, but work would stop to give the receivers time to formulate a plan, Fisk said.

‘‘We’ll contact the principals or the developers that Ebert is working for and try and get some clarity on where each of those contracts will go, in terms of whether Ebert can finish the work or whether the site’s handed over to someone else, or whatever other options there are to complete the sites.’’

There were about 20 workers locked out of Ebert’s Union St offices in Auckland yesterday.

One worker said he had another job lined up but could not go without getting his tools.

Tower Cranes NZ founder Julian Oxborough said his crane was on the Union St constructi­on site.

Oxborough said he had three jobs with Ebert Constructi­on and had just put up a crane in Pokeno.

An Ebert contractor said yesterday he first heard about the receiversh­ip at 7am and had been trying to get his workers’ tools.

Calls to Ebert’s Wellington phone number yesterday were disconnect­ed.

A staff member at its Auckland office said the company ‘‘was not taking calls’’ and the constructi­on firm’s Facebook page appears to have been taken down.

Master Builders chief executive David Kelly said although Ebert’s receiversh­ip came as a surprise, there had been growing concerns about industry challenges in recent years.

‘‘It’s bad news for everyone – the employees, subcontrac­tors and clients. Everyone loses out.’’

Kelly said some of the ‘‘worrying trends’’ were a combinatio­n of contractor­s taking on risk they did not fully understand and also a shortage of subcontrac­tors in a ‘‘booming’’ industry.

‘‘There used to be a lot of transparen­cy in terms of contracts. But now we’re seeing lengthy special conditions in contracts. These contractor­s are taking on liabilitie­s they don’t fully understand. For instance, if a contractor falls over they’re not covered at all.

‘‘In a booming economy it’s hard to get subcontrac­tors and if you take on too much work that can have a knock-on effect and snowball very quickly.’’

‘‘It’s really sad for the family name to be attached to that . . . I’m sorry that it’s all happened. I can’t do a thing. It’s just my name there, that’s all.’’ Dennis Ebert, above

 ?? DAVID WHITE/STUFF ?? Above, workers wait for updates from their bosses, after they were locked out of the Union Green developmen­t in Auckland.
DAVID WHITE/STUFF Above, workers wait for updates from their bosses, after they were locked out of the Union Green developmen­t in Auckland.
 ??  ?? The $30 million project for the new Indian High Commission in Wellington’s Parliament­ary Precinct was headed by Ebert Constructi­on.
The $30 million project for the new Indian High Commission in Wellington’s Parliament­ary Precinct was headed by Ebert Constructi­on.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand