New York Daily News

ZONE THEIR HOUSES

Arena staff may be hit hardest by shutdown

- THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

MIAMI — David Edelman can usually be found at a Denver Nuggets basketball game or a Colorado Rapids soccer game. As an usher, he interacts with fans in a role he calls a staple of his life.

But there are no Nuggets games for at least a month. No Rapids games, either. And Edelman has no idea what he'll do now.

“This is what I do for a living,” Edelman said earlier this week, as the realizatio­n hit that sports were going on hiatus because of the coronaviru­s. “This is my income.”

Thousands of workers would have staffed the 450 NBA and NHL games that will not be played over the next month in response to the pandemic. And then there are the more than 300 spring training and regular-season baseball games, 130 NCAA Division I men's and women's tournament games, 50 or so Major League Soccer matches, all internatio­nal golf and tennis tournament­s, and whoknows-how-many high school, small college and other entertainm­ent events canceled or postponed because of the global health crisis.

The total economic impact of the loss of sports and other events because of the pandemic — assuming only a month shutdown — is impossible to calculate but will reach the billions, easily.

Tickets aren't being sold, so teams and leagues and organizing bodies lose money. Fans aren't going to events that aren't happening, so taxi drivers and ride-share operators have no one to ferry to and from those places. Hotel rooms will be empty. Beers and hot dogs aren't being sold, so concession­aires and vendors lose money. Wait staff and bartenders aren't getting tips. Without those tips, their babysitter­s aren't getting paid.

The trickle-down effect sprawls in countless directions.

Some teams are trying to help. Dallas Mavericks owner Mark Cuban, within minutes of the NBA shutdown announceme­nt, said he wanted to find a way to help workers who will lose money because games won't be played. By Friday, he had his plan: “We will pay them as if the games happened,” he told The Associated Press in an email.

Other teams, including the Cleveland Cavaliers, have made similar commitment­s to workers at not just NBA events but also the building's minor-league hockey games. The Miami Heat, Toronto Raptors, Washington Wizards, Golden State Warriors and Atlanta Hawks were among the earliest NBA franchises to reveal they're working on how they'll take care of arena staffs. So have the NHL's Washington Capitals, among others, and the ownership group for Detroit's Pistons, Red Wings and Tigers on Friday said they were setting up a $1 million fund “to cover one month's wages for our part-time staff for games, concerts and events that they would have otherwise worked.“

“Our teams, our cities and the leagues in which we operate are a family, and we are committed to looking out for one another,” New Jersey Devils owner Josh Harris said.

There were many more significan­t gifts revealed later Friday.

Zion Williamson of the New Orleans Pelicans said he would “cover the salaries” for workers at the team's arena for the next 30 days. Blake Griffin of the Detroit Pistons pledged $100,000 for workers there, the San Jose Sharks said part-time arena workers would get paid for all games not played and Florida Panthers goalie Sergei Bobrovsky

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