LONDON, Jan 14 (Reuters) – Carillion’s directors were making a final rescue appeal to its lending banks on Sunday night after the government refused to rescue the struggling construction and services company, Sky News reported.
Emergency talks on Sunday concluded with John Manzoni, the permanent secretary at Britain’s Cabinet Office, announcing that Carillion would not receive any special support from taxpayers, Sky said, citing government sources. (http://bit.ly/2D9K0ry)
Carillion declined to comment on the Sky News report.
With thousands of jobs and major infrastructure projects and contracts on the line, the chairman of the governing Conservatives earlier said ministers were “keeping a very close eye” on the Carillion negotiations and contingency plans were in place.
Brandon Lewis told the BBC that Carillion was still a going concern. The company said it was continuing to hold talks to avoid entering administration after contract delays and a downturn in new business, which have hit its profit and shares.
“Hopefully, they will be able to work with their partners to get the working capital they need to continue to provide important services,” Lewis said.
Carillion is part of a consortium that won a 1.4 billion pound ($1.9 billion) contract to help build Britain´s High Speed 2 railway on last year. The deal had offered it some respite after the company had lost other contracts.
Carillion, which has been in discussions with stakeholders and creditors for nearly a week, said these were continuing as it battles for survival following several profit warnings and a first-half loss of more than 1 billion pounds ($1.37 billion).
But deputy general secretary of the Trades Union Congress, Paul Nowak, called on the government to step in.
“Tens of thousands of jobs are now at risk, along with vital public services and major infrastructure projects across the country,” Nowak said in a statement.
Carillion, which is a major provider of public services, including hospitals and schools, employs about 43,000 people worldwide.
“Workers, taxpayers and public service users could well be left to carry the can. Carillion is a textbook example of the failures of privatisation and outsourcing. The government needs to step in, guarantee jobs and services, and explain how they let this mess happen in the first place.”
The Conservative Party’s Lewis declined to comment on whether ministers were ready to bail out the company, which Sky News had said could enter administration as soon as Monday unless the government backs a rescue plan.
Carillion said on Friday it was having “constructive discussions” with creditors, rejecting suggestions that they did not like the plan put forward by the company.
Shares in the company hit a new low of 14.2 pence on Friday after falling 30 percent. ($1 = 0.7283 pounds)
(Reporting by Elizabeth Piper; Additional reporting by Rama Venkat Raman; Editing by David Goodman and Alexander Smith)
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