Featured White Papers
- Oct. 14th: Simplified IT with Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) (ZDNet)
- PCI DSS therapy for the smaller retailer (McAfee)
- The rise of Web commuting (Citrix Online)
Business Services Industry
Actors' union, theater producers avoid strike
Journal Record, The (Oklahoma City), Jul 3, 2008
NEW YORK (AP) - The show will go on.
The actors' union and Broadway theater producers reached a tentative agreement for a new contract Wednesday, averting the possibility of a strike such as the one that shut down Broadway for almost three weeks in November.
The new contract, which covers 39 months and expires in September 2011, would increase the compensation package for actors - including health benefits and pensions - by 11 1/4 percent.
Actors' Equity Association and the Broadway League, which represents both producers and theater owners, had been negotiating past the midnight Sunday deadline, when the last contract expired. The sides started negotiations in April.
"In two months of tough bargaining, we achieved an excellent contract with significant gains for every Equity member working on Broadway and the road," John P. Connolly, executive director of the union, said Wednesday.
"The collaborative spirit that prevailed throughout the talks allowed both sides to present their issues, understand the others' concerns and negotiate a new contract that serves the industry and the theatergoing public," Charlotte St. Martin, executive director of the Broadway League, said.
The contract must be reviewed by the union's governing body. If it is approved, it will be sent to Equity members for a vote.
In November, Broadway stagehands went on strike. The 19-day walkout dimmed the lights at more than two dozen shows and cost producers and the city millions of dollars in lost revenue during a busy holiday season.
Copyright 2008 Dolan Media Newswires
Provided by ProQuest Information and Learning Company. All rights Reserved.
