South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

SeaWorld to permanentl­y lay off some employees

- By Caroline Glenn and Gabrielle Russon

SeaWorld Entertainm­ent revealed Friday that it will not bring back some of the thousands of workers it had furloughed earlier on amid the coronaviru­s pandemic.

In a Securities and Exchange Commission filing that came just before 5 p.m., the Orlando-based company said it had “committed to a plan of terminatio­n, impacting some of the company’s furloughed employees.”

It did not specify how many workers were permanentl­y let go or which parks were affected but said the company will spend somewhere between $2.5 million and $3 million “related to employee severance costs.”

At the end of 2019, companywid­e there were nearly 11,000 part-time and 4,300 fulltime employees.

“Due to the sudden and unforeseea­ble economic impacts of the pandemic on the company’s business operations, that were not reasonably foreseeabl­e at the time of the temporary furlough, the company has determined that it will transition certain park and corporate personnel from a furlough status to permanent layoff,” the filing states.

Asked for specifics about the number of people laid off, SeaWorld would not say.

“While we were able to bring thousands of furloughed Ambassador­s back to work and hoped to bring back everyone, the current environmen­t requires us to set up the company for long-term success,” said SeaWorld spokeswoma­n Lori Cherry via email.

SeaWorld’s part-time employees, which make up the majority of its workers, had

been on unpaid furloughs since the park voluntaril­y closed March 16. SeaWorld, which is not unionized, later said about 95% of the entire company was furloughed at one point.

“It’s pathetic. They treat their animals better than their own employees,” said Jo DeGiovanni, a furloughed ride attendant, who has waited for months to get an update on her employment status from SeaWorld after the Orlando parks reopened in June.

As a part-time worker, she said she wouldn’t be eligible for severance.

They’re the latest round of layoffs for SeaWorld, which operates 12 parks across the country. In 2019, the company laid off an undisclose­d number of workers, billed as an “efficiency” move, and eliminated 125 positions

in 2018.

In October 2017, it cut 350 jobs, facing backlash for its live shows starring captive orcas that fueled attacks from animal rights activists. The company was the subject of the 2013 documentar­y film “Blackfish” that centered on the infamous orca Tilikum who lived at SeaWorld for 25 years and was involved in three human deaths.

It’s the latest wave of workers who have lost their jobs because of the coronaviru­s pandemic in Florida, where unemployme­nt was at 11.3% in July, representi­ng 1.13 million out-of-work residents. In the Orlando region, where tourism is the main economic driver, unemployme­nt is the highest in the state, at 15.3%. At its worst in May, unemployme­nt in the area surged to 22.6%.

For those who are able to navigate Florida’s glitch-ridden unemployme­nt system, the laid-off SeaWorld workers will be able to collect at most $275 a week in state unemployme­nt, among the lowest payouts in the country. Once the program rolls out, Floridians will also be able to collect an additional $300 a week — a trimmed-down portion of the $600 individual­s had been collecting until the federal program ran out.

The layoffs come as SeaWorld has tried to shore up attendance at its parks and is dealing with severe budget shortfalls.

During a recent earnings call, the company divulged it lost $131 million during April, May and June while a majority of its theme parks were forced to close under local stay-at-home orders to curtail the spread of the virus. Total revenue was just

$18 million, about $388 million less than the company made in the same three months in

2019.

The Orlando Sentinel also reported that SeaWorld Entertainm­ent had fallen millions of dollars behind on constructi­on bills at properties in Florida and California. In Orange County alone tax liens stacked up to about $16 million in unpaid bills.

In August, the company announced it would delay the opening of two of its new roller coasters, Iron Gwazi at Busch Gardens in Tampa and Ice Breaker at SeaWorld Orlando, that were scheduled to be unveiled this spring.

Since the Orlando park reopened on June 11 it has been operating at an estimated one-third capacity to comply with socialdist­ancing guidelines

Universal Orlando and Disney World also have struggled.

 ?? JOE BURBANK/ORLANDO SENTINEL ?? SeaWorld Orlando guests wearing masks ride the Mako roller coaster on June 11.
JOE BURBANK/ORLANDO SENTINEL SeaWorld Orlando guests wearing masks ride the Mako roller coaster on June 11.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States