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Greater Manchester's new supermarket with 'wild' ice cream flavours and BBQ selling out in an hour manchestereveningnews.co.uk - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from manchestereveningnews.co.uk Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
17 Feb 2021, 09:25 Hello Oriental, a 6,000 sq ft market hall and dining destination, is to open at Bruntwood SciTech’s Manchester mixed-use development in July. Located over three floors in the South Pavilion, the venue will offer a range of Chinese and East Asian street food. South Pavilion, one of two ground floor and subterranean space spaces within Circle Square, is located in Symphony Park, the public green space at the centre of Bruntwood SciTech’s Oxford Road scheme. The Hello Oriental concept is being launched by Chi Yip Group, the firm behind Manchester restaurant Ocean Treasure and online supermarket of the same name.
Rogue employers named and shamed for failing to pay minimum wage The 139 named companies failed to pay £6.7 million to over 95,000 workers. From: 139 companies, including major household names, have short-changed their employees and have been fined offending firms failed to pay £6.7 million to their workers, in a completely unacceptable breach of employment law Business Minister Paul Scully says the list should be a ‘wake-up call’ to rogue bosses, as department relaunches naming scheme after 2-year pause Almost 140 companies, including some of the UK’s biggest household names, are being named and shamed today for failing to pay their workers the minimum wage.
The 139 named companies failed to pay £6.7 million to over 95,000 workers. 139 companies, including major household names, have short-changed their employees and have been fined offending firms failed to pay £6.7 million to their workers, in a completely unacceptable breach of employment law Business Minister Paul Scully says the list should be a ‘wake-up call’ to rogue bosses, as department relaunches naming scheme after 2-year pause Almost 140 companies, including some of the UK’s biggest household names, are being named and shamed today for failing to pay their workers the minimum wage. Investigated between 2016 and 2018, the 139 named companies failed to pay £6.7 million to over 95,000 workers in total, in a flagrant breach of employment law. The offending companies range in size from small businesses to large multinationals who employ thousands of people across the UK.