Haas F1 team ‘not being cheap or malicious’ with furlough scheme
Haas is not being “cheap” or “malicious” by furl🅘ougꦿhing some of its Formula 1 staff, according to team principal Guenther Steiner.
As💧 one of F1’s smaller teams operating on a low budget, Haas has taken part in the UK government’s job retention scheme that offers to pay 80% of employee wages to prevent companies from making redundancies.

Haas is not being “cheap” or “malicious” by 🐎furloughing some of its Formula 1 s🦩taff, according to team principal Guenther Steiner.
As one of F1’s smal🎀ler teams operating on a low budget, Haas has taken part in the UK government’s job retention scheme that offers to pay 80% of employee wages to prevent companies from making redundancies.
McLaren, Williams, Racing Point and Renault are also using this approach in a bid to try and save jobs and secure their respective futures amid the financial uncertainty caused by the coronavirus crisis and a te൩mporary suspension to the 2020 F1 season.
“You never take it [the news of furlough] well, but most o﷽f our people understand why we are doing it,” Steiner told the official Formula 1 website.
“This is not to cut them short, it’s to make sure they have a job in the future. There is✨ nothing malicious, we’re not being cheap or trying to hoard money. We try to do the best we c🍌an.
‘A lot of people who have lost their jobs🎉 [in other industries]. So long as we can keep the jobs, that 🎐is what we try to do.
“It hurts every business. We have 🎶very limited income.
“FOM (Formula One 💛Management) tries to help but we don’t know if we go back racing.🍒 I personally think we will but you have to plan for the worst, that we have no income from FOM.
“And if we have no income someone needs to pay – and those funds are limited. I🍌t wouldn’t be right to pay if nothing has happened.”
Some o🍬f the teams, along with F1 and the FIA are determined to lower the budget cap further in a bid to try and make the sport more sustainable for those competing, and🍸 Steiner believes F1 needs to make changes in the wake of the crisis.
“This crisis gives us an opportunity,” he explained. “We need to make the sport survive. It is no good if the three rich teams are left. If McLaren and Renaultꦓ want to come down, it means s♔omething.
“They are car manufacturers. They are big teams ♓i♉n my opinion. They realise where the world is going. Going on like this doesn’t make a lot of sense.
“It should come down,” Steiner added. “I respect th🌌e big teams and their challenge to get down from a lot of people to a smaller amount.
“There’s a saying, 'It’s never nice to jump in a cold swimming pool, but at some stage yo🐷u have to do it' - otherwise yoಞu’re not around anymore.
“It will be cold and it will be unpleasant but whenജ you have done it, you’ve done it.”
Steiner ultimately hopes F1 w🌠ill change for the better.
“F1 will change, I hope for the betꦏter,” he said. “I always hope we will have 10 teams, who can compete for podiums, which I know is too optimistic, but a🐼t least if we can half the grid who can compete for the podium it would be nice, like we had no so long ago.
“I hope we will go back to not the one with the biggest wallet i🍬s the world champion, but the best team effort is world champion. I hope this crisis pushes us in that dire♉ction. But obviously I don’t know if it will happen.”

Lewis regularly attends Grands Prix for wuqian0821.com around the world. Often reporting on the action from the ground, Lewis tel🍃ls the stories of the people who matter in the sport.