RSS Feed     Twitter     Facebook

Posts Tagged ‘Luton’

Gyllenhaal splurges £100K to spend time with Taylor Swift!

‘Brokeback Mountain” star Jake Gyllenhaal apparently splurged 100,000 pounds to whisk Taylor Swift from America to the UK on a private jet. After she flew in to Luton, the stars locked themselves away in Gyllenhaal”s London hotel suite at The Dorchester. Gyllenhaal was in town promoting his new comedy flick ”Love And Other Drugs.” The [...]

Rooney vows off field ‘sex scandal’ won’t affect on-field ‘scoring’ skills against Swiss

England striker Wayne Rooney has assured manager Fabio Capello that he would be focused and would not let his controversial private life affect his performance during tonight’s Euro 2012 qualifier against Switzerland. According to reports, Rooney had a brief chat Capello onboard the flight from Luton airport. The England manager and his advisers had been [...]

New life for an old car site

Always a slightly poignant moment for me going up to what was once colloquially known locally as ‘The Austin’ – now MG Motor UK and formerly Austin of England, British Motor Corporation, British Leyland, etc, etc at Longbridge, on the southern outskirts of Birmingham.

I know all that because, for an enjoyable short while, I took the PR shilling, working for an an associated but independent museum full of mostly British Leyland ‘classic’ cars and prototypes and a vast archive from which one could, if one wished, obtain such details as how many Austin A40s were produced in 1948. And exported to markets including the US by post-war Austerity Britain workers encouraged by posters saying “The Ships Are Waiting”.

It was to Longbridge, with its miles of conveyors, sleek painted bodies silently creeping along underground tunnels to final assembly, and innovative pre-prepared component sets for each car on the final line that companies like Datsun (now Nissan) of Japan came to admire, be amazed and secure licences to build the A40 in Yokohama. You know the rest…

All this is now in the past. Vast areas of the complex formed by one Herbert Austin from a former tin printing plant way back in the day were bulldozed under BMW ownership, much more was sold off and leased off under Phoenix. Today, even the vast body shop across the main road, a robotised marvel when opened about 1980 to build the Mini Metro, and its long, enclosed conveyor over the A38 highway to the paint shops, is but a distant memory, the ground now levelled and ready to receive housing, offices and a shopping ‘destination’, the fate of many once-proud assembly plants in the west - as new greenfield facilities rise in the east.

Today Longbridge is but a corner of the once-vast site, a mothballed paint shop, busy design and development centre and associated offices, and an assembly hall stitching together semi knocked-down kits shipped in from China.

Yet, though much of the manufacturing – and the skilled, if monotonous, assembly jobs that went with it – is gone from the UK (also RIP Rootes/Chrysler/PSA Linwood and Coventry; British Leyland Speke, Leyland Trucks Bathgate, et al; and I also fear for the famous Vauxhall site at Luton after 2013), the British motor industry is not dead, just smaller and different.

We might no longer make Ford cars here but we still make their diesel engines and petrol ones for BMW; that company’s Mini, GM Vauxhall, Jaguar, Land Rover, Toyota, Honda and Nissan all have car assembly plants whose quality is comparable with anywhere abroad. All foreign-owned now, of course, but still providing many local jobs, valuable tax and local community revenue, business for suppliers, training and skills. We’re in a global economy and every new assembly job has to be pitched for and won, against tough competition abroad.

Assembly can now be done virtually anywhere. Eastern Europe, China, India, Russia, Thailand. None were on the automaking map when Longbridge, and Detroit, were at their best. What is setting the UK apart is our design and development expertise. Who helped Nanjing move engine production to China and adapt an old Rover car design for local production, using local suppliers? Ricardo Consultants 2010, a British company now absorbed into SAIC’s MG Motor UK design centre. Where are many F1 race cars designed, developed and tested? Here. Where are the world renowned MIRA and Millbrook vehicle development centres? Here.

That is the future. Design and develop here. Assemble somewhere else, lower-cost. As an old consumer motoring writer I know used to say: “The only thing certain is change.”

None of that brings back the tens of thousands of auto manufacturing jobs lost over here in the last three decades or so. But it has opened up thousands of opportunities for well educated engineers and designers graduating from the likes of Coventry University’s acclaimed auto designer’s course, one of whom recently styled a 2020 MG for SAIC to show off worldwide.

And there are still many skilled hands left in the business. Witness the flexible, multi-tasking line workers at the volume makers, the leather, wood and aluminium trim magicians at Aston Martin, Jaguar, Land Rover, Bentley and Rolls-Royce.

That at least should give the ghosts of Longbridge something to smile about as the builders hammer away.

Cadillac in Europe

Will they ever learn at GM that the Cadillac brand is a very, very hard sell in Europe? We found out today that there are new plans to kick-start the brand in Europe after the Kroymans bankruptcy last year. It won’t be easy.


Even if you have some good product, it’s hard work getting people away from the established prestige brands. And, I would think, it’s even harder in these very lean times at that premium end of the market.


That said, maybe there is room in the market for Cadillac at fairly low volume; enough non-conformist moderately affluent people who really don’t want a BMW or Mercedes-Benz and want to make a public statement to that effect. Caddy can perhaps establish a small bridgehead and gradually build on that. Maybe that’s the thing – come up with a realistic business and marketing plan, steady as she goes, learn to walk before attempting to run.


I was reminded of a warm spring afternoon in Luton a couple of years ago when Jonathan Nash laid out the thinking on things like Cadillac brand positioning and distribution. I guess if you have a brand like Cadillac and want it to be global then, sooner or later, Europe just has to be back on the agenda, whatever the history may be. 


GENEVA PREVIEW: Cadillac eyes European comeback


THE EDITOR’S INTERVIEW: Jonathan Nash, MD Saab GB and GM UK’s Caddy man

Simon Cowell ”more famous than god’ among kids

X-factor judge Simon Cowell is more famous than God among kids.
Cowell topped the poll of the most famous person in the world conducted on more than 1,000 children by Luton First, an organisation set up to promote the Bedfordshire town.
The Queen came in second, followed by God at third.
Moreover, talent show X-factor has also made [...]

GM unit Vauxhall to cut 354 jobs at British plant

Vauxhall, the British division of troubled US carmaker General Motors, announced on Monday that it intended to cut 354 jobs at one of its two British factories. The company said in a statement that it proposed to “reduce Luton’s headcount by 354 employees” to streamline its workforce in line

Opel/Vauxhall still murky


Has the fog cleared over the future of GM’s European Opel/Vauxhall operations? To some extent perhaps, but major uncertainties remain.


Even if we assume that the deal to sell a majority stake to Magna is now a formality (I am a little wary of such assumptions these days; the deal has yet to be closed), there’s still the small matter of addressing a restructuring of operations to give the new ‘orphaned’ firm a fighting chance of long-term survival.


Where will the cost-cutting axe fall? Again, the politics of the situation – in terms of plants and jobs in different countries – will continue to be very much in the limelight. Will decisions be taken on economic grounds or political ones? We’ll see, but it has been pretty political so far.


It may not, however, be quite as simplistic as portrayed in the sense that German Chancellor Angela Merkel may have got the deal she wanted ahead of the German general election, but its the post-election period that will see any ‘bad’ news on German Opel jobs becoming evident.


Other national governments won’t sit idly by, either.


OPEL AFTERMATH: Factory, worker, futures unclear


Here in Britain the politicians are stirring, too. The future for Vauxhall’s Ellesmere Port looks pretty secure – it is making the new Astra and is seen as a relatively efficient plant. It also acts as a natural currency hedge while the UK stays out of the euro. But there are question-marks against the Vauxhall Luton plant that makes vans in collaboration with Renault.


On the plus side, the UK government is hoping to secure more work for Ellesmere Port, said to be earmarked to make the Ampera range-extender hybrid (the Chevy Volt’s European sibling). How has that project been ring-fenced to stop Magna and its Russian partners getting all over the technology? Maybe that’s been an open door for the UK government to push at for a while and maybe that helps to explain why Lord Mandelson hasn’t been too noisy through the whole Opel/Vauxhall sale process – there’s been a quiet ‘understanding’ with GM over the future Ampera project.


As I say, the politicking and speculation will continue for a while yet. Things should become clearer in October.

ANALYSIS: Fear and loathing in Luton

GM receives three bids for Opel

Flags

Would-be buyers of General Motor’s Opel business have until later on Monday to lodge plans for the firm’s future.

Canadian-Austrian car parts maker Magna International is favourite to buy Opel – which includes Vauxhall in the UK.

Magna, backed by Russia’s Sberbank, wants to use Opel to make an aggressive push into the Russian market.

However, Belgium-based investor RHJ International is manoeuvring to try to make a successful bid – with plans to restructure Opel’s operations.

GM was forced to put Opel up for sale as part of its massive restructuring which saw it go into Chapter 11 bankruptcy in the US – before emerging as a leaner company with less debt.

Opel has been placed under the ownership of a trustee in which both GM and the German government have a stake – making the process of deciding a buyer complex.

Vauxhall commitment

The Magna consortium had looked to certain to win the battle for Opel since May – when the German government’s supported the move.

And last week, German chancellor Angela Merkel and Russian president Dmitry Medvedev voiced their support for Magna.

However, Opel’s future has become less clear-cut after RHJ, which is backed by US private equity firm Ripplewood, said last week that its negotiations with GM and Germany were "at an advanced stage".

Both firms’ plans are thought to involve cutting about 10,000 Opel jobs – and protecting all four German car-making plants.

Magna has now said that "no immediate plant closures are contemplated" at the Vauxhall sites at Luton and Ellesmere Port, which employ about 5,000 people. However, that commitment has only been made to 2013.

RHJ is also expected to support saving both Vauxhall factories – but may ask workers to take pay cuts.

GM is expected to give its preliminary findings on the final bids to the German and other European governments on Wednesday.

Next week GM is expected to have a recommendation ready on which bid to accept. That will be put before its board and the US Treasury, which has a majority stake in GM.</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

‘Question marks’ over Opel bids

Opel worker in Germany

There are still lots of question marks surrounding the three bids for a majority stake in Opel, Germany’s economy minister has said.

Karl-Theodor zu Guttenberg said that the bidders needed to take on more risk if any deal was to be agreed.

The German government is closely involved in talks between Opel’s owner General Motors and the bidders, having pledged considerable financial support.

If a deal is not agreed, he said, Opel could ultimately face bankruptcy.

‘Advanced’ negotiations

"There are still lots of question marks. For example, the bidders have to ensure that the new Opel company can start with a strong capital base. Otherwise, the EU Commission will not accept the rescue," Mr zu Guttuenberg said.

"If everything fails, what we do not want to happen – Opel’s bankruptcy – cannot be ruled out ultimately," he added.

In May, the German government backed a bid from Canadian car parts maker Magna to take a stake in the troubled carmaker.

However, relations between Opel’s owner, General Motors (GM), and Magna have soured in recent weeks, leaving the door open for two further bidders – Belgian private equity firm RHJ International and Chinese firm Beijing Automotive Industries.

Just last week, RHJ said it was in "advanced" negotiations with GM.

Magna wants control of some GM intellectual property rights, as well as distribution rights in Russia, something which the US carmaker is not willing to hand over.

Now it appears there are doubts in Germany about all three bids.

Job losses

GM has just emerged from bankruptcy protection after losing billions of dollars following a massive slump in sales due to the global economic downturn.

As part of its cost-cutting measures, the carmaker is selling GM Europe, which employs a total of 54,500 workers across Europe, with 25,000 based in Germany.

Under the Vauxhall brand, the firm employs 5,500 UK workers and has plants in Luton and Ellesmere Port.

There have been worries that UK workers will suffer sharp job losses as financial support for Opel from the German government safeguards German jobs. </p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Psychiatric nurse jailed for golf rage attack

Amateur golfer sent to prison for nine months after beating a fellow player around the head with a club

A golfer who beat a fellow player around the head with an eight iron after an outbreak of “golf rage” was today jailed for nine months.

Harold Stafford, a psychiatric nurse, launched the attack on Barry Barnes after he accused him of playing his ball at a golf course in Luton.

During his trial at Luton crown court, Stafford claimed he acted in self-defence after Barnes had racially abused him.

The court heard that he began shouting at Barnes, accusing him of playing his ball. The argument intensified, and as Barnes turned his back to walk away, Stafford took an eight iron and began beating the golfer about the head.

The father-of-two knocked Barnes to the ground and continued his assault, hitting and kicking him, leaving him with bruising to his eyes, cuts and bruises to his chest, and bruising to his back and arms.

Stafford was convicted of actual bodily harm with the judge praising his previous good character and service to the community as he passed sentence.

Claudette Elliott, prosecuting, said: “This is a golf rage incident that occurred on 19 September 2008.

“The defendant was there with two of his friends and there was a misunderstanding about a ball that had gone astray.

“He felt that Mr Barnes had played his ball and he hit Mr Barnes with a golf club, causing it to break.

“Mr Barnes suffered quite serious injuries. He had two black eyes, his right eye puffed up to the size of a golf ball and his left eye was almost closed.

“The defendant has made it clear that golf is his passion. He said: ‘I love to play golf and I would play every day if I could. I also understand that golf is a game of integrity and honour.’”

The court heard that Barnes also suffered chest and back injuries in the attack.

In a statement read to the court, Barnes said: “I’m very shocked. I could not believe he was so cowardly to attack me when my back was turned. I’m disgusted that someone could behave like this.”

Passing sentence, Judge Richard Foster said: “It’s tragic that you are before this court today. You have an impeccable record as a psychiatric nurse and you are clearly a man of many qualities who has many good and strong friendships, as indicated by your support in court today.

“You are a man who has served his community well as a psychiatric nurse but, on this occasion, you showed the most appalling violence and anger, and I regret to say that I can think of no other sentence but custody.

“If this is how you respond to minor provocation, I dread to think how you respond to provocation in your role as a psychiatric nurse, but that is for others to decide.”

Brereton Horne, defending, said: “What happened was a moment of madness and a temporary lapse of judgment.

“He now faces a conviction and as a result of that conviction he will lose his job. This experience for him has been a shattering one and one for which he has been punished severely.”

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Six-year-old and GP die of swine flu

• UK fatalities linked to H1N1 virus now up to 17
• Exact cause of deaths to be determined by coroners

A GP and a six-year-old girl have died after contracting swine flu, taking the number of UK deaths linked to the virus to 17, officials announced today.

Dr Michael Day, a family doctor from Bedfordshire, died on Saturday at Luton and Dunstable hospital.

Chloe Buckley, from north-west London, died on Thursday at St Mary’s hospital in Paddington after contracting the virus in the UK.

Along with Sameerah Ahmad from Birmingham, also six, Chloe is one of the youngest victims of swine flu. Children aged between five and 14 are most affected by the virus, according to the Health Protection Agency (HPA).

A postmortem will be needed before health officials can determine whether Chloe had any underlying health conditions, Dr Simon Tanner, NHS London’s director of public health, said.

NHS East of England said a swab test confirmed Day had also contracted the H1N1 virus, but the exact cause of death will remain unknown until the coroner’s report.

The first British patient without underlying health problems died on Friday after contracting swine flu. The patient, from Essex, died at Basildon and Thurrock University hospital.

The UK has the third-highest number of confirmed cases – almost 10,000 – of swine flu after Mexico, which has 10,262 cases, and the US, which has at least 33,902 confirmed cases. Tanner said Chloe’s death would “probably not be the last that we have in this pandemic”. She was the sixth person in the capital to die after contracting the H1N1 virus.

“We would like to extend our deepest sympathies to the family at this difficult time as they come to terms with their loss,” said Tanner.

Dr Day’s practice, the Priory Gardens health centre, is to contact everyone who has been in close contact with the doctor recently, including patients, NHS East of England said.

They will be assessed for symptoms of swine flu and offered antiviral medication if necessary.

Dr Paul Hassan, senior partner at Priory Gardens, said staff at the practice were “completely devastated”.

“Dr Day was a work colleague and also a personal friend to everyone at the practice,” he said.

“I know the news will also come as a great shock to our patients, many of whom have known him for many years. Our thoughts at this time are with his wife and family.”

Hundreds of thousands more people than those officially recorded are believed to have swine flu. Doctors have warned that rates of infection are reaching epidemic levels in London and the West Midlands. Its rapid spread has prompted the HPA to stop giving updates of the exact numbers infected.

In its last weekly update, on Thursday, the agency said 335 people had been taken to hospital with the virus, 43 of whom were in critical care. Tanner said it was difficult to say exactly how many people had caught the virus now patients were no longer swabbed. Swabbing was abandoned after it was determined that swine flu was widespread.

Tanner emphasised that most people who contracted the virus would experience mild symptoms and feel better within a few days. The advice remained to wash hands regularly and throw away used tissues, he said.

At St Catherine’s school in West Drayton, north-west London, headteacher Sara Benn said pupils were struggling to come to terms with the news of Chloe’s death. “It is impossible to put into words the sorrow that the whole school feels in such tragic circumstances,” said Benn.

“Chloe was a bright and tenacious student with a keen interest in sports. She will be missed by her fellow pupils and her teachers at the school. Our thoughts are with her parents and family at this time. We are working with the council and health authority to support parents and pupils dealing with this devastating news.”

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Six-year-old and GP die of swine flu

Chloe Buckley, from north-west London, and Bedfordshire GP Michael Day take UK death toll to 17

A six-year-old girl and a GP have died from swine flu, taking the number of UK deaths linked to the virus to 17, it was announced today.

Chloe Buckley, from north-west London, died on Thursday at St Mary’s hospital in Paddington after contracting the virus in the UK. Bedfordshire GP Dr Michael Day died on Saturday in the Luton and Dunstable hospital.

A post-mortem examination will be carried out on Chloe to determine whether she had any underlying health conditions, said Dr Simon Tanner, from NHS London.

A swab test has shown that Day had swine flu but his death will be investigated by the local coroner to determine its exact cause, a statement from NHS East of England said.

It comes after the first British patient without underlying health problems died on Friday after contracting swine flu. The patient, from Essex, died in Basildon.

Earlier today, it was disclosed that the virus had reached Downing Street. It is understood that Gordon Brown’s adviser on climate change, Michael Jacobs, has been infected.

Nearly 10,000 Britons have been confirmed with swine flu after it spread to the UK from Mexico. However, hundreds of thousands more people in the UK are thought to have the virus.

The total number of cases in the country are now being estimated rather than counted individually.

The UK has the third highest case total in the world after Mexico, which has 10,262 cases, and the US, which has at least 33,902.

Speaking about Chloe’s death, Dr Tanner said: “We don’t know if she had underlying health issues.

“There is a post-mortem examination planned. At that point we hope to say if there were underlying health problems.”

Chloe’s death brings the number of swine flu-related deaths in the capital to six.

Tanner said it was difficult to say exactly how many people have caught the virus, now patients are no longer swabbed. He said most people who contracted the virus would experience mild symptoms and feel better within a few days.

The advice to regularly wash hands and throw away used tissues remains the same, he added.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


GM reborn after 40 bankruptcy days

‘Business as usual is over at GM,’ said CEO Fritz Henderson

America’s biggest carmaker, General Motors, won a second chance to prove itself as a profitable motor manufacturer today as it emerged from bankruptcy at lightning speed after a remarkably swift, smooth financial restructuring.

After just 40 days under court-supervised protection from its creditors, GM was resurrected as a solvent business shortly after 6.30am when lawyers, completing an all-night paperwork session, signed over its factories, stocks, equipment and intellectual property to a new entity controlled by the US government.

GM’s chief executive, Fritz Henderson, pledged to pay back $50bn (£30.9bn) of public loans well in advance of a deadline of 2015 and promised that the streamlined company would be a nimbler, less bureaucratic and more decisive organisation. GM will focus on four vehicle brands – Chevrolet, Cadillac, Buick and GMC.

“Business as usual is over at GM,” said Henderson at a press conference in Detroit. “Today, we take the intensity, decisiveness and speed of the past several months and transfer it from the triage of the bankruptcy process to the creation and operation of a new General Motors.”

He continued: “We recognise that we’ve been given a rare second chance at GM, and we are very grateful for that. And we appreciate the fact that we now have the tools to get the job done.”

The US government owns 60.8% of the new GM, while Canada’s government holds 11.7% and a union-controlled pension fund has 17.5%. Creditors of the old company, who were owed $27bn (£16.67), were compensated with a stake of just 10% to the dismay of Wall Street bondholders who fought a short, unsuccessful battle for a larger slice.

President Obama had initially predicted that reforming GM would take 60 to 90 days. But creditors’ objections were decisively thrown out by a New York bankruptcy judge, Robert Gerber, in a resounding win for the administration’s auto restructuring taskforce.

“This is a major victory for the Obama administration over Wall Street,” said Aaron Bragman, a motor industry analyst at IHS Global Insight in Detroit. “The government really put the screws on bondholders and enforced a deal on them that it thought was suitable.”

After swapping loans for equity, the new GM has debt of $48bn (£29.6bn), compared to the $170bn (£105bn) burden when it filed for chapter 11 protection. But the transformation has been painful for thousands of employees, parts suppliers and car dealers.

Once cutbacks are complete in 2011, GM is likely to have just 38,000 blue-collar factory workers in the US, compared to 113,000 three years ago. The number of GM plants will fall from 47 to 31 and, through a clear-out of senior management, GM’s executive team will shrink by 35%.

The firm, which was once the largest corporation in America, is in the process of selling international names including Saab, Vauxhall, Opel and Hummer as part of its downsizing. In Britain, the decision to offload GM’s European operations has cast a cloud of uncertainty over 5,500 jobs at Vauxhall factories in Luton and Ellesmere Port, Cheshire.

Henderson said GM’s emergence from the bankruptcy courts would allow “every employee, including me, to get back to the business of designing, building and selling great cars and trucks”.

He insisted that GM could shake off its reputation for uninspirational designs and slow-moving bureaucracy.

“Einstein’s definition of insane is doing the same thing over and over again, expecting different results,” said Henderson. “We know we have to change.”

Among GM’s priorities will be the development of environmentally-friendly vehicles such as the electrically powered GM Volt, which is due to be launched by the end of next year. GM executives have even reportedly mulled changing the company’s distinctive blue logo to a green hue, although Henderson said he did not plan to do this.

New initiatives include a joint venture with the website eBay to explore ways of auctioning cars online, and a forum called ‘Ask Fritz’ in which customers will be able to share suggestions with the chief executive.

But financial experts warned that the company faces challenges in winning back the trust of customers and the financial community.

“The legacy costs are gone. The challenge in the future is how to approach a marketplace that has been burned by GM,” said Pete Hastings, a credit analyst at Morgan Keegan.

Along with its rival Chrysler which also recently went through bankruptcy, GM has been hit by the worst slump in US vehicle sales since the second world war. The company has struggled to cope with high petrol prices, a change in tastes towards smaller, more fuel-efficient vehicles and fierce competition from Asian rivals. It has lost its title as the world’s leading carmaker to Japan’s Toyota.

A new chairman, former AT&T boss Edward Whitacre, will preside over GM’s board. He told reporters: “For 100 years, General Motors was among the world’s greatest companies. It deserves to be there again and it will be there again.”

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds