We, the deaf-blind users, need to know if the Humanware will continuely
produce mPOWER and PK?  Who will repair them?

Leslie--

-----Original Message-----
From: Public discussion list on issues of technology for deafblind people
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Jeff Bohrman
Sent: Saturday, January 26, 2008 8:12 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [DBT] FW: [Braillenote] Fast fall 'from hero to zero': nearly
60 HumanWare staff lose their jobs.

I also wonder if the development of DBC will continue?  Jeff 

-----Original Message-----
From: Public discussion list on issues of technology for deafblind people
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Mr. Leslie US1
Sent: Friday, January 25, 2008 11:58 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [DBT] FW: [Braillenote] Fast fall 'from hero to zero': nearly 60
HumanWare staff lose their jobs.

Read below. Leslie--

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Noel Brailet
Sent: Friday, January 25, 2008 6:41 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [Braillenote] Fast fall 'from hero to zero': nearly 60 HumanWare
staff lose their jobs.


Oh my god! what's happening?

From: http://www.stuff.co.nz/thepress/4373770a24035.html
Fast fall 'from hero to zero'
By TINA LAW - The Press | Saturday, 26 January 2008

Christchurch has lost another manufacturer as nearly 60 HumanWare staff lose
their jobs.

Staff were told the news yesterday via a video link with chief executive
Giles Pepin, who was in Canada.

HumanWare, created by Christchurch innovator Dr Russell Smith, makes hi-tech
aids for the blind.

An employee said yesterday the company would have nothing more than a branch
office in Christchurch.

He said about six staff would remain, including two sales staff and four
employees involved in research and development.

It was understood all the manufacturing was being outsourced and the
research and development was shifting to Canada.

"I think some people were angry," the employee said.

"Others were resigned," she added.

"We've been through two weeks of consultation but we knew from the beginning
the decision had been made."

Management would not talk to The Press yesterday and instead passed on the
Canadian contact details of Ivan Lagace, the marketing vice-president.

Lagace did not return calls.

At least two of HumanWare's vice-presidents were thought to be on site.

Pepin told The Press last week that the two, Richard Nadeau, operations
vice-president, and Pierre Hamel, research and development vice-president,
were staying until the end of the month to reorganise projects.

The redundancies added to announcements in the past year by a handful of
local firms, including GPC Electronics, Click-Clack and Skellerup, of the
axing of more than 500 jobs over the next year.

Smith built PulseData, which later became HumanWare, into a high-profile
multimillion-dollar company with 230 staff and sales worldwide.

In August 2005 Smith, 60, died in a light-plane crash off the North
Canterbury coast with his wife, Marian D'Eve, 57. Since then, the company
has been through almost constant change, with new overseas owners and
managers.

When Jolimont Capital, an Australian private-equity fund, bought 70 per cent
of HumanWare last May it said no changes would be made.

Just four months later, eight staff were laid off, and in November, it was
announced the company was shifting its headquarters to North America.

"It's amazing how fast the turnaround was," the employee said.

"One minute we received a pat on the back from (Prime Minister) Helen Clark,
and the next minute we're given slips of paper telling us when we finish. In
the space of 18 months we've gone from hero to zero. Very quickly."

He said staff were told HumanWare would be out of its existing building in
Hillsborough within six months.

About 20 people were paid out yesterday and would not be returning to work
on Monday. Others in manufacturing had been given departure dates.

It was thought the company was attempting to find a local manufacturer which
could take on its manufacturing for a short period.

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