In Thursday’s (3/12) Philadelphia Inquirer, Peter Dobrin reports, “In what is only the first step in averting or minimizing a deficit this season, the Philadelphia Orchestra Association yesterday shed 20 percent of its administrative staff and said other cost-cutting moves were on the way. Twelve staffers were let go, and six other positions will go unfilled, leaving the orchestra with 72 administrators. … Remaining staff members earning more than $50,000 annually will take a 10 percent pay cut for the portion of salary above $50,000, and vice presidents will take additional compensation reductions. … The orchestra recently celebrated surpassing by $5 million the goal of its $125 million endowment drive, for a total raised of $130,078,771. The boost was to have ensured the fiscal health of the organization, but, in a cruel bit of timing, the goal was reached as portfolio values were plunging. The market value of the orchestra’s endowment was $117 million as of Jan. 31, down 30.73 percent from the same date a year earlier … Ticket revenue is 14 percent lower than at the same time last year. Corporate support is unchanged, but individual giving is down 15 percent.”
Posted March 12, 2009
Change font size
Change font size