Texarkana Gazette

Goodell voluntaril­y reduces salary to $0, other NFL employees take pay cuts, furloughs

- By Sarah Valenzuela

Roger Goodell is taking a massive pay cut in the wake of the coronaviru­s pandemic. But don’t worry too much about the commission­er’s ability to handle his finances during the crisis.

Goodell, who makes more than $30 million a year from salary and bonuses, voluntaril­y cut his salary to $0 in an effort to help with the league’s cost-cutting measures, according to the Associated Press.

All other NFL employees have been subject to either pay cuts or furloughs depending on position, per a memo sent around the league acquired by NBC on Wednesday.

“During this time, one goal has been to maintain pay and benefits for our workforce for as long as possible,” Goodell said in the memo. “It is clear that the economic effects will be deeper and longer lasting than anyone anticipate­d and that their duration remains uncertain.

“While we continue to prepare for a full 2020 season of NFL football, we also need to manage in a responsibl­e way, adopting a flexible approach that responds to the current conditions in a way that minimizes the risk to our employees, our clubs, and the NFL’s business.”

The league plans to roll out pay cuts based on tier of position: 5% for manager level, 7% for directors, 10% for vice presidents, 12% for senior vice presidents and 15% for executive vice presidents. Employees will also continue to receive their health benefits.

“The NFL is not immune to the economic consequenc­es of the COVID-19 pandemic and it is our obligation to take responsibl­e steps to protect the business and manage through this crisis as effectivel­y as possible,” Goodell wrote. “These decisions were difficult and we know these measures will cause hardship for those impacted.

“I believe that furloughs and compensati­on reductions can be limited, or in time even reversed.”

The league has still been trying to find ways to hold a safe, coronaviru­s-free season, like other major sports leagues around the world. Goodell, who hosted the NFL’s first virtual draft from the basement of his Westcheste­r, N.Y., home last week, has been optimistic there will be football this season.

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