MANCHESTER UNITED staff have been forced to eat in toilets as part of the club's latest cost-cutting exercises.
Since taking over the football operations, Sir Jim Ratcliffe has embarked on multiple efforts to save money at the club.
Part of this financial review saw 250 redundancies at the club.
Now the club's agency staff have had their meal plans drastically changed.
They used to be offered a lunchbox that included a sandwich, cereal bar, crisps and a soft drink on a match day.
However, this has now changed, with some claiming that they were given leftovers from food that had been offered to corporate punters.
United said that the food on offer to staff was the same as what was provided for the fans, but said it was not leftovers and had been made especially for workers.
The club has added that after the review, a lot of the food in the lunchboxes was often left out and wasted.
Some workers have even claimed that they are now being forced to eat in a toilet.
One told the Daily Mail: "They’ve set up a dining table next to four toilet cubicles.
"You come out of the cubicle and someone is sat in right front of you, eating."
United has responded to the claim by arguing that the area is a separate room with an adjoining bathroom.
The Red Devils have also done away with providing free matchday programmes to supporters in the private boxes.
Fans discovered the change during the Premier League opener against Fulham at Old Trafford.
One fan said: "Given the money we pay, to not even get a programme each seems miserly in the extreme."
Once again, the club has claimed that many ended up in bins and were another waste.
Furthermore, it is claimed that those supporters in a box can ask for a programme and get a QR code to read a digital version.
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