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Malin Head staff say 16 jobs
will go
05.11.07
STAFF at Malin Head
Marine Rescue Centre say they derive no comfort from
claims their workplace will be retained as a coast
guard station.
They believe at most, only two workers will keep
their jobs under such a scheme with 16 more set to
get the axe.
The 18 workers were responding to Fianna Fáil
Senator Cecilia Keaveney who stressed last week that
Malin Head and its sister station in Valentia would
not be closed or disposed of as Irish coast guard
locations.
She said there would be "no diminution in the
quality of the emergency response capability on the
west coast" though admitting "the precise nature of
their long-term function has yet to be finalised".
But the Malin Head staff told InishowenNews.com:
"Senator Keaveney's statement does not get away from
the fact that if current plans are allowed to go
ahead Malin Head and Valentia Coast Guard will close
as rescue centres, resulting in a loss of
sustainable jobs in Inishowen and Valentia Island. |
"There are currently 18
staff at Malin Head. If Malin Head and Valentia were
to be upgraded as the two centres for the country as
originally planned, it would result in the creation
of up to 28 jobs for Malin Head."
The workers say the Government statement merely
means the buildings and equipment would remain and
be remotely |
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controlled from the planned new
centres with "possibly one or two staff required at
Malin Head in this situation".
Their concerns reached the Seanad floor last week
with Sinn Féin's Senator Pearse Doherty and Senator
Keaveney locking horns on the issue.
Cllr. Pádraig MacLochlainn accused Senator Keaveney
of "defending the indefensible" rather than joining
Senator Doherty in the fight to save the Malin Head
jobs.
"The facts are that the Marine Rescue Co-ordination
Centre is going at Malin Head and with it, the vast
majority of jobs at the coast guard station. No
amount of spin can cover this up," said Cllr. MacLochlainn. |
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