Oliver-founded social enterprise vows to continue training chefs

The venture was set up in 2006, four years after Oliver founded his first restaurant, Fifteen London, with a high-profile television documentary charting the highs and lows of the endeavour. PHOTO: AFP

LONDON •The head of a restaurant in south-west England, set up by Jamie Oliver to train unemployed young people as chefs, vowed on Tuesday to "keep the light burning" after the celebrity chef's restaurant chain went into administration.

Fifteen Cornwall is a social enterprise - a business that seeks to do good - and operates under a franchise, meaning it is not part of the chain now in administration.

Its chief executive Matthew Thomson described the closure of a number of restaurants with the loss of 1,000 jobs as a "tragedy" and said it was a "very, very challenging time" for the industry.

"Jamie is still doing some fantastic work and it is a real tragedy to hear about his restaurants today. We are committed to his vision, still operating the same model he gave us 13 years ago," he told the Thomson Reuters Foundation by telephone.

The venture was set up in 2006, four years after Oliver founded his first restaurant, Fifteen London, with a high-profile television documentary charting the highs and lows of the endeavour.

Fifteen London reinvested its profits in its training scheme, which helped 500 apprentices, several of whom went on to become Michelin-starred chefs.

The model of hiring and training disadvantaged people typically excluded from the workforce has been replicated by many other social enterprises since, solving a range of problems, from homelessness to hunger.

With people eating out less in Britain, increased competition and a squeeze on margins due to wage increases, Mr Thomson said the past two years have been "very hard" for the business, which has trained about 130 chefs.

Two other Fifteen restaurants were launched in Amsterdam and Melbourne, but both have since closed.

Mr Thomson said he hoped to keep the brand going in Cornwall.

"We have no reason to drop the brand and are utterly committed and if we end up being the only Jamie Oliver restaurant in Britain, we'll be incredibly proud of that," he said.

"We hope there is a way through these dark days - we'll do anything we can to keep the light burning."

Oliver said he was "deeply saddened by this outcome", which has left about 1,000 people without jobs. Administrators KPMG did not disclose how many of those were at Fifteen London.

A spokesman for Jamie Oliver's business group declined to give further details.

REUTERS

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A version of this article appeared in the print edition of The Straits Times on May 23, 2019, with the headline Oliver-founded social enterprise vows to continue training chefs. Subscribe