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Wednesday newspaper round-up: Deloitte, fracking, Twitter
(Sharecast News) - US freight railroad workers are close to striking over claims that grueling schedules and poor working conditions have been driving employees out of the industry over the past several years. Heated negotiations over a new union contract between railroad corporations and 150,000-member-strong labor unions have been ongoing for nearly three years. A "cooling off" period imposed by the Biden administration after it issued recommendations to settle the dispute ends on Friday. If no deal is reached, unions are threatening industrial action - the first since 1992 - and workers say they will quit an industry already facing staff shortages. - Guardian The Worcester owners have confirmed they have reached an agreement for the sale of the club in a move that looks set to save the Warriors from financial disaster if it proves successful. As reported by the Guardian on Monday, a deal has been agreed with an unidentified buyer, giving rise to optimism that Worcester's burgeoning debts of £25m - including the £6m owed to HMRC by 6 October - will betaken on and the club can avoid going into administration, which would in turn lead to relegation. - Guardian
Deloitte is creating at least 1,000 new jobs outside of London as it joins a rush of City firms expanding beyond the capital. The Big Four firm will add the new roles in Northern Ireland, Scotland, Wales and the north of England over the next five years in a boost for the country's regional economies. - Telegraph
Liz Truss is being urged to relax the limits on earthquakes caused by fracking as part of plans to kickstart an energy revolution. The Prime Minister is already poised to end the moratorium on fracking within days in a bid to make Britain energy independent by 2040. But companies say this alone will not be enough to unlock Britain's potentially vast shale gas reserves. The Telegraph understands fracking businesses are lobbying for the limits on seismic activity to be substantially increased to help kickstart the industry. - Telegraph
The FBI informed Twitter of at least one Chinese agent working at the company, US senator Chuck Grassley told a Senate hearing yesterday where a whistleblower testified, raising new concerns about foreign meddling at the influential social media platform. Peiter "Mudge" Zatko, a former hacker who served as Twitter's head of security until he was fired last year, said some Twitter employees were concerned that the Chinese government would be able to collect data on the company's users. - The Times
Drew Nelson, the former owner of Newport Wafer Fab, is reportedly close to a deal with a private equity firm to buy back Britain's biggest semiconductor manufacturer, if the government decides to unwind its purchase by the Chinese-owned business Nexperia. The investor, Palladian Investment Partners, also considered teaming up with Nelson to rescue the business last year but this was rejected by Nexperia, a key customer, shareholder and board member, because it said the terms were too punitive. - The Times
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