Morning Sun

Goodell reduces salary to $0

Upper level employees subject to cuts

- By Barry Wilner

Commission­er Roger Goodell has reduced his salary to $0 and other NFL employees will be taking pay cuts or furloughs due to the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Goodell, who makes upward of

$30 million a year from salaries and bonuses, voluntaril­y had his salary reduced this month, a person familiar with the move tells The Associated Press on Wednesday. The person spoke on condition of anonymity because the NFL has not announced the move publicly.

The league also is implementi­ng tiered reductions in base salary, beginning with the pay period ending May 22. The reduction will be 5% for workers up to the manager’s level, 7% for directors, 10% for vice presidents, 12% for senior vice presidents, and 15% for executive vice presidents.

In a memo sent to league office staffers, Goodell also said no employee earning a base salary of less than $100,000 will be affected by these reductions, and no employee’s salary will be reduced below $100,000 by the reductions.

“We hope that business conditions will improve and permit salaries to be returned to their current levels, although we do not know when that will be possible,” Goodell said.

While the NFL has gone about business as usual with free agency and the draft — and currently is planning to play a full season beginning in September — it clearly is feeling the same economic pinch as other sports. Even as it extended its streaming deal with Amazon Prime for Thursday night games for another three years on Wednesday, the league was making in-house financial adjustment­s.

That means furloughs and adjustment­s to pension plans.

The furlough program “for individual­s in our workforce who are unable to substantia­lly perform their duties from home and/or whose current workload has been significan­tly reduced,” Goodell wrote, will become effective May 8.

Those being furloughed will be alerted in the next few days, and they will keep medical, dental and vision benefits, with the league paying the full cost of maintainin­g those benefits.

“It is important to remember that a furlough is not a terminatio­n,” Goodell told league staffers. “We do not know how long a furlough will last, but we are hopeful that we will be able to return furloughed employees back to work within a few months.”

Pension plan and other contributi­ons will be reduced from 15% to 10% of eligible compensati­on and is a permanent change which takes effect on July 1.

“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.

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