The Portland Museum of Artwork (PMA) in Maine has laid off 13 workers resulting from monetary hardships introduced on by the Covid-19 pandemic. These laid off embrace managers and salaried workers in addition to hourly employees, in keeping with an announcement asserting the layoffs. The museum’s director, Mark Bessire, has taken a voluntary wage discount as a part of the establishment’s cost-cutting measures, in keeping with WMTW.
None of these let go are members of the museum’s just lately fashioned union of gallery attendants and safety employees. (A separate group of round 35 employees unionised, beneath UAW Native 2110, in 2021; in 2022 the museum settled an unfair labour practices grievance with 14 former workers who had been laid off.)
In its public assertion, the museum attributes the layoffs to bills that “stay excessive and unpredictable”, the “deterioration” of the world surrounding the museum’s Congress Sq. website, the ageing amenities in its personal constructing and persistently low attendance practically 4 years after the onset of Covid-19. “Since 2020, the museum has seen a 35% lower in attendance as a result of fewer guests and employees are coming again to Congress Sq. and our areas for programmatic progress are restricted,” the assertion reads. “We’re fastidiously and collaboratively designing long-term plans for a secure and scalable future.”
These long-term plans embrace persevering with with an formidable, $100m renovation and enlargement venture that entails an architectural addition of 60,000 sq. ft to the museum’s current campus. The mass timber design for that venture, by the West Coast agency Lever Structure, was chosen simply over a yr in the past. A PMA spokesperson confirmed that this venture will proceed, regardless of the monetary hardships cited within the public assertion concerning the layoffs.
“The enlargement is required resulting from our assortment rising and limitations of our ageing amenities to serve our diversifying communities,” the spokesperson stated. “And this tough second of restructuring is in response to a a lot slower restoration from the pandemic, shoring up our financials as we put together for a sustained and vibrant future.”