The Sun (Lowell)

‘First to go, last to come back’

Workers in live-events industry remain out of work

- Ky natie Lannan

On Labor Day in Copley Square, stagehands and other workers set up for a major event — basically, a combinatio­n of a concert, a convention, an exhibit hall and a wedding.

There were no guests and no performers. There were 270 empty chairs.

“Every chair, every place setting is a job that was out of work,” said Mark Consiglio, president of the Massachuse­tts Live Events Coalition, which hosted the “empty event.” “Maybe it was a florist. Maybe it was a videograph­er. Maybe it was an audio technician.”

Other jobs represente­d by those empty seats, Consiglio said, include wedding DJS, lighting technician­s, arena concession workers, parking attendants — people in the various trades and fields connected with live events, whose ranks number about 12 million nationwide and whose livelihood­s are indefinite­ly frozen amid closures, limits on gathering size and other restrictio­ns of the pandemic.

“We’re in a phase that’s beyond reopening,” Consiglio said. “We were the first to go, last to come back.”

Under the Baker administra­tion’s gradual economic and social reopening strategy, “large capacity venues,” including stadiums, arenas, dance floors, exhibition halls and convention centers, cannot reopen until the fourth and final phase, which hinges on developmen­t of a COVID-19 vaccine or other medical interventi­on.

Theaters and concert halls were allowed to open for outdoor performanc­es only — with capacity limits, distancing requiremen­ts and enhanced hygiene protocols, and with singing and the playing of brass or woodwind instrument­s “discourage­d” under state guidelines — when the first step of Phase 3 began in July. Indoor performanc­es fall into the second step of Phase 3, which Gov. Charlie Baker in August put on an indefinite hold as part of his response to an uptick in COVID-19 cases.

A new era of live entertainm­ent has started to take shape, without many of its previous hallmarks and the economic activity they generate.

Profession­al sports have resumed without fans in the stands — and, in the case of hockey and basketball, with all the activity isolated in bubbles outside of Massachuse­tts. While fans can watch live games again on screens, the return of pro sports has come without benefits for myriad workers tethered to those industries.

And musicians are finding social-distancing-friendly ways to perform. The Massachuse­tts Museum of Contempora­ry Art in North Adams has been holding shows — including two sold-out performanc­es on Saturday evening by pianist Marco Benevento — in its courtyard, where concertgoe­rs wear masks and bring their own chairs.

In Lowell, where the city’s signature Lowell Folk Festival was held virtually this year and the Lowell Summer Music Series was canceled, municipal officials and the Greater Merrimack Valley Convention and Visitors Bureau collaborat­ed for a series of live acoustic sets on downtown streets, from a dozen area musicians.

The Boch Center, in Boston’s theater district, is recording half-hour live performanc­es — before an empty house, with no amps and no spotlights — on the Wang Theatre stage as part of its new “Ghost Light Series,” which will air on NECN.

While options are now available for spectators, with the aid of nice weather, television­s and computer screen, much still remains on pause for the workers who derive their income from events inside concert halls, arenas and conference centers, with no clear timeline for when they’ll be able to return to work.

The live-events world is “almost like this subculture with its own economy and its own learning structure” that doesn’t always translate directly to a written resume or the credential­s a recruiter might seek, Consiglio said, giving the example of a roadie who began traveling with bands as a teenager and is now unemployed for the first time in 30 or 40 years. He said some event workers are trying to pick up part-time work or taking on entry-level jobs to stay afloat while others “are just stuck.”

“The live-events folks, they’re masters of multiple things because they have to do a lot of those things,” he said. “They might not have the paper that says they went to college and they understand business administra­tion, but they could probably school you in understand­ing the economics of how the gate works in a concert or the theater and how people get paid that way.”

As some industries and workplaces have gradually reopened, the unemployme­nt rate in Massachuse­tts remains high, at 16.1% in July with 591,000 Bay State residents unemployed.

Consiglio said his group isn’t pushing for an immediate restart of live events but wants a role in reopening planning and for programs to be put in place to aid its members who did not qualify for Pandemic Unemployme­nt Assistance or other unemployme­nt benefits, until it’s safe for them to return to their jobs.

“We’re very pessimisti­c about the outlook on coming back to work. We don’t feel like it’s even going to be in 2021,” he said.

Production for movies, television shows and streaming services, a field that has some worker overlap with live events, was authorized to resume as part of Phase 3. Momentum there is now starting to pick up, Massachuse­tts Production Coalition Executive Director David Hartman said.

Seven major film and TV series projects were on the ground here at the time of the economic shutdown in the spring, Hartman said, and activity has restarted on a handful of production­s.

“There should be several more that get back underway throughout the fall,” he said. “Things are starting to come back online.”

 ?? COURTESY BOCH CENTER ?? The Boch Center’s new Ghost Light Series gives musicians a chance to perform before an empty theater while capacity limits, distancing requiremen­ts and the state’s phased reopening plan mean many live performanc­es -- and the jobs supported by the live-events industry -- remain on an indefinite pause.
COURTESY BOCH CENTER The Boch Center’s new Ghost Light Series gives musicians a chance to perform before an empty theater while capacity limits, distancing requiremen­ts and the state’s phased reopening plan mean many live performanc­es -- and the jobs supported by the live-events industry -- remain on an indefinite pause.
 ?? COURTESY LIVE EVENTS COALITION ?? Out-of-work employees of the live-event industry in Boston participat­e in the Live Events Coalition’s recent “Empty Event” in Copley Square, part of a series of events aimed at raising awareness about the ongoing havoc COVID-19 is reaping on the live-events industry and industry workers. The coalition is calling on Congress to provide relief to entertainm­ent workers, venues and businesses to help them stay afloat until work opportunit­ies become available.
COURTESY LIVE EVENTS COALITION Out-of-work employees of the live-event industry in Boston participat­e in the Live Events Coalition’s recent “Empty Event” in Copley Square, part of a series of events aimed at raising awareness about the ongoing havoc COVID-19 is reaping on the live-events industry and industry workers. The coalition is calling on Congress to provide relief to entertainm­ent workers, venues and businesses to help them stay afloat until work opportunit­ies become available.

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