Cineplex Execs Take 80 Percent Pay Cut Amid Theater Worker Layoffs

Authored by hollywoodreporter.com and submitted by Frocharocha

The Canadian exhibition giant, which has shuttered its theaters, has around 13,000 employees nationwide.

Canadian exhibition giant Cineplex on Monday said part-time employees will be temporarily laid off and full-time employees will take steep pay cuts to keep their jobs after nearly 1700 screens nationwide were shuttered amid the coronavirus pandemic.

The circuit, which operates 165 cinemas with 1,695 screens nationwide and has around 13,000 employees, also said its top executives will take around an 80 percent cut in their base salary. Over the next month, a sliding scale in the senior management pay cuts, based on titles and not receiving a salary for two weeks, arrives at the 80 percent reduction in salary formula.

The move follow Cineplex on March 16 shutting down all of its locations, initially until April 2, amid the COVID-19 outbreak for social distancing.

"From the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, our primary focus has been the health and safety of our employees and guests. With the temporary closure of our network of entertainment venues and the majority of our full-time employees working from home, our focus was able to shift to safeguarding the long-term stability of our business and our readiness to return once the crisis has passed," Cineplex said in a statement received by The Hollywood Reporter.

Part-time employees temporarily laid off are being offered a lump sum payment equal to two-and-a-half weeks pay if they don't qualify for federal unemployment insurance, and most do not. Part-time staff will be offered the chance to be rehired when Cineplex resumes operation of its nationwide network of theaters.

Cineplex is also offering full-time staff salary pay cuts that correspond with their job title to avoid temporary layoffs. "As the COVID-19 situation continues to evolve, we will continue to take their lead — and that of the health authorities — and we will reopen our theatres and entertainment venues when they tell us it is safe to do so," the chain added.

The temporary cost-cutting will also help Cineplex meet debt conditions for its pending $2.1 billion, $34-per-share takeover deal with Cineworld Group.

"In response to declining attendance and certain government-directed shutdowns of places of public gatherings including theatres, Cineplex is managing its business to reduce expenses in an amount necessary to offset declining revenues so that Cineplex is supporting its business and would be in a position to satisfy the debt condition," Cineplex told investors in a March 16 letter.

The Canadian company said it still hoped to satisfy all conditions to close the Cineworld Group transaction by June 30.

March 23, 2:00 p.m. Updated with the calculation for the 80 percent reduction in salary for senior management.

SkeetySpeedy on March 23rd, 2020 at 20:06 UTC »

In my own company, hours are cut for the entire staff of 1000s by 50%.

Every executive level is employee is working for free indefinitely and their compensation is being pooled into an internal company charity to cover lost hours.

Any employee that still can also has the ability to contribute.

Our lawyers that now have lots of free time are working for free handling every insurance and unemployment case for us as well.

My company has been making me grumpy the last year - but they are really coming through for us now.

THIS IS HOW YOU DO IT PEOPLE.

I’m now dedicated to this company in a way I never would have been. Customers have heard about it and are promising their business for the future.

Taking care of your people ensures that they will take care of you.

popgeist_official on March 23rd, 2020 at 18:30 UTC »

Movie theater operators can’t get a break. First “Cats”, now this.

gbimmer on March 23rd, 2020 at 17:34 UTC »

I've owned businesses. 4 of them, in fact, going into the 2007 recession. We took massive pay cuts as well. I don't understand top level people NOT taking pay cuts. It's why you get paid the big bucks when times are good.