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Mike Ashley's Sports Direct bows to pressure and closes stores Sports Direct staff facing uncertain future after pressure forces store closures
(about 7 hours later)
Shops including Evans Cycles join coronavirus lockdown after staff were initially told the reverse Workers on zero-hours contracts at Mike Ashley’s chain will reportedly not be paid while stores closed
Mike Ashley’s Sports Direct has bowed to pressure from the government and the public by closing all of its stores after widespread anger that he intended to flout the UK lockdown. Thousands of shopworkers are facing an uncertain future after Mike Ashley’s Sports Direct chain bowed to government pressure and closed all its stores.
Ashley’s Frasers Group, which includes Sports Direct and Evans Cycles, wrote to all of its staff on Monday within 30 minutes of Boris Johnson’s decision to shut down all non-essential retailers, claiming that selling sporting and fitness equipment made the company a vital asset and the shops should remain open. Ashley’s Frasers Group, which includes Sports Direct, had intended to remain open as other non-essential retailers closed, on the basis that selling sporting and fitness equipment made the company a vital asset as Britons were forced to stay home.
However, the Frasers Group backtracked on Tuesday, stating it would not open either chain, even though government policy excludes bicycle shops from closure under new measures to ensure physical distancing during the coronavirus outbreak. However, Frasers Group was forced to backtrack after the government intervened. Michael Gove, the Cabinet Office minister, told the BBC Radio 4’s Today programme that Sports Direct had made the “wrong” call and that its stores should not be open. Management had “got the message”, Gove added.
Michael Gove, the Cabinet Office minister, told the BBC Radio 4’s Today programme: “Sports Direct thought it would be appropriate for their stores to be open in order to help people get exercise equipment. We made it clear that was wrong and that the stores should not be open.” Management had now “got the message”, Gove added. Despite the U-turn some Sports Direct workers were still told to report to work. In one message sent to staff, the company wrote “we will not open our Sports Direct or Evans Stores to the public” and it carries on “please continue to head into work as we have been instructed last night”.
Sports Direct suggested it may reopen in future if “given the go-ahead by the government”. The company said in a statement: “Please note we are contacting them at all levels, including attempting to get confirmation from the prime minister.” Salaried Sports Direct staff were asked to do shifts in shuttered shops, organising stock and making sure premises were secure. In a series of conference calls shop managers were told that this was the last guaranteed shift for many workers and April was a “grey” area, as the retailer examined the government support packages available to retailers. The thousands of Sports Direct staff on zero-hours contracts (who are only paid for the hours they work) will be paid for March but won’t be paid while the stores are closed, it is understood.
In the email on Monday evening, the chief finance officer, Chris Wootton, told staff: “We stock a huge range of sports equipment designed for exercising at home indeed, home fitness is the number one trending topic on social media after coronavirus itself. “I’ve worked half my life for this company and I feel angry and let down,” said one Sports Direct shop worker. “It’s a mess.”
“Against the backdrop of the closure of gyms, the demand for these types of products has increased exponentially as the population looks to maintain a healthy lifestyle. Sports Direct suggested it could reopen in future if “given the go-ahead by the government”. The company said in a statement: “Please note we are contacting them at all levels, including attempting to get confirmation from the prime minister.”
“Consequently, we are uniquely well placed to help keep the UK as fit and healthy as possible during this crisis and thus our Sports Direct and Evans Cycles stores will remain open where possible to allow us to do this (in accordance with the government’s current social-distancing guidance).” In the email on Monday evening, the chief finance officer, Chris Wootton, had confidently explained to staff why it was so important: “We stock a huge range of sports equipment designed for exercising at home indeed, home fitness is the number one trending topic on social media after coronavirus itself.
The retailer’s move attracted widespread criticism and the company came under increasing pressure over the wellbeing of its workers. “Against the backdrop of the closure of gyms, the demand for these types of products has increased exponentially as the population looks to maintain a healthy lifestyle.”
But Ashley was accused of putting profits before the wellbeing of his staff with his bid to remain open as other non-food stores closed. Gavin Callaghan, the leader of the Labour-controlled Basildon council in Essex, said local employees of the chain should not go to work. “Mike Ashley is the lowest of the low and he has no place in our borough,” he said in a tweet.
Labour MP Jess Phillips also criticised the appeal to keep stores open, tweeting: “Massive mugs notwithstanding there is nothing people cannot live without in Sports Direct.”
Sports Direct’s attempt to position itself as a vital to the nation’s fitness regimes was also undermined by a report that it was increasing the price of some home exercise equipment by up to 50%. Internal documents seen by the PA news agency showed the price of a 4kg Everlast kettle bell had increased from £9.99 to £14.99, while a 12kg weight was now £39.99, up from £29.99 in the wake of the coronavirus pandemic.
Dixons Carphone, which unsuccessfully lobbied to be included on the government’s list of “essential” retailers, also asked hundreds of staff to turn up for shifts on Tuesday. The electricals specialist had hoped to keep just over a third of its 305 Currys PC World open as “contact-free” outlets but all its stores have now closed.
Last week Dixons Carphone also announced it was permanently closing the 531-store Carphone Warehouse chain, with the loss of 2,900 jobs, and one employee accused the company of putting lives at risk by telling staff to go to work at shops even though they are closed to the public.
“It’s wrong to ask people to come in. These are unnecessary journeys they’re asking staff to make,” the long-serving sales worker said. “The company might say it’s voluntary and that any employee who feels uncomfortable does not need to come in, but we feel we have no choice. We feel like we’re being held to ransom for our redundancy. They haven’t said that explicitly, but that’s what it feels like.”
Dixons Carphone said all its UK stores were now closed but that some store colleagues were asked to go in and make sure they were shut safely. “We’re now serving our customers through our online business,” said the company in a statement. “Our contact centres remain open, as we meet the high demand from customers for essential products and technology during this time with colleagues in these locations working from home where possible. We will not ask any colleague to do anything they don’t feel comfortable doing.”