The luxury yacht maker Fairline Boats is being marketed for sale after it went into administration last week. Administrators have retained 69 staff to keep the business running and finish existing orders, but the remaining 381 have been told not to return to work after they were sent home last Wednesday.
The majority of them are located at the company's premises in Corby and Oundle, where it designs and manufactures a range of luxury boats, while a handful of staff remain to continue operations at a testing location in Ipswich.
Unite said the workers had been "sacrificed on the altar of uncaring capitalism", claiming the firm did not pay the employees' pension contributions for the last three months, while still deducting contributions from staff pay packets.
The yacht builder has had a difficult few years that saw it transition through five different CEOs. In September 2015, Fairline was sold by private equity firm Better Capital to Wessex Bristol, an investment business that also owns sportsboat builder Fletcher Boats.
The joint administrators, Geoff Rowley and Alastair Massey of FRP Advisory, are attempting to arrange a sale of the business or its assets. "We request interested parties to get in touch - Fairline is a proud brand and has an array of loyal customers."
The company, which makes boats ranging in value from £350,000 to £2.5m, suffered from a fall in orders from Russian customers affected due to the recession and a weak rouble.
The company started when Jack Newington in 1963 bought a series of gravel pits on the River Nene and built the Oundle Marina. Four years later Fairline Boats launched their first boat. In 2007 the company celebrated its 40th birthday and 2 years later built its 12 000th boat - a Squadron 55.
The majority of them are located at the company's premises in Corby and Oundle, where it designs and manufactures a range of luxury boats, while a handful of staff remain to continue operations at a testing location in Ipswich.
Unite said the workers had been "sacrificed on the altar of uncaring capitalism", claiming the firm did not pay the employees' pension contributions for the last three months, while still deducting contributions from staff pay packets.
The yacht builder has had a difficult few years that saw it transition through five different CEOs. In September 2015, Fairline was sold by private equity firm Better Capital to Wessex Bristol, an investment business that also owns sportsboat builder Fletcher Boats.
The joint administrators, Geoff Rowley and Alastair Massey of FRP Advisory, are attempting to arrange a sale of the business or its assets. "We request interested parties to get in touch - Fairline is a proud brand and has an array of loyal customers."
The company, which makes boats ranging in value from £350,000 to £2.5m, suffered from a fall in orders from Russian customers affected due to the recession and a weak rouble.
The company started when Jack Newington in 1963 bought a series of gravel pits on the River Nene and built the Oundle Marina. Four years later Fairline Boats launched their first boat. In 2007 the company celebrated its 40th birthday and 2 years later built its 12 000th boat - a Squadron 55.