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NWDA chairman praises Ellesmere Port’s Vauxhall unions

ONE of the region’s top business leaders has praised trade union negotiators for their role in securing thousands of jobs at Vauxhall’s Ellesmere Port plant.

Robert Hough, the recently appointed chairman of the Northwest Development Agency, was speaking at the organisation’s annual meeting held in Liverpool..

Mr Hough was formerly deputy chairman of Liverpool John Lennon Airport and Port of Liverpool owner, Peel Holdings.

Speaking to an audience of 800 delegates at the BT Convention Centre, Mr Hough said: “We had the two-year wage freeze. It was a collaborative response from employers and the trade unions. That has been outstanding.”

Last week, Vauxhall’s likely new owner, Canadian car parts firm Magna, said it would keep production going at Ellesmere Port until at least 2016 and held out the prospect of new models beyond that.

Mr Hough said the NWDA could claim some of the credit for saving the car plant.

Referring to an £8m training grant given to Vauxhall last year, he said: “That plant has been preserved, the workforce is still there and that has resulted from the regional development agency investment 12 months ago.”

Speaking about the effect of the recession on the region’s economy, Mr Hough said: “It has been a nasty downturn.”

But he also struck an upbeat note, describing the current tough market conditions as an “opportunity”.

He said: “Business will recover. We can survive and thrive.”

Ellesmere Port is in pole position to build the European version of the Ampera electric car, while Jaguar Land Rover’s Halewood plant is to build the new LRX “baby” Range Rover.