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Disney to lay off employees In the first half of next year Because the measures to control the COVID-19 outbreak Therefore, having to limit the number of customers in the amusement park.
On November 26, 2020, the Al Jazeera news agency reported that Walt Disney Co said it plans to lay off 32,000 employees. Last September Disney announced that it will lay off 28,000 employees as the company encountered difficult conditions. And it is restricted to accepting customers who will come to the amusement park. Due to the COVID-19 epidemic
The company said so after it filed a belated lawsuit with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. Last Wednesday However, that the layoffs would begin in the first half of 2021, Disney did not respond to a request for comment from Reuters. Are the 28,000 previously announced layoffs included in the latest figures? But company spokesperson confirmed to ‘Variety’ magazine that the figures were including previously announced numbers.
In early November, Disney said it was transporting more employees to Disney in Southern California. This is because there is a possibility that the state will allow the opening of an amusement park. While the Disney theme parks in Florida and outside the United States has resumed operations earlier this year. With strict measures of social spacing Test COVID-19 AND wearing a mask There are no figures of people infected with the outbreak of trips to Disneyland.
Disneyland in Paris was forced to close again at the end of October. Because France re-announced a blockade country In response to the second wave of COVID-19 outbreaks, Disney in Shanghai, Hong Kong and Japan stayed open
The number of Americans filing jobless claims for the first time increased last week. Noting that New COVID-19 epidemic and trade restrictions are spurring layoffs and destroying the recovery of the entire national labor market. Said the Department of Labor. Claims for state unemployment benefits increased from 30,000 cases to 778,000 cases, seasonally adjusted for the week ending November 21, marking a two-week spike in claims. Which far exceeded the expectations of economists To archive up to 730,000 cases
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