The Guardian Australia

Staff shortages see UK restaurant­s struggle to cope with Christmas season

- Robyn Vinter

Turning down party bookings over the Christmas period is the last thing a restaurant owner wants to do. But that is the harsh reality for the Rattle Owl, an independen­t restaurant featured in the Michelin Guide, which, like the vast majority of hospitalit­y businesses, is suffering a shortage of staff and having to make compromise­s.

“We used to be able to do 26 (people for a Christmas party booking) but we absolutely can’t do that now. The max we can do now is 10,” said the York restaurant’s owner, Clarrie O’Callaghan.

The shortage means that anyone who called to make a reservatio­n for a larger number of people has been turned away.

“Independen­t restaurant­s are all in the same boat: we’re having to limit numbers to ensure customers get the best service.”

The restaurant has five chefs and six front-of-house staff, but needs one or two more chefs and two more front-ofhouse workers. It is not alone in suffering what is being called an “existentia­l threat” to the hospitalit­y industry.

London celebrity chef Jason Atherton last month said he will have to close restaurant­s in the new year because a third of posts at his restaurant­s are vacant. Tom Kerridge, Rick Stein, Angela Hartnett and Raymond Blanc have also all raised their voices in support of training and recruiting more hospitalit­y workers.

Other restaurant­s are making compromise­s over who they hire. One restaurate­ur said they were training front-of-house staff to do kitchen work, which is not ideal, as well as hiring internatio­nal students, who are allowed to work 20 hours a week.

Last month, a group of hospitalit­y organisati­ons wrote to the Secretary of State for Work and Pensions calling for “urgent interventi­on” in what was becoming a “perfect storm” that would force businesses to close.

In the joint letter to Mel Stride MP, UKHospital­ity, the British Beer and Pub Associatio­n (BBPA), British Institute of Innkeeping (BII), the Institute of Hospitalit­y and charity Springboar­d, wrote that the recruitmen­t crisis was causing “an existentia­l threat to our industry”.

“This is not a problem facing just one type of venue or hospitalit­y business, it is a universal issue, and it is critical because brilliant, passionate people are the lifeblood of hospitalit­y,” the letter said.

Emma McClarkin, chief executive of the BBPA, said the vacancy rate in the hospitalit­y sector stands at 11%, compared with the UK average of 4%, and this is costing the industry £22bn a year.

“It is stark that hospitalit­y is struggling to attract the people we need,” she said. “Obviously, we’ve always had a problem getting enough chefs in the kitchen. That was the case even prepandemi­c, but now we’re struggling to even get people to come in to do front of house; it was never a problem before. And this is going to impact on Christmas.”

McClarkin said that during the pandemic many staff from overseas left and had not returned, this was especially the case with EU workers, who no longer have freedom of movement to the UK.

She said the uncertaint­y caused by the various lockdowns, where businesses were forced to close at short notice, had also seen staff leave the industry.

“We’re seeing people that also moved away (from the industry) because they were worried about longterm security. So they’ve gone off to work for, maybe, Amazon or a delivery company, or maybe work in a supermarke­t or retail environmen­t, where they felt that they were able to sustain an income.”

The organisati­on estimates that pubs are losing 16% of sales because of staff shortages.

“It’s the difference between a business making it and not making it. That’s how difficult it is. We’re in a ‘cost of

doing business’ crisis, as well as a cost of living crisis.”

Pubs are now closing at a rate of 50 a month, compared with 30 a month at the beginning of the year. Last month, it was revealed that restaurant closures increased by 60% after the pandemic, with 1,567 insolvenci­es over 2021-22, up from 984 during 2020-21, according to a study by the consultanc­y Mazars. The figure includes 453 over the past three months, up from 395 in the previous quarter.

McClarkin said: “We’re expecting that to get worse over the coming months, so we really need to have a great Christmas.”

The hospitalit­y industry is running a joint campaign called Hospitalit­y Rising to encourage people to take up jobs in pubs, bars, restaurant­s and cafes. McClarkin said: “A job in a pub is not just a stopgap, it’s an opportunit­y to progress fast into a long career where you have a lot of fun. There’s never a boring moment in hospitalit­y.”

 ?? Photograph: Richard Saker/The Observer ?? Clarrie O'Callaghan of The Rattle Owl: ‘Our max for a party is 10 people – we used to do 26.’
Photograph: Richard Saker/The Observer Clarrie O'Callaghan of The Rattle Owl: ‘Our max for a party is 10 people – we used to do 26.’

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