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Glastonbury Festival issues statement regarding allegations of worker exploitation

06 July 2017, 11:48 | Written by Laurence Day

Glastonbury Festival has issued a new statement in a bid to clear up the circumstances around their alleged mistreatment of workers on zero-hour contracts.

The statement, posted to their website, reads:

In response to recent stories in the media, we would like to state that Glastonbury Festival’s post-event litter picking team are all given temporary worker agreements for the duration of the clean-up. As well as being paid, they are provided with free meals and access to on-site facilities.

The length of the clean-up varies considerably from year to year, based largely upon the weather conditions before, during and after the Festival. This is something the litter pickers - many of whom return year after year - are made aware of in their worker agreements (which assure them of a minimum of eight hours' work).

This year was an unusually dry one for Glastonbury. That, coupled with a fantastic effort from Festival goers in taking their belongings home, meant that the bulk of the litter picking work was completed after 2.5 days (in 2016, a very wet year, the equivalent period was around 10 days).

All but a core crew of litter pickers were advised that there was no further work available after Friday (June 30). Those who weren’t able to leave the site over the weekend were given further meals, plus assistance with travel to nearby towns with public transport links.

We'd like to thank the litter pickers for their work on the clean-up, which was - as always - hugely valued by the Festival.

Glastonbury had been accused of "exploiting" low-paid workers from the EU in an investigation by The Independent.

"Organisers were accused of taking advantage of some 700 people who were signed up as litter pickers expecting two weeks of paid employment," reads the article. "Only to leave some three quarters stranded and out of pocket in the Somerset countryside."

Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn - staunchly anti-zero hour contracts - spoke impressively at the festival while introducing US hip-hop duo Run The Jewels.

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