THE closure of a Saltney storage locker factory is 'an act of vandalism' and will be a 'devastating blow to the loyal workforce', a union has said.

The Welsh Government has been asked to step in to help save the storage locker production plant at Saltney which is set to close in January 2021 with the loss of 55 jobs.

The site was first established to support the war effort during World War Two and has been manufacturing storage lockers for the last 40 years. The production firm manufactured the storage lockers for the Nightingale Hospitals.

Unite the union branded the Whittan Group’s decision to close the profitable Saltney site in the new year as ‘an act of industrial vandalism’. Saltney straddles the Anglo/Welsh border in north Wales.

Regional officer Brian Troake said: “This is a devastating blow to the long-standing and loyal workforce at Saltney, many of whom have worked at the site for decades.

“The proposed closure is an act of industrial vandalism by the Whittan Group, which will be resisted every inch of the way by Unite’s members to retain these jobs in Wales.

“Our members in Saltney deserve better treatment from the company, which appears to be transferring this work in an act of self-preservation for its Telford headquarters."

Unite believes that it was always the company’s intention to close the site following its acquisition in 2016 to relocate work to its Telford headquarters in Shropshire.

The union said that the news was ‘a bitter pill’ for its members, especially after their efforts in supporting the battle against coronavirus by manufacturing the storage lockers for the Nightingale hospitals.

Brian Troake added: “Saltney is an economically viable site which boasts a full order book and a healthy future.

“The company should recognise its social responsibility towards its loyal employees and their families, and also to the wider community. This will also be a bitter blow for the local economy, especially in the middle of a pandemic.

“We would encourage the Whittan Group to work with Unite and the Welsh Government to explore every avenue available to prevent closure, including the chancellor’s new job support scheme (JSS) as a way of avoiding compulsory redundancies.”

Jack Sargeant MP for Alyn and Deeside, said he backed Unite the Union.