Layoffs Hit Museum of the African Diaspora in San Francisco
The Museum of the African Diaspora (MoAD) has laid off seven staff members and reduced the hours of its remaining 11 employees, KQED has learned.
Monetta White, director of the San Francisco art and history museum, announced the “incredibly difficult and painful decision to reduce staff” in an email to supporters Monday. “We have been forced to temporarily close our museum, impacting our already limited operating funds,” she said.
In the message, White also brought attention to MoAD's online programming, including events and a new podcast. “We are dedicated to remaining as accessible as possible to you,” White said.
News of MoAD's cutbacks follows more than 300 layoffs or furloughs of workers at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art. SFMOMA expects to lose $8 million through June.
A survey by the San Francisco Arts Alliance found 28 percent of the city’s arts organizations were contemplating layoffs as of March 20. Most have reduced or suspended contractor hours.
The 145 arts groups that responded to the survey anticipate losing as much as $73 million in earned income and donations if the coronavirus crisis proceeds through mid-September.
A survey conducted by the California Arts Council and released this week paints a similarly dire picture for arts groups statewide. The average estimated revenue loss of 3,049 respondent organizations for the period between Tuesday, Mar. 17 and Thursday, Mar. 26 is $193,642.
The $2 trillion federal aid package signed into law on Friday includes $7.5 million for the Smithsonian Institution. Despite being a Smithsonian affiliate, Sabb said he doesn’t know if MoAD will receive funds from that portion of the package. White, MoAD's director, is meeting with Smithsonian officials this week.
The aid package also includes $75 million each for the National Endowment for the Arts and National Endowment for the Humanities.