Walt Disney Co. officials said a second round of layoffs started on April 24 as the company presses ahead with its objective of trimming roughly 3 percent of its 220,000-strong global workforce in a bid to rein in costs.
The latest round of job cuts will affect employees across the United States, where the company employs about 166,000 people, Burbank, California-based Disney said in a statement to media outlets.
The layoffs will affect various divisions—including ESPN, Disney’s entertainment division, Disney Parks, and its Experiences and Products division—although hourly workers at Disney’s theme parks aren’t expected to be part of this round of cuts, according to the company.
Disney-owned ESPN on April 24 began to notify staff that layoffs are coming.
“As Bob Iger previously said, Disney is reducing its workforce by approximately 7,000 jobs as part of a strategic and streamlined realignment. Today, I am sharing the difficult news that we are beginning to notify ESPN employees whose positions are impacted,” ESPN Chairman Jimmy Pitaro said in a memo to staff obtained by The Epoch Times.
“As we advance as a core segment of Disney, with operational control and financial responsibility, we must further identify ways to be efficient and nimble,” Pitaro continued. “We will continue to focus our workforce on initiatives that are most closely aligned with our critical priorities and emphasize decision-making and responsibility deeper into the organization.”
ESPN’s second-longest tenured employee, Mike Soltys, is among those laid off.
Disney Market Cap Down $69 Billion
Disney’s market cap has shrunk by slightly more than $69 billion since the company expressed its full-throated opposition to a Florida law banning instruction of gender identity and sexual orientation in public schools for kindergarten through third grade.“Florida’s HB 1557, also known as the ‘Don’t Say Gay’ bill, should never have passed and should never have been signed into law,” the statement reads.
Disney stated at the time that it was the company’s goal “for this law to be repealed by the legislature or struck down in the courts.”
Supporters of the legislation have argued that it gives parents more power to decide how and when topics relating to LGBT issues can be introduced to their children. It also gives parents the opportunity to sue school districts for violating the rules set out in the legislation.
On the day he signed the bill into law, DeSantis said that “parents have every right to be informed about services offered to their child at school and should be protected from schools using classroom instruction to sexualize their kids as young as 5 years old.”
Disney’s declaration of opposition to the bill prompted some parent groups to call for boycotts of the company’s products, movies, theme parks, and shows.