Arts and Design

Whitney and New Museum lay off staff members as coronavirus economic fallout continues




The Whitney Museum of American Art

In a round of cost-cutting, the Whitney Museum of American Art and the New Museum in New York have joined the ranks of US museums that have laid off employees in response to the coronavirus (Covid-19) outbreak and a resulting loss of income.

The Whitney says it has laid off 76 of its 420 workers, primarily visitor services staff and temporary employees who it says had been with the museum between a few weeks and two years. It says that the employees will receive five to six weeks’ pay dating from 13 March, the day it closed its doors.

The museum says that its director, Adam D. Weinberg, and senior staff members are meanwhile undergoing pay cuts, effective immediately. “We have informed our other employees that we are continuing to assess the ongoing impact of Covid-19 on the museum’s finances, and as we finalise our budget plans for the next fiscal year we expect to make another announcement regarding further changes,” the Whitney says.

The New Museum, which also closed on 13 March, says it is furloughing 41 full-time and part-time members of its staff of 150, most of whom it says are hourly and part-time workers involved in visitor services. “We hope to rehire them as soon as conditions permit,” it says in a statement. The museum says it is also laying off seven others whose programmes are being discontinued or significantly reduced. Health insurance for those furloughed will be provided at least through 30 June, it says.

All senior staff members will take pay cuts of 10% to 20%, with the director, Lisa Phillips, taking a voluntary salary reduction of 30%. “These are inconceivably challenging times, and we recognise the painful effects of these measures at this very difficult moment,” Phillips says in a statement. “Our board and leadership are addressing the gravity of the situation with a commitment to the ongoing survival of the museum.”

Weinberg spoke in a similarly sober tone. “We have made these decisions with great reluctance as we continue to assess this new and unforeseen landscape and try to forecast the months to come,” the museum’s statement quotes him as saying. “We are grateful to all our staff for the tremendous diligence and dedication they have shown throughout this time.”

Among the other US museums that have reduced their staffs in recent days are the Museum of Contemporary Art and Hammer Museum in Los Angeles, the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, the Cleveland Museum of Art, the Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Art and the Carnegie Museums in Pittsburgh. The Metropolitan Museum of Art has signaled that it plans layoffs as well as it braces for a $100m budget shortfall.

The list is expected to grow as the nation reels from closings intended to limit the spread of the coronavirus and businesses and institutions shed jobs. Last week 6.6 million Americans filed for unemployment benefits, continuing to shatter records after 3.3 million filed the previous week.





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