The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Workers face the axe after clinical waste firm ceases trading

DUNDEE: HES staff in city wait to learn their fate after bosses cancel meeting

- DEREK HEALEY dhealey@thecourier.co.uk

Workers at the Dundee plant of a troubled clinical waste firm are facing redundancy after bosses announced the company has ceased trading.

Healthcare Environmen­tal Services (HES), which is responsibl­e for disposing of clinical waste from every hospital, GP surgery, dental practice and pharmacy in Scotland, broke the news to hundreds of staff yesterday morning.

However, workers in Dundee were left angrily awaiting confirmati­on after bosses reportedly scheduled a meeting for hours after colleagues in North Lanarkshir­e received their redundancy notices, and then scrapped it at the last minute.

The company became embroiled in a clinical waste stockpilin­g controvers­y earlier this year and was set to lose its NHS Scotland contract in April, after being stripped of 17 contracts with NHS trusts in England.

Almost 400 people are employed by the company across the UK but eight permanent staff members and a number of “casual workers” in Dundee will have to wait until later today to meet with company bosses to officially learn their fate.

One employee, who asked not to be named, said: “We were originally supposed to be going in for a meeting at 4pm with the plant manager but that’s been cancelled now until 11am on Friday.

“I changed my plans to go in so it’s pretty frustratin­g given we already know what’s going on at other depots. There’s a lot of anger about how everything has been handled.

“One of my friends based in Dundee was still out working last week, collecting waste from care homes and hoping this was all going to be sorted out.”

A letter from HES managing director Garry Pettigrew said a shortage of incinerato­rs led to the backlog problem and blamed “unfair government pressure” on the business for the redundancy notices.

Mr Pettigrew claimed a bank had withheld funds “due to pressure from political and market perception of our company”.

In the redundancy letter, HES said it was unable to make payments, but directed staff to the Redundancy Payment Service to claim money owed.

“There’s a lot of anger about how everything has been handled. EMPLOYEE

 ??  ?? Staff at the HES plant in Dundee are scheduled to meet with the firm’s bosses today.
Staff at the HES plant in Dundee are scheduled to meet with the firm’s bosses today.

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