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Manufacturing

Wren Kitchens redundancies spark outrage as award-winning employer slashes staff at shuttered showrooms

Humber giant already criticised for keeping manufacturing going having committed to US and domestic expansion

A fortnight ago: Wren staff celebrate the best employer status for a second successive year. (Image: Wren Kitchens)

The largest employer in the Humber region has made hundreds of redundancies nationwide amid the coronavirus crisis.

Wren Kitchens, which has already come under fire for keeping manufacturing going - citing need for the products from customers who have already ripped their old set-ups out - has drastically cut back on showroom staff, having closed all 90 º£½ÇÊÓÆµ outlets.

It comes just weeks after it was named ‘Employer of the Year’ by recruiter Indeed, and as it faces up to huge capital expense.

The Barton-based company is replicating its model in the US, with manufacturing and retail being established, while it is also about to cut ground on huge expansion plans at The Nest headquarters.

Owned by one of East Yorkshire’s richest men, Malcolm Healey, the former Hygena head launched Wren from scratch a decade ago.

It now turns over almost half a million pounds, having relocated from Howden to Barton in 2013.

Wren Kitchens' Wrenovation ad for Winter 2019/20.(Image: Wren Kitchens)

Staff have told how they were assured up until hours before they were fired - many for “underperforming” that the firm’s “family values” would see them looked after.

Employees affected were read a specially prepared script in which they were told: "The reason for your dismissal is due to your performance bearing in mind the needs of the business and the economic situation facing the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ in light of the Covid-19 pandemic."