This
government does not care about the future of the West Coast or its
people.
The
solution to all problems is to privatise and remove any safeguards
against the interests of his rich mining friends.
The
Spring Creek mine that has been mothballed was an underground mine
that nobody objects to. What the government wants is to let an
Australian company open-cast mine an area that is protected because
of its high conservation values.
If
we're looking for scapegoats why not blame everything on the greenies
- LOL
Government
turns down bid to save mine jobs
26
September, 2012
The
Government has rejected a bid by a group of Solid Energy miners to
keep the Spring Creek and Huntly East coal mines in full operation.
The
group left Parliament angry and upset on Tuesday afternoon after the
Government dismissed their proposal, saying their meeting with
State-Owned Enterprises Minister Tony Ryall was a waste of time.
The
state-owned coal company on Monday announced some 460 jobs would go
as it restructures its business to cope with the global downturn in
coal sales.
It
plans to mothball the Spring Creek mine on the West Coast, putting
234 staff out of work as well as 130 contractors; more than halve its
313-strong head office in Christchurch and eliminate 63 jobs at the
Huntly East mine.
The
workers' delegation arrived at Parliament just before midday.
Five
of the miners presented Mr Ryall with a $40 million plan they believe
could keep both mines in full operation.
Afterwards,
Mr Ryall said while he has empathy for the miners, the Government
won't be making any capital injections into Solid Energy to forestall
the changes.
"Even
if the Government did put another $50 to $70 million into Solid
Energy, there's no guarantee that we would not find ourselves in this
position in another year's time, with low coal prices and the company
needing to make quite difficult decisions which have significant
impacts on families and communities."
Mr
Ryall says Solid Energy did not make the decision to lay off workers
lightly.
Ged
O'Connell of the Engineering, Printing and Manufacturing Union says
Mr Ryall listened to what the miners had to say but wasn't prepared
to step in to help them.
Mr
O'Connell says the meeting was cordial and courteous but the result
led them to think it was a waste of time. "It was clear that
(the Government's) current economic strategy or policy just doesn't
allow them to reinvest in any of their SOEs."
Heartbreaking,
say miners
One
of the miners, Paddy McKenzie, who has worked for the company for
more than 20 years, says it is heartbreaking.
He
says it is going to have a massive impact on the West Coast, as there
are no alternative careers for him and many of his colleagues.
Another
miner, Trevor Bolderson, says the company has been throwing money
around like confetti, and only a few weeks ago recruited a miner from
Australia.
He
says the man's container arrived at his own expense, and is now stuck
in Lyttelton.
Solid
Energy situation avoidable – PM
Prime
Minister John Key says the situation at Solid Energy could have been
avoided if the company had already had a mixed-ownership model.
The
company is one of four state-owned enterprises the Government intends
to put up for partial sale.
Mr
Key says Solid Energy has a significant amount of debt on its balance
sheet and has embarked on a lot of new technologies, some of which
are not proving successful at this point.
"A
traditional coal company with external investors would probably be
more cautious in some of the things it had done."
Mr
Key says having external directors and external analysis puts
companies under greater scrutiny.
Support
new mines, says Joyce
26
September, 2012
Economic
Development Minister Steven Joyce has told people lamenting the loss
of mining jobs at state-owned Solid Energy to support fast-tracking
of new mines on the West Coast.
The
company is cutting more than 400 jobs at the Spring Creek and Huntly
East mines and its head office in Christchurch.
Mr
Joyce says Opposition parties can't complain about job losses and
then not support other initiatives to create jobs.
After
the Government on Tuesday told a delegation of miners from the West
Coast and Huntly it would not invest in Solid Energy to save their
jobs, Mr Joyce went on the attack.
He
called on the Labour and Green parties to support his call for
objectors to Bathhurst Resources Escarpment Mine near Westport to
withdraw their court action.
Environmental
group Forest and Bird is refusing to withdraw the action against
development of the open-cast coal mine on conservation land.
The
group says Mr Joyce has hit the panic button as a result of the job
cuts and is trying to deflect blame onto mining opponents. The appeal
is to be heard in the Environment Court in October.
Green
Party MP Eugenie Sage says the Government is just making excuses for
the job losses.
Labour's
West-Coast Tasman MP Damian O'Connor says his party does not object
to the Bathurst proposal and accuses the Government of playing
politics over the issue.
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