Mercury (Hobart)

NUMBERS GAME

Almost 800 on AFL books before staff cuts

- MICHAEL WARNER Australian football

AFL staff numbers exploded to a staggering 795 before last month’s cuts were announced, leaked internal documents reveal.

News Corp can for the first time reveal the full scale of the AFL empire, which employs almost as many workers as the 18-team national competitio­n has players.

A not-for-profit organisati­on that pays no tax, the AFL employed about 100 staff before the appointmen­t of chief executive Andrew Demetriou in 2003.

A dossier detailing the body’s hierarchy has emerged as league chiefs begin slashing jobs because of the impact of the COVID-19 crisis.

The AFL has repeatedly refused to disclose how many staff it employs at its sprawling, two-storey Docklands headquarte­rs and interstate outposts.

Not even club presidents are privy to the informatio­n.

But the documents obtained by News Corp reveal there are 367 staff working in department­s overseen by AFL general counsel Andrew Dillon, 116 under AFL Media boss Darren Birch, 100 for commercial boss Kylie Rogers and 93 in football operations run by Steven Hocking.

Birch will depart late next month under a plan to reduce the league workforce by about 20 per cent.

The leaked organisati­on charts reveal there are eight inhouse lawyers, 42 staff in the AFL finance division, 26 in strategy and 10 in the integrity unit, including six ex-Victoria Police officers.

Another 104 are employed at AFL NSW, 88 at AFL Queensland, 40 at AFLNT and 29 at AFL Tasmania.

About 500 work at AFL House in Melbourne.

The wages bill for the AFL bureaucrac­y topped $115.6 million last year — $10.56 million alone on chief executive Gillon

McLachlan’s 11-person executive team.

Almost 80 per cent of the workforce was stood down in March and placed on the Federal Government-funded JobKeeper payments program.

The league says a skeleton AFL staffing team that continued to work after the COVID-19 crisis started had taken a minimum pay cut of 20 per cent. The game’s 850 players have been hit with 50 per cent pay cuts.

And the 18 clubs have been ordered to cut staff and save millions of dollars in costs.

An AFL spokesman said McLachlan had taken the same 50 per cent pay cut as the players this season, but the size of his salary remains a closely guarded secret because of an edict pushed through by AFL Commission chairman Richard Goyder.

His wage was last publicly disclosed at $1.74 million three years ago.

The AFL executive team — set to be marginally reduced — earned an average salary of $880,000 last year.

AFL staff are due to be notified about their futures next Tuesday and many roles made redundant from October 16.

The AFL stopped publishing its official staffing numbers in its annual report, filed with the Australian Securities and Investment­s Commission, several years ago.

It now boasts about a dozen in house department­s, including the office of the chief executive, football operations, game developmen­t, legal and integrity, commercial operations and corporate affairs.

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