Townsville Bulletin

McLaren workers gear up to strike

- JONATHAN MCEVOY

MCLAREN’S Formula One staff are considerin­g strike action after being rewarded for their hard work with a chocolate bar each.

Irate workers contacted Sportsmail in Britain to complain about the atmosphere within the struggling team, describing it as “toxic” and their bosses as “clueless”.

One employee, speaking under the guarantee of anonymity, said: “We have been working all hours of the day, sweating blood, and they give us 25p ( 45c) Freddo bars.

“The management hand them to the supervisor­s to divide them out to employees in their team. “Strictly one each.” Despite McLaren having won 20 world championsh­ips and with an annual budget of some £ 200 million ($ 359million), the source explained: “The Freddos are handed out when a package is produced on a tight schedule. For example, we were given two weeks to produce the Spain upgrade package in May,” they said.

“We all worked 24/ 7 to meet the deadline. We got it done in time. So a week later a Freddo was handed out to all staff involved as ‘ a bonus’. Supervisor­s are embarrasse­d to hand them out.

“We also got a Freddo last year after building the car.”

The complaints from McLaren’s shop floor follow Sportsmail’s recent revelation that staff grew so disgruntle­d with their plight — 166 points off leaders Mercedes — that they planned to take their grievan- ces to former team principal Martin Whitmarsh.

The anonymous source claimed executives even appealed to staff to build prototypes out of wood if they had any ideas how to improve their substandar­d car.

“That shows how clueless they are,” added the employee. “They told us at the post- Canadian Grand Prix debrief that they knew what was wrong with the car but not how to fix it. They ask us when they are on six- figure salaries.

“We call four of the management the ‘ Untouchabl­es’. There is Eric Boullier, racing director, Matt Morris, chief engineer, Simon Roberts, chief operating officer, and David Probyn, operations director. Some of them just walk about chatting. We have no respect for them. The atmosphere is toxic. We would like to go on strike but people fear for their jobs.”

 ??  ?? McLaren racing director Eric Boullier.
McLaren racing director Eric Boullier.

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