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Crisis-hit Reid Transport now under police investigation

6th December 2007
Page 16
Page 16, 6th December 2007 — Crisis-hit Reid Transport now under police investigation
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The police decline to say why they are investigating the haulier, which went into administration last month. David Harris reports.

REID TRANSPORT, the Northern lreland-based haulier that has been put into administration, is being investigated by the police (` Reid Transport in administration: 200 jobs lost', CM 29 November).

The Police Service of Northern Ireland (PSNI) declines to reveal the nature of its inquiries; nor will it confirm reports that one aspect of the investigation concerns allegations that Reid had employed a boy of 14 for up to five nights a week, in breach of the child labour rules.

Administrators for the company did solve one problem when negotiations with former workers ended a blockade at its Ballymena depot.

Nearly 200 workers had been demanding payment for time they had already worked; they will now be paid redundancy money, although this is limited to a maximum of f.310.

Sean Smyth, Unite's industrial organiser for the site, says employees had not been paid since 15 November: "We agreed to lift the blockade after hours of talks with the administrator at Northern Ireland's equivalent of ACAS when the administrators agreed to pay the staff something, even though some will not get everything that is owed to them."

Unite is demanding a full inquiry into the collapse of Reid, which is understood to have debts of £3.5m.

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