Coronavirus
Liverpool shines spotlight on struggling event industry with second #WeMakeEvents awareness evening
4 years ago
****UPDATE – Please note the event at M&S Bank Arena (detailed in this article) has now been cancelled due to Liverpool’s COVID spike. But you can still spread awareness and support the cause by using the #WeMakeEvents on social media.
Live entertainment producers in Liverpool are to stage a massive awareness event to highlight thousands of jobs that will be lost without urgent government help.
Itâs part of a UK-wide initiative â RED ALERT â Stand as ONE – by an industry which says itâs on the verge of collapse.
Andy Dockerty, managing director of city-based Adlib Audio, said: âThis industry employs around one million highly-skilled people in the UK, many of whom have had no work since March.
âWe have had no help whatsoever from the Government so far and the chancellorâs latest announcement offered nothing.
âUnless we get some support to save this industry, which actually contributes billions to the economy every year, 600,000 people stand to lose their jobs.â
He added: âWe need support extended for the people and companies in this sector until they can return to work.â
The hour-long awareness event on Wednesday (September 30) will be socially distanced and all those who attend will have had to register, and will be monitored.Â
Starting at 7.30pm, the event will see buildings throughout Liverpool illuminated in red.
A video will be screened on the side of the M&S Bank Arena, and a beam of white light symbolising 10,000 potential job losses will be shone into the sky â one of 60 with 59 other events being held around the UK.
Andy explained: âMany people thought that we would benefit from the ÂŁ1.57bn support package that went into the arts sector, but that generally only covered those supported by the annual arts grants, like theatre, heritage sites, and a small amount for the small venue trust.
âThe other 50%, the live entertainment, corporate events and production industry â the commercially viable sector which, incidentally, was the fastest growing industry in 2018 –Â has not received any help at all.â
Andy is one of a group of people who have helped to pull together the #wemakeevents team to put the spotlight on the increasingly dire situation, and call for help before itâs too late. The team includes companies like Andyâs along with other major players from the industry including equipment manufacturers, production rental houses, distributors and freelancers.
His company was set up in 1984 and provides the sound, lighting, video, rigging equipment and technicians for major worldwide touring artists, corporate events, sporting events and festivals.
Until recently, he employed 167 full-time staff and provided work at any one time for up to 200 freelancers.
But he has already had to let 55 members of staff go â âwhich was soul-destroyingâ â and faces worse unless he, and others like him, get support.
âWe work in venues that have mass gatherings which are generally only commercially viable if they are at 80% capacity â social distancing at one metre averages a 30% capacity house â so itâs not viable even if we were able to stage events,â he said.
âAs it is this sector has not worked since March 20. My company has lost around ÂŁ11-12 million in revenue since that time – when we were looking to another record year.
âWhat frustrates me is that the Government has said there is no point supporting non-viable businesses – but this is viable.
âIn fact, this is the fastest growing sector in the UK and, when we can bounce back, it is the industry that will bounce back quicker than any other. You only need to look at the ticket sales for shows that have been cancelled, and only 20% of people have asked for their money back.
âSo 80% have kept their tickets for rescheduled shows.Â
âThatâs one example of how quickly itâs going to come back, on top of which everybody will be wanting some genuine entertainment. We have no fear about coming back or how quickly, itâs about when itâs allowed to come back and will it still be here because it hasnât been supported correctly, if at all.â
Hope that Rishi Sunakâs announcement would have offered some help was shattered.
Andy said there was little appreciation for the skills in the sector and added that those within it would be forced to seek jobs elsewhere.
âThat could then lead to a shortage of skills in the sector so that, when we can come back, the people we need wonât be there because theyâve had to find jobs in other areas because theyâve got homes and families to support.â
Andy stressed that the live entertainment industry provided people with an escape and memories â as well as making a massive contribution to the UK economy, and city economies: âA big arena show generates millions for an area via hotels, restaurants, and bars etc.
âIt doesnât make sense not to give it any help.â
The #wemaketeams RED ALERT â Stand as ONE event on Wednesday will, hopes Andy, raise awareness of the live entertainment sector, of what it does and how important it is, as well as its current plight.
And, ultimately, it will get it the help it needs to protect companies and employees within it until they can get back to work.
âWe are looking at 12 months without income because it will likely be next March or April before we can come back,â he says. âWe donât need bank loans, we need Government grants.Â
âSurely it makes sense to protect an industry that invests and puts so much into the economy every single year? We can and will come back â but we need help until then.â