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Dell Limerick staff express their shock and disappointment at job cuts

AS thousands of Dell employees left the massive manufacturing facility following today's briefing with management the anguish was clear on their faces.

Staff began gathering since early morning to learn their fate following weeks of speculation.

Father-of-one Thomas McNamara, 28, of Keyes Park has been working on

the weekend shift at Dell for the past four years. He said the

announcement wasn't a surprise.

"People were expecting it, I was myself and I would have been shocked if they told us our jobs were safe, a lot of people would have shocked if they said things would be okay," added Mr McNamara who revealed he has plans to marry his partner, Ciara, in the near future.

"I'm kind of shocked in a way but it won't settle in until October

because that is when the line I work on will be let go," he told

reporters.

Denis Ryan, 53, who lives in Newcastlewest said: "I'm disappointed

because the New York press could tell two years ago that Dell was

closing but management kept that quiet and they have used this

recession to close the place," he said.

Mr Ryan, who was previously made redundant when Krups closed in 1992,

said he will just have to get on with his life. "People will have to

improvise and do what they have to do but no-one is going to starve at

the end of the day and I have plenty of friends."

Another employee, Eamon Ryan, 59, from Nenagh, said he was angry at

the redundancy package, which was offered to workers. "The redundancy

package is six weeks pay per year of service based on base-rate pay,

it does not include overtime earnings and it does not include shift

allowances which it should do," he said adding the impact of the job

losses will be severe.

"There are plenty of people here who have mortgages and young families and I don't honestly don't know how they will survive and for people in their late forties and early 50s it is going to be an extremely difficult time."

Around 30 percent of those who will lose their jobs at Dell are

non-nationals. Raiss Djro, who is originally from the Ivory Coast said

it was a sad day for everyone at the company. "It is a sad day but

what can we do, I am not a pessimist and hope things will be okay. At

the moment things are though but I think they will get better," said

the father-of-one who now lives at Old Cork Road.

Niall Sheehy from Knockaderry said: "I've been here for seven years

and for Dell to go from Limerick means Limerick is finished it is just

finished."


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Weather for Limerick

Saturday 04 February 2012

5 day forecast

Today

Light rain

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Temperature: 4 C to 10 C

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Wind direction: South

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