Thursday, March 29, 2007

LEWES ARMS: The First 100 days


'Greedy King' joins other picketers outside the Lewes Arms. Photo: Andrew Hasson

KEEP UP WITH LATEST DEVELOPMENTS AT www.lewesarms.org.uk

The Lewes Arms is back in the national press with a vengeance, triggered off by an excellent four-page piece by Tim Minogue in The Guardian published to mark the first 100 days of the total boycott of the pub, which has reduced the Lewes Arms takings by 90%. The piece also features other pubs around the country who have suffered at Greene King's hands thus reinforcing the importance of this story as a national issue.

This story was picked up by Nick Cohen in
The Observer who wrote: 'Furthermore: Please raise a glass to Lewes's drinking classes. At Westminster tomorrow, there will be a rally for the Sustainable Communities Bill, an attempt by MPs from all parties to break up the centralised English state by giving local authorities the power to deal with social and environmental grievances. It's a worthy measure, but what sets this initiative apart from many other good causes is the number of boozers who support it. Publicans, small breweries and the Campaign for Real Ale - the vanguard of England's beer-drinking classes, in short - are rallying behind the bill and being radicalised in the process.
'Writing in the Guardian last week, Tim Minogue of Private Eye explained why. He is one of a group of pickets who are turning customers away from the Lewes Arms. The Greene King conglomerate owns the 220-year-old Sussex pub and in December decided to practise restrictive trading by refusing to sell the bitter from Lewes's independent brewery. As with other exploitations of their market dominance by the pub corporations, Greene King's ban had nothing to do with drinkers' wishes, but was an act of commercial spite against a small business rival. Rather magnificently, its customers responded with a mass boycott that has turned the Lewes Arms into a ghost pub. '

'We usually discuss political cynicism in grand terms and talk about globalisation, the judges and the EU undermining democracy. More insidious is the inability of the English to make lives in their localities a bit better. If this bill succeeds, Lewes council will be able to compel Greene King to stock Harvey's Bitter. If it falls, it won't. That strikes me as reason enough for MPs to vote for it.'
Also see follow-up story in The Publican, the leading trade magazine.

Also the Business section of the Evening Standard:

Greene King makes locals more local

'Landlords are to be given greater power to run local pubs after a shake-up by Greene King.

'The brewer has been under fire in Lewes, West [ED: should be East] Sussex, for removing guest bitter Harveys from the Lewes Arms. Regulars boycotted the pub and burnt effigies of Greene King management. [ED: No effigies have been burnt]

'Today the company is splittting its managed house operations into local pubs, to be run by Jonathan Lawson and "destination" pubs headed by Jonathan Webster.

'Lawson joined from sainbury's where he was director of the convenience store business. Webster was chief executive at Hardy & Hansons. Mark Angela who ran the business befored the split, is lraving with a year's salary of around £450,000.

'Greene King said the move is not connected to its Lewes troubles. But chief executive Rooney Anand said: "Managers will be given greater autonomy and flexibility to match individual pub offers to local needs.

'Greene King's 510 local pubs will focus on selling beer while its 280 larger "destination" pubs and hotels are to be food led.'

A similar story appeared in the Financial Times (March 27th). 'More than a local from Greene King' by Tom Braithwaite. It begins: 'Greene King, the pubs group, is splitting its managed pubs into "local" and "destination" divisions in order to facilitate acquisitions.'

The Guardian’s Mark Milner reported (March 27th): Greene King splits managed pub division. ‘Greene King said yesterday that it is to split its managed pub operation into two, a move which will see the departure of Mark Angela, the current head of the business.The company denied the decision represented a change in policy at Greene King and said it was designed to provide scope to allow the managed operations to continue to grow. It said there was no connection between yesterday's decision and the high-profile dispute between Greene King and regulars at the Lewes Arms, at Lewes in East Sussex, over the company's decision to withdraw a local brew, Harveys bitter, prompting an ongoing boycott by the pub's customers.