Search

14 Sept 2025

65 jobs lost in East Mayo

‘Bleak day’ for Kiltimagh and Ballyhaunis following Homecare Medical job losses

 

65 jobs lost in East Mayo


‘Bleak day’ for Kiltimagh and Ballyhaunis

Edwin McGreal


Communities across East Mayo were reeling when news of the loss of 65 Mayo jobs at Homecare Medical Supplies was confirmed by the company yesterday (Monday).
Kiltimagh has to face the loss of 50 jobs at the Homecare Medical service centre on the Knock Road while 15 jobs will go at the Ballyhaunis centre on the Knock Road. A further 15 jobs will go at other Homecare centres in other parts of the country, meaning a total of 80 jobs in total will be lost nationwide.
The company, run by the McGuinness family from Knock, supplies healthcare equipment to the HSE, hospitals, nursing homes and the community-care, pharmacy and retail sectors.
Homecare Medical announced to staff on Friday last that from January 31 next, its HSE contract for the recycling of aids and appliances will be terminated.
They said this would lead to a lack of work, which would necessitate the redundancy of 80 positions in the company’s service area.
Joe Kelly of development company Kiltimagh IRD, who last week spoke out in The Mayo News about the problems facing small towns like Kiltimagh, greeted the news with dismay, saying it only served to heighten the problems.
“Any time you lose 50 jobs from a small, weak local economy is a bleak day,” he told The Mayo News. “My sympathy really goes to the workers who have found out that they will be facing into Christmas knowing that they are not going to be in a job shortly into the New Year. My sympathy also goes to the McGuinness family, who run a good business.
“We’re now in a situation where we have to try to replace 50 jobs, and not alone that, but there could be another 50 jobs at stake as a knock-on effect in retail and services – jobs that rely on those 50 people spending money locally.
“I really think it is up to the Government to step up to the plate and find a solution. There are still three months before these jobs go, so they can look at intervening there, or they can look at finding replacement jobs fairly rapidly. Things are certainly bleak enough right now, but we have to keep fighting the fight, keep trying,” he said.

Shock
Kiltimagh-based Fine Gael councillor Eugene Lavin said there was a sense of shock around the town yesterday when the news started to break.
“It is a serious blow to Kiltimagh and to Mayo. This is a major blow. We’re all devastated in the town and in the wider region. Ballyhaunis is less than 15 miles away, so it is a double blow for the region,” he told The Mayo News.
“I didn’t see it coming, I thought things were going very well there. They had expanded their business in the last year. But I am not au fait with how these HSE contracts work.
“I would fully approve of what Joe Kelly and Kiltimagh IRD would have to say in terms of highlighting the demise of the small town. Footfall is a big thing for people wanting to set up a business, and if the people are not in the town centre, is the incentive there to open? I certainly think that the Government has to intervene. A cut in rates – or no rates at all – for businesses in town centres would be a great incentive for new businesses.”
In a statement yesterday, Homecare Medical stressed that, while the contract loss affects a large portion of the workforce, it only accounts for part of its business, and that the remaining 70 jobs at the company will remain unaffected.

26 jobs for Claremorris
Meanwhile, there was better news in Claremorris with a total of 26 new jobs being brought to the town by new companies setting up or existing firms expanding.
The global dental benefit management company DeCare Dental Insurances is adding ten new positions, increasing its workforce in Claremorris to 100. Commercial and web-video production company Freelance Media IT is relocating ten jobs to the town. Nursing-care and home-care provider Communicare is setting up a new base in Claremorris to serve the west of Ireland, adding three new positions initially. And the online marketing and web-design startup Milk Marketing has created three new jobs.
Three of the four have set up at Innovation House, one of a number of premises in Claremorris with ‘fibre to the building’. This provides high-speed broadband through the ultra-fast Metropolitan Area Network circling the town.
President of Claremorris Chamber of Commerce Jimmy Flynn said the new jobs cement the town’s growing reputation as a digital hub.
“We have two big global exporters, CBE, which supplies electronic point-of-sale systems, and DeCare, which provides dental benefits and services to customers worldwide, together employing over 370 people, many in Claremorris”, he said.
He added that he expects further good news on the jobs front in the months ahead. “Claremorris has it all: A top-class infrastructure, a can-do attitude and a strong community spirit. The business environment, community ethos and quality of life continue to attract new firms and additional jobs,” he concluded.

To continue reading this article,
please subscribe and support local journalism!


Subscribing will allow you access to all of our premium content and archived articles.

Subscribe

To continue reading this article for FREE,
please kindly register and/or log in.


Registration is absolutely 100% FREE and will help us personalise your experience on our sites. You can also sign up to our carefully curated newsletter(s) to keep up to date with your latest local news!

Register / Login

Buy the e-paper of the Donegal Democrat, Donegal People's Press, Donegal Post and Inish Times here for instant access to Donegal's premier news titles.

Keep up with the latest news from Donegal with our daily newsletter featuring the most important stories of the day delivered to your inbox every evening at 5pm.