The Science Museum of Minnesota and Minnesota Children's Museum in St. Paul — two of the state's most popular and largest museums — are temporarily laying off most of their workers because of the COVID-19 pandemic.
On Tuesday, Alison Rempel Brown logged into Google Hangouts to deliver the bad news to hundreds of Science Museum staff: Their paychecks would stop April 2 through June while the museums tries to weather the loss of $15 million in revenue from a three-month closure.
"It unfortunately takes an unprecedented response," said Rempel Brown, the museum's CEO. "Our goal is to make sure we will be there [after the outbreak] and get through this."
Nonprofits across Minnesota are struggling to stay solvent during the pandemic — from arts organizations and animal rescue shelters to food shelves coping with increased calls for help.
While foundations are launching new funds and the national nonprofit sector is pleading for $60 billion in federal aid, cultural nonprofits that rely on admission and ticket sales are being forced to lay off staff.
Nationwide, the museum community — from art museums to zoos — are losing at least $33 million a day due to COVID-19 closures, the American Alliance of Museums wrote in a letter to Congress last week, asking that any economic relief legislation include at least $4 billion for nonprofit museums.
The closures come at museums' busiest part of the year for school field trips and families visiting on spring break. In Minnesota, the Science Museum usually brings in 40% of its annual revenue during this time.
Instead, starting April 2, the Science Museum will temporarily lay off 450 of its more than 500 employees through early June. About 70 remaining employees will take pay cuts and compile online content or do other work.