ACC Deny Contractual Arrangement With Sirva
30 September 2004
ACC Deny Contractual Arrangement With Sirva
The saga surrounding the connection between international relocating company SIRVA and ACC took a new twist yesterday when The Democrat's Social Issues Researcher, David Tranter, received a letter dated 27 Sept. from ACC's Senior Adviser Customer Relations, Paul Miller, stating, "ACC has no contractual arrangement with SIRVA". Yet a in recent newspaper article about SIRVA losing ACC papers on Dunedin streets SIRVA's New Zealand boss Graham Sutcliffe referred to ACC as their "client".
This matter arose out of the photographing of an a protest in May outside ACC's Greymouth office when the driver of a car stopped opposite was seen to be photographing the protest group. The car was traced to SIRVA following which Mr. Sutcliffe first claimed the photo was taken out of mere curiosity by Pickford's staff of whom SIRVA is the parent company. Mr. Tranter's suspicions were heightened when Mr. Sutcliffe subsequently told him that SIRVA's lawyer would give him a copy of the photo on condition that he publicly retracted the story. If the matter was the triviality Mr. Sutcliffe claimed why involve a lawyer? But even stranger is that if they had given me the photo it would be further proof that the incident happened which Mr. Sutcliffe asked me to publicly retract, Mr. Tranter said.
Now
ACC deny any contractual arrangement with SIRVA - who say
ACC is a "client". The photographing of a protest by a
employees of a company who have links with ACC raises the
wider question of covert surveillance of people carrying out
legitimate protest Mr. Tranter says. I approached ACC at the
suggestion of ACC Minister Ruth Dyson - and now in his
letter ACC's Paul Miller suggests I ask SIRVA.The
self-contradictory statements by SIRVA and now ACC's further
contradiction raise questions which I am referring back to
Ruth Dyson.
ENDS