Bangkok Post

Downton Abbey castle halts weddings due to Brexit

- SACHIN RAVIKUMAR WILL RUSSELL HANNAH MCKAY

It is a problem the butler of Downton Abbey might have sympathise­d with.

Highclere Castle in southern England, where the early 20th century period drama about the lives of aristocrat­s and their servants was filmed, is facing a serious staffing crunch.

The reason is the dearth of workers from the European Union, which has forced owner Fiona Carnarvon to mothball the castle’s main business of hosting larger weddings on the site of the Emmy- and Golden Globe-winning show.

“We have stopped being able to offer any weddings of any substantia­l size because of Brexit,” Carnarvon, a countess who owns Highclere with her husband, the eighth Earl of Carnarvon, said.

“There are no staff,” she said, speaking from the morning room at the Victorian castle that sits on a 2,000 hectare estate.

It used to host around 25 weddings with more than 100 guests a season. Weddings with around 20 guests are still possible, but are a much smaller part of a business that the owners say can cost several thousands of pounds a day to run.

Revenues from other parts of Highclere’s business such as its gift shop — the house opens to the public during the summer months — have also fallen, which Carnarvon says reflects not just Brexit but also the hit to the hospitalit­y industry from Covid-19 and the costof-living crisis.

Its staffing challenges in particular illustrate the still-unfolding impacts of Brexit on Britain’s labour market three years after the UK’s departure from the European Union, its biggest trading partner.

A vital workforce of EU students attending university in Britain who were available to work during weddings is no longer available, said Carnarvon.

“When we go to our usual agencies and try to find people, they are not there,” she said. “If we asked for 10, three might turn up... there’s nobody we haven’t asked.”

The number of EU students admitted to British universiti­es fell 50% in 2021, and applicatio­ns dropped 40%, partly due to uncertaint­y created by Brexit, university admissions service UCAS said last year.

Since leaving the European Union, Britain has faced worker shortages at various stages in areas such as manufactur­ing, constructi­on and logistics.

With Britain still boasting higher rates of employment and lower unemployme­nt than most EU countries, business groups have pushed the government to relax post-Brexit immigratio­n rules.

Britain has relaxed the eligibilit­y rules for work visas in a range of profession­s but the list does not include the hospitalit­y sector.

Its Brexit-supporting Prime Minister Rishi Sunak has also pushed back against calls from businesses to liberalise immigratio­n to address labour shortages, saying withdrawal from the bloc had helped bring more flexibilit­y on business regulation and secure “proper control” of the country’s borders. Just outside Highclere Castle, in the grounds designed by 18th century landscape architect Capability Brown, dozens of chairs and a few tables lie stacked and unused.

They will remain unused during the spring, too, as Highclere has closed afternoon teas it offered to the public, said Carnarvon, due to the lack of staff.

Highclere’s gift shop has also stopped shipping to EU countries — about a third of the shop’s overall business — because of increased courier costs and paperwork in the aftermath of the EU departure, Carnarvon said.

 ?? ?? Highclere Castle, the venue for Downton Abbey, in Highclere, England.
Highclere Castle, the venue for Downton Abbey, in Highclere, England.
 ?? ?? An interior view of Highclere Castle.
An interior view of Highclere Castle.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand