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Coronavirus: 2,000 jobs at risk as Carluccio's faces collapse | Coronavirus: 2,000 jobs at risk as Carluccio's faces collapse |
(32 minutes later) | |
Italian restaurant chain Carluccio's is facing collapse, after warning it was facing permanent branch closures due to the coronavirus. | |
It is currently working with administrators in a move that could threaten more than 2,000 jobs. | It is currently working with administrators in a move that could threaten more than 2,000 jobs. |
Before the outbreak it was hit by the crunch in the casual dining sector and recently urged the state to step in. | Before the outbreak it was hit by the crunch in the casual dining sector and recently urged the state to step in. |
Administrator FRP said it was working with Carluccio's to "consider all options" for the restaurant's future. | Administrator FRP said it was working with Carluccio's to "consider all options" for the restaurant's future. |
Restrictions aimed at curbing the coronavirus pandemic have recently forced all cafes and restaurants to close. | |
Before the government's pledge to pay 80% of those workers' salaries, Carluccio's Chief Executive Mark Jones told the BBC the firm "was days away from large-scale closures" without state aid. | |
"FRP is working with the directors of Carluccio's to consider all options for the company in the current climate," a spokesperson for the administrator said. | |
Carluccio's has faced some difficult times in recent years, closing a third of its restaurants in 2018 as part of a Company Voluntary Arrangement (CVA) rescue plan. | |
Like many in the casual dining sector, it has felt the brunt of a fall in consumer spending, combined with higher business rates, and increases in the National Living Wage. | |
Prezzo and Byron also used CVAs to close restaurants while Jamie's Italian went into administration last year. | |
The chain was founded more than 20 years ago by celebrity chef and restaurateur Antonio Carluccio, who died aged 80 in 2017. |
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