by Paul J. Pelkonen
An empty, silent campus and armed off-duty cops as the
Atlanta Symphony Orchestra locks out its players.
Photo of the Woodruff Arts Center from Wikimedia Commons.
Jail bars added by the author.
Last month, Superconductor reported an impending labor impasse between the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra Players Association (ASOPA) and the Executive Board of the Woodruff Arts Center (WAC). That impasse has now escalated into a lockout.
According to the Slipped Disc piece, orchestra members' Aug. 31 paychecks have been canceled, along with health, dental and disability benefits. Several musicians in the orchestra are battling cancer and other health issues. The musicians' contracts expired Aug. 25.
According to the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra's official website, negotiations are ongoing. But the Slipped Disc article paints a different, disturbing picture:
- Off-duty police have been hired to patrol the Woodruff Arts Center, (no doubt to fend off threatening bassoon players).
- The players' parking passes have been cancelled.
- All scheduled work (performances and rehearsals) through Sept. 24 are cancelled.
The Woodruff Arts Center seeks to close a budget gap estimated at $5 million. Orchestra members had made an 11th-hour offer of $4 million in concessions, to be paralleled with income cuts for the 75 members of the ASO board. The ASO, in turn wants $2.6 million in cuts to come from the orchestra musicians alone.
The orchestra is scheduled to open its season Oct 4. Their 2012 tour will bring them to Carnegie Hall on October 27 for a performance of William Walton's Belshazzar's Feast.