The Press and Journal (Aberdeen and Aberdeenshire)

Workers left jobless as fish factory closes

Industry: Council vows to help staff get back into employment

- BY REBEKAH MCVEY

Efforts are being made to support scores of workers left jobless by the sudden closure of a north-east fish factory.

Employees of Prime Seafoods were called in to a meeting on Tuesday afternoon, where they were told they were losing their jobs immediatel­y and that the business had gone to the wall.

Management, which had seen the company experience huge shortfalls in recent years, blamed the decision on “a lack of fish and overheads that are not sustainabl­e”.

Factories in Fraserburg­h and Peterhead were cleared, and the company website was wiped from the internet within hours.

Yesterday, Aberdeensh­ire Council and local politician­s vowed to do all they could to help the 68 workers get back into employment – and to “identify risks” which caused the collapse of the 40-year-old firm.

Banff and Buchan MP, David Duguid, said he was “ready to stand by those affected” and voiced concerns that high business rates could have played a part in the firm’s demise.

He said: “I am aware of some of the speculatio­n and I know, for example, that high business rates are a millstone round the neck of many local firms. I am keen to find out exactly what went wrong, so that we can identify and try to mitigate factors that may be putting other, similar businesses at risk.”

Chief executive of the Scottish Seafood Associatio­n, Jimmy Buchan, also speculated that business rates had a “devastatin­g impact” on the firm and others like it.

Mr Buchan said: “We’ve been pleading with the Scottish Government for years but they haven’t listened. We don’t want sympathy, we want action.”

Aberdeensh­ire Council’s economic developmen­t head, Belinda Miller, said workers would be helped through the Partnershi­p Action for Continuing Employment (Pace), which was set up by the Scottish Government to assist people facing redundancy.

She said: “This must be a very worrying time for everybody concerned and arrangemen­ts are being made to provide informatio­n to employees.”

MSP for Banffshire and Buchan Coast, Stewart Stevenson said the loss of 68 jobs was a “major blow”.

Mr Stevenson said: “I will be contacting Prime Seafoods to see what actions can be taken to mitigate the decision, and have offered my support.”

Prime Seafoods is registered to George and Susan Forman but no one from the firm was available for comment yesterday.

A government spokesman said: “We are concerned to learn of job losses at Prime Seafoods in Peterhead and Fraserburg­h.

“We are maintainin­g the most competitiv­e nondomesti­c rates regime in the UK, ensuring that over 95% of properties in Scotland pay a lower poundage than they would in other parts of the UK.”

“A lack of fish and overheads that are not sustainabl­e”

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