Cleveland Bridge faces a £500,000 bill to compensate the 250
workers thrown off the £757m Wembley Stadium project.
The steel fabrication and bridge-building contractor was left
"gobsmacked" by Multiplex's decision last week to invoke a 28-day
notice period and replace Cleveland with Dutch contractor
Hollandia, the original runner-up for the £60m steelwork deal
in 2002.
Cleveland said it was baffled by the main contractor's decision as
it had successfully completed the complex task of building and
raising the Wembley arch, while Multiplex itself has maintained
that the project was running to budget and on schedule for its May
2006 opening.
This is the second major blow to hit Cleveland Bridge this year. In
late February it announced that 240 of the 920-strong workforce
faced redundancy at its Darlington base as a result of clients
"stalling" over a number of future projects (CJ 3 March).
A source told CJ: "Cleveland Bridge was absolutely gobsmacked when
it was told it was off the project. It came totally out of the
blue.
"The decision means that not only is Cleveland Bridge going to have
to pay £500,000 in redundancy payments, but its workers have
been left high and dry. Cleveland Bridge has put everything into
this contract and thought it would need every single member of
staff for two years," he said.
After meetings with Multiplex, Hollandia and the unions, Cleveland
Bridge offered to second its staff to the Dutch contractor, but
this offer was initially turned down.
However, CJ understands that Hollandia has already taken on steel
erector Fastrack.
Late on Monday Amicus representatives met Hollandia and Multiplex
to discuss the future of the union's 205 members on the project.
Regional officer Frank Westerman told CJ the union wants to
establish: who will pay compensation to its members and whether all
contract terms and conditions will be honoured; and how many staff
will be transferred to Hollandia.
Should workers be transferred Amicus wants Hollandia to adopt a
last-in-first-out policy. The union expects an answer within a
week.
Cleveland will continue to do some offsite fabrication work for the
project, Hollandia will then complete the remaining steelwork,
including the contract to build the roof.
CJ has also been told the project will bust its budget. A project
source said: "We believe the whole project is going to cost at
least another £100m on top of the £750m-plus already
spent.
"The cost of steelwork is likely to add £40m, cladding a
further £20m, and the civil engineering bill an extra
£20m. The M&E work hasn't even started yet and that is
always an expensive part of any project."
Wembley National Stadium said any comment would be made by
Multiplex. However, Multiplex failed to comment.