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Daily Mirror
Daily Mirror
National
Benedict Tetzlaff-Deas

Pub launches 'work from pub' scheme with lunch and unlimited tea, coffee for £15 a day

A pub chain has launched a unique new 'work and play' package as Brits struggle to keep up with the cost of living crisis.

Young's is now offering working space at the majority of its public houses across the UK - alongside a tempting deal of lunch with unlimited tea and coffee for £15 a day.

The 'WFP' scheme, which sees workers swap their desks at home for a more community-based working environment, also includes the use of power sockets, quiet areas, and the option of gin and tonic or pint at the end of your shift.

First launched in 2020, the scheme has now been rolled out to a total 185 Young's pubs amid rising energy bills for office workers who now find themselves working from home.

Young's is offering a 'work from pub' including lunch and unlimited tea and coffee for £15 a day (Getty Images)

As well as keeping their electricity usage down, some 'work from pub' customers also say they prefer the more communal atmosphere of a pub.

Jen, an education copywriter using the Cutty Sark pub in Greenwich, London, said she even preferred the cosy atmosphere of the 200-year-old premises to the office, telling The Guardian: "It definitely beats the water cooler".

It follows a number of similar offers by pubs in the UK as many struggle to stay afloat following the combined impacts of the coronavirus pandemic, the energy crisis, and the cost of living.

The scheme comes as rising energy bills put financial pressure on work-from-home employees as well as the pubs themselves (Getty Images)

Alarming research by The Morning Advertiser earlier this year said as many as seven in 10 pubs could shut for good this winter because of rocketing energy bills.

The survey found over 65 per cent of pub and bar operators have seen their utility costs more than double. Of those, 30 per cent reported a jump of 200 per cent and eight per cent increases of more than 500 per cent.

Emma McClarkin, chief executive of industry body the British Beer and Pub Association, said: “This rise in energy costs will cause more damage to our industry than the pandemic did if nothing is done in the next few weeks, consumers will now be thinking even more carefully about where they spend their money.

“There are pubs that weathered the storm of the past two years that now face closure because of rocketing energy bills for both them and their customers.”

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