Disneyland furloughs more workers, citing 'limbo' on reopening
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[November 10, 2020]
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Walt Disney
Co <DIS.N> said on Monday it was furloughing additional workers from its
Disneyland theme park in Southern California, because it still does not
know when the state will allow it to reopen because of the coronavirus
pandemic.
The number of furloughs, which include executive, salaried and hourly
workers, was not known. It comes on top of the 28,000 employees who were
laid off in September, mostly across Disney's U.S. theme parks, in
California and Florida.
The furloughs was announced in a memo to staff from Disneyland Resort
President Ken Potrock that was seen by Reuters. Disneyland, located in
Anaheim, has been closed since mid-March.
California health authorities in October dashed hopes of the reopening
of large theme parks anytime soon, saying that cannot happen until a
county's COVID-19 risk level falls to the lowest of the state's four
tiers regarding coronavirus spread and infections.
"The recently released state guidelines put us in limbo regarding a
reopening timeline in the foreseeable future," Potrock's memo said.
As a result, Disney was "in the untenable situation of having to
institute additional furloughs for our executive, salaried and hourly
cast," he said.
The furloughed employees will be able to maintain health insurance, and
Potrock said he hoped to get them back to work once Disneyland
eventually reopens.
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Walt Disney Co's Disneyland and California Adventure theme parks in
Southern California are now closed due to the global outbreak of coronavirus
in Anaheim, California, U.S., March 14, 2020. REUTERS/Mike Blake
Disney's theme parks in Florida and those outside the U.S. reopened
earlier this year without seeing new major coronavirus outbreaks but
with strict social distancing, testing and mask use.
Disneyland Paris was forced to close again late last month when
France imposed a new lockdown to fight a second wave of coronavirus
cases. The company's theme parks in Shanghai, Hong Kong and Tokyo
remain open.
(Reporting by Jill Serjeant; Editing by Leslie Adler)
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