Friday, April 17, 2009

SAG/AMPTP REACH TENTATIVE AGREEMENT ON TV/THEATRICAL CONTRACT--MEMBERSHIP FIRST VOWS TO FIGHT RATICFICATION

Variety has reported on SAG and the AMPTP reaching a tentative agreement on the TV/Theatrical contract. This is the same contract that Membership First's Alan Rosenberg, along with SAG's previous National Exec Director Doug Allen, were unable to negotiate. Now that some progress has been made, Membership First, lead by Alan Rosenberg and Anne-Marie Johnson, have vowed to fight ratification.

Here's Variety's report on the issue:

SAG, AMPTP reach tentative deal
Guild's national board to review this Sunday
By VARIETY STAFF, VARIETY STAFF

http://www.variety.com/article/VR1118002545.html?categoryid=1066&cs=1


SAG and the congloms have reached a tentative agreement on the
feature-primetime contract -- nearly 10 months after the previous deal
expired.
Both the Screen Actors Guild and the Alliance of Motion Picture and
Television Producers made the announcement early Friday afternoon.

SAG's national board is expected to approve the terms of the pact at
its meeting this weekened -- triggering the mailing of ratification
ballots to its 120,000 members.

The deal comes following two months of back-channels talks between SAG
toppers and moguls such as Disney's Robert Iger and News Corp.'s Peter
Chernin. The last key points to be settled centered on SAG insisting
on an expiration date in June 2011 in order to stay in synch with the
WGA, DGA and AFTRA expirations.

The back-channel talks also focused on settling claims for force
majeure payments to actors from TV series that went dark during the
writers strike.

Deal comes three months after the moderate majority on SAG's board
ousted Doug Allen as SAG national exec director for allegedly botching
the negotiations. Allen was replaced by David White as interim
national exec director and by John McGuire as chief negotiator.

The hardline Memebership First faction, which lost its board majority
last fall, has vowed it will urge members to vote down the deal -- on
grounds that it falls short in on on multitude of areas, particularly
new media.

The AMPTP has contended that its offer -- first made last summer -- is
in line with those deals accepted by the other guilds last year and
remains generous amid the declining economy.