Employees at the Shannon site of the Avara Pharma Group say they have been treated “with contempt and disregard”.

Earlier this year, the High Court placed Avara Pharma Group in provisional liquidation upon hearing it was insolvent with debts of €9.5m a year and as such was unable to pay its employees. Purchased from UCB Manufacturing in 2016, the company broke even in two years but has been loss making since last year.

Avara Pharma Group operates a 2,000 square metre facility in the Shannon Industrial Estate manufacturing active drug ingredients, in particular for use in the treatment of Parkinson’s disease, for pharmaceutical companies.

Members of their workforce have since spoken out and have launched an online petition to secure a fair redundancy deal. Of the 115 workers, they said “many of whom have young families or have dedicated most of their working lives to this site, face the prospect of being made redundant next week. This follows on from a haphazard consultation period and no clear communication regarding their rights or entitlements”.

Workers were critical of the liquidators involved in the process. “The previously recommended redundancy payment which would have enabled these now vulnerable workers to pay their bills and provide for their families are not being honoured by the liquidators. Workers on this site have already had money taken out of their pockets as a result of the liquidation process”.

“This is just another example of a large multinational coming to our shores and treating the Irish worker and the Irish state with contempt and disregard”.

SIPTU Sector Organiser, Alan O’Leary told The Clare Echo on Wednesday that they were meeting with the liquidators “to agree a viable business plan that can save the jobs at the plant”. He added, “This is a very difficult situation for the workers in Avara. The union is working very closely with the court appointed liquidators’ in order to protect our members’ jobs. We have also spoken, today, to Minister of State at the Department of Trade, Employment and Business, Pat Breen, outlining the concerns of our members concerns regarding the future of the plant and the need for a viable business plan.”

Conleth O’Sullivan of Sixmilebridge warned, “Many employees like myself have given long service and deserve to be treated with respect. The site is potentially dangerous if skilled workers do not make it safe before losing our jobs”.

Green Party councillor, Roisin Garvey felt staff at the Shannon plant had mistreated. “I met some of the amazing workers from this company and to say they’ve been mistreated would be a massive understatement. 34% of them have been working there more than 15 years, half of them have been working there more than 10 years and they are all getting nothing but the statutory 2 weeks per year of service as a revolting redundancy package. There is also huge safety concerns about the lack of a proper plan for the decommissioning of the site as all the workers have been told to leave the site for good on the 14th of August even though they are really the only people with the expertise knowledge on how to decommission the site safely. They have thousands of tonnes of chemicals and explosives on site, there are homes and a runway 50 meters from the plant”.

Related News

m18 traffic 08-04-26 2
Teenager in TUSLA care a 'social admission' to hospital as Gardaí unable to transfer 14 year old to Dublin with motorway protests
wes browne avenue utd 07-04-26 3
Ex Manchester Utd defender Wes Brown links up with Avenue Utd's U13s
m18 traffic 08-04-26 3
'Widespread damage' to Clare economy with ongoing fuel protests say Ennis Chamber
timmy dooley 1
Dooley to lead talks in efforts to end fuel protests but says view Government has profited on excise duty is 'lovely simplistic argument'
Latest News
clare vs limerick minor 06-04-26 rian cotter eoghan murnane 1
Hayes hails improvement in Clare's workrate, shooting efficiency & kickout retention
wes browne avenue utd 07-04-26 3
Ex Manchester Utd defender Wes Brown links up with Avenue Utd's U13s
m18 traffic 08-04-26 3
'Widespread damage' to Clare economy with ongoing fuel protests say Ennis Chamber
timmy dooley 1
Dooley to lead talks in efforts to end fuel protests but says view Government has profited on excise duty is 'lovely simplistic argument'
bridge utd vs tulla utd 15-03-26 adam kilker 1
Kilker's strike sends Tulla through to third round of FAI Junior Cup
Premium
Lissycasey leap to top of Cusack Cup with third win on the trot
'Blockades must be removed as matter of critical urgency' says Crowe following meeting with protestors
Co Clare feeling the pump of protests as service stations run out of fuel
Clare let Rebels off the hook in U20 stalemate
Naming rights of Cusack Park 'more for local presence than improving business' say Zimmer Biomet

Subscribe for just €3 per month

If you’re here, you care about County Clare. So do we. Did you rely on us for Covid-19 updates, follow our election coverage, or visit The Clare Echo every week for breaking news and sport? The Clare Echo invests in local journalism and we want to safeguard its future in our county. By becoming a subscriber you are supporting what we do, will receive access to all our premium articles and a better experience, while helping us improve our offering to you. Subscribe to clareecho.ie and get the first six months for just €3 a month (less than 75c per week), and thereafter €8 per month. Cancel anytime, limited time offer. T&Cs Apply. www.clareecho.ie.