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Scottish family firm acquires assets of 'respected' company
Scottish family firm acquires assets of 'respected' company

The Herald Scotland

time5 days ago

  • Business
  • The Herald Scotland

Scottish family firm acquires assets of 'respected' company

NWH Group acquired the trading assets of Coatbridge-based Henry Waste Management, which it described as 'a well-established and respected skip-hire and waste-collection company'. It said the move strengthens its position in central Scotland and aligns its 'long-term strategy of growth through both organic expansion and strategic acquisition'. Craig Williams and John Crawford are working together to 'support the seamless integration of customers and services and ensure continuity across operations'. (Image: NHW Group) It noted the deal also includes the transfer of 'key personnel', with the longstanding owner of Henry Waste Management, John Crawford, joining Dalkeith-based NWH in a consultancy capacity. A driver from the Henry business is also joining NWH, which employs about 370 people. The transaction includes around 585 skip containers, and five skip vehicles. Read Ian McConnell's exclusive story here

Scottish family-owned business buys Lanarkshire skip-hire assets
Scottish family-owned business buys Lanarkshire skip-hire assets

The Herald Scotland

time07-08-2025

  • Business
  • The Herald Scotland

Scottish family-owned business buys Lanarkshire skip-hire assets

NWH Group said the acquisition of the trading assets of Coatbridge-based Henry Waste Management, which it described as 'a well-established and respected skip-hire and waste-collection company', strengthens its position in central Scotland and aligns its 'long-term strategy of growth through both organic expansion and strategic acquisition'. It noted the deal also includes the transfer of 'key personnel', with the longstanding owner of Henry Waste Management, John Crawford, joining Dalkeith-based NWH in a consultancy capacity. A driver from the Henry business is also joining NWH, which employs about 370 people. NWH noted the remainder of the Henry Waste Management business - 'employees, yard etc' - was acquired by a third party. It said that Mr Crawford will work directly with Craig Williams, NWH Group executive director, to 'support the seamless integration of customers and services and ensure continuity across operations'. Mr Williams said: 'We're delighted to welcome John and the Henry Waste Management assets into our business. We've known John and his team for many years and have built a strong working relationship based on trust and shared values. This acquisition not only expands our operational footprint in the region but also enhances our capacity to serve customers efficiently and reliably.' NWH noted that, while the Henry Waste site in Coatbridge had been sold to a third party, it would retain access to a dedicated tipping bay at the location, 'ensuring a smooth continuation of service and improved operational efficiency'. Mr Crawford said: 'After many successful years running Henry Waste, I'm proud to see the business become part of a forward-thinking company like NWH. Its commitment to customer service and innovation reflects the values that helped build our reputation, and I'm looking forward to working with Craig and the wider team to ensure a smooth transition for our customers.' The acquisition took effect officially on August 1, with NWH noting an internal integration team had been appointed to 'oversee the smooth alignment of routing, scheduling, and systems across the newly acquired fleet and equipment'. The company added: 'This latest move underscores NWH Group's commitment to sustainable growth, enhancing service capacity while supporting the circular economy across Scotland.' Read more NWH in April declared it had delivered 'another outstanding year of growth', as it reported a record trading performance for the financial year ending September 30, 2024. It observed that, since 'the Covid-impacted 2020', it had delivered increasing sales and profits. NWH achieved turnover of more than £55 million in the 12 months to September 2024, a 6% increase on the previous year. Operating profit rose by 24% to £4.2m, which NWH said demonstrated the strength of its 'diverse business model and commitment to long-term value creation'. NWH said this 'robust' financial performance had been driven by sustained expansion across its trade waste and construction and demolition divisions, as well as strong contributions from its 'newly enhanced' processing facilities in Newcastle and longstanding sites in Midlothian, Glasgow, Dundee, Angus and Edinburgh. It added: 'Despite some sector-wide headwinds, the group continued to invest in infrastructure, sustainability and operational excellence. Growth in the trade waste division was underpinned by improved customer retention and new multi-year contract wins across key commercial sectors such as retail, leisure and manufacturing.'

New Colonel Mustard & The Dijon 5 single on Lanarkshire label has hallmarks of a summer anthem
New Colonel Mustard & The Dijon 5 single on Lanarkshire label has hallmarks of a summer anthem

Daily Record

time25-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Daily Record

New Colonel Mustard & The Dijon 5 single on Lanarkshire label has hallmarks of a summer anthem

Wild Flowers features Dumfries Community Choir and is unlike anything the music collective has produced before Colonel Mustard & The Dijon 5 have released their first new music in four years on Coatbridge-based label Button Up Records. The new single Wild Flowers comes hot on the heels of their fantastic performance supporting legendary reggae band UB40. ‌ Wild Flowers, which features Dumfries Community Choir, has the hallmarks of a feelgood summer anthem and is quite unlike anything the music collective has produced before. ‌ Frontman, John (McAlinden) McMustard who is from Moodiesburn, explained: 'It's about appreciating the little and exciting things in life, wild flowers, summer strangers , simple pleasures and buried treasure and of course love. 'It came about from the Sunday Songwriting group I was part of a few years ago, the challenge initially was to write a haiku. So the first three lines are from the Japanese poetry tradition. I love the simplicity, five syllables, then seven syllables, then five syllables about nature and not rhyming. I think Wild Flowers has under 40 words. I love the simplicity of that. 'The message is universal and simple 'live your life for love'. Just a shame these thoughts or messages never seem to reach our politicians. 'We might be entering our classic rock phase, although next single might easily be a happy hardcore tune. ‌ 'The Dumfries Community Choir collaboration came about from Eden Fest a few years ago when I left a comment after seeing them do a brilliant 90s indie rock 'n' roll set with Bittersweet Symphony and Supergrass's Pumping on Your Stereo. They saw the comment and said they are big Colonel Mustard fans and would love to do something in the future. 'It feels like a special song and I hope the 6th Dijon Yellow Movement and folk that don't know the band feel the same way when they hear it.' Colonel Mustard & the Dijon 5 have a busy schedule over the summer playing a host of festivals and venues across the country, including Belladrum where Supergrass are also on the bill. ‌ "We're bringing out a CD EP with Wild Flowers and some B-sides on Aigust 1, which will include a new song 'Be Good To Yourself' featuring Mary Kiani to tie in with our Belladrum Festival performance," said John. They recently won over an initially sceptical crowd in Falkirk as support for UB40. ‌ 'It was brilliant,' said John. 'When we started we could see some of the older guys with their arms crossed thinking, 'who are these yellow sparkly, silly hat dafties'. 'Once we played Bouncy Ball and Cross the Road, our more ska and reggae influenced songs, you could see the heads and shoulders going and by the end and from the cheers it felt like we won over a massive new fanbase, which was a really enjoyable experience as its rare we get a big support slot. ‌ 'We're still getting lovely comments from new fans weeks later. We were really grateful for the massive opportunity.' John is particularly looking forward to watching another band perform again this summer, the first band he ever saw live – Oasis. ‌ He revealed: 'I'm taking my oldest boy John to see them in Edinburgh for his birthday, he'll be 16 , same age I was when I first saw them at Barrowland Ballroom in December 1994. 'Come to think of it maybe there's a wee Oasis vibe in the mix in Wild Flowers. The wheel has come full circle.' The band will be back at Barrowland on Sunday, August 31 performing at a fundraiser for Marie Curie and the Beatson in honour of friend John 'Soapy' Soutar who died in May this year. ‌ John added: Soapy was a true champion of underground bands including Colonel Mustard & The Dijon 5, Mickey 9s, the Girobabies, Filthy Tongues and the Twistettes, as well as a member of the James fanclub. 'Each band is going to play a James cover on the night and it's going to be hosted by Still Game legend Gavin Mitchell with a DJ set by Phil Jupitus.' ‌ Garry John Kane of Button Up Records said: 'I love working with John and the band. It's a good relationship. They're also a great live band and I never get bored watching them. They're a joy.'

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