The Chronicle

Crashed firm’s staff to get 98% of their money

WORKERS TO BE PAID BEFORE ALL OTHER CREDITORS

- By JONATHON MANNING Reporter jonathon.manning@reachplc.com @jonnyAMann­ing

FORMER staff of Utilitywis­e are in line to receive the majority of the money they are owed after the company’s collapse, a new report has revealed.

In February, Utilitywis­e, based at Cobalt Business Park in North Tyneside, fell into administra­tion after it failed to find a new owner willing to inject £10m into the business to keep it afloat.

As a result the energy consultanc­y, one of the biggest in the region, was forced to close its doors, making 581 members of staff redundant.

Workers were told they were losing their jobs suddenly, with management sending out an email at 3pm telling them to attend a meeting an hour later. Staff were then told they were being made redundant immediatel­y, which was met by angry reactions from those affected.

But more than six months after Utilitywis­e went bust, the firm’s former workers have finally been given some good news after administra­tors say they are set to receive the majority of the £1.2m they are owed.

In the administra­tors’ report, FTI Consulting outlined how much money it expected Utilitywis­e’s creditors would be repaid. Former workers are classed as preferenti­al creditors and are eligible to receive money owed to them through wages, holiday pay and pensions contributi­ons.

The report said: “We are currently waiting confirmati­on from the Redundancy Payments Services of the level of preferenti­al claims against the company, which are expected to exceed £1.2m.

“Based on current estimated floating charge realisatio­ns and costs of realisatio­ns, we anticipate a dividend of 98 pence for every pound owed to preferenti­al creditors.”

Creditors have lodged claims of £116.1m against the company and while staff are set to receive 98% of what they are owed, the same cannot be said for Utilitywis­e’s other creditors.

NatWest and RBS is owed £21m from the company but as a secured lender, they are only expected to receive between £3.8 and £3.9m.

The remaining unsecured creditors were owed a total of £76.1m when the company collapsed, but FTI does not believe there will be enough funds to pay any of that back.

The firm’s shareholde­rs have claimed £17.8m but will receive nothing.

The administra­tors’ report also confirmed that former employees are taking legal action against Utilitywis­e for the way they were made redundant.

“A number of employees have made claims to an employment tribunal. We continue to assist the tribunal by providing informatio­n in relation to the background to the redundanci­es that took place during the administra­tion,” the report said.

The details of the employment tribunal have yet to be revealed, although sources have claimed in the past it relates to the fact Utilitywis­e failed to hold a 45-day consultati­on period with staff before they were made redundant. Utilitywis­e’s collapse came after a difficult 18 months when the company was forced to delay publicatio­n of its accounts, suspend trading on the London Stock Exchange, and bring in a new auditor to examine its accounts. Eventually the firm’s banks said it would only renew its lending if the firm could find £10m of investment to inject into the business. It was hoped a new owner could be found, but ultimately a sale was not possible.

We anticipate a dividend of 98 pence for every pound owed to preferenti­al creditors Administra­tors’ report

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 ??  ?? Utilitywis­e fell into administra­tion in February
Utilitywis­e fell into administra­tion in February

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