NY State Restaurant Association Closes Two Offices, Expects Conditions to Worsen


Both workers at the two-person Rochester office were laid off; no jobs were displaced at the Long Island location, which was operated by a management group. The trade group’s Albany headquarters and New York City office, which handles its insurance subsidiary, will stay open, according to a report in the Albany Business Journal.

In an earlier cost-cutting measure, two employees from the Albany office were laid off in December and January.

The cuts are expected to slash the organization’s $2 million annual budget by $350,000, said ceo Rick Sampson, who noted that the layoffs were the first in his 34-year tenure with the organization.

Membership dropped 10 percent from last year, to 2,700, the result of increased restaurant closings and fewer restaurant openings. But that was only part of the reason for the cuts. Sampson is planning for an economy that he expects will get worse before it gets better.

“This was done in anticipation of what could come. We had to make sure our association remains in solid shape. I don’t want to be sitting here in September and looking back with regret,” he said. More staff changes aren’t planned at this point, Sampson said.

Dues for the association range from $350 to $3,500, depending on the member’s volume of business.

Members help make our journalism possible. Become a Restaurant Business member today and unlock exclusive benefits, including unlimited access to all of our content. Sign up here.

Multimedia

Exclusive Content

Financing

Reassessing McDonald's tech deals from 2019

The Bottom Line: The fast-food giant’s decision to end its drive-thru AI test with IBM is the latest pullback away from a pair of technology acquisitions it made five years ago.

Operations

Trend or fad? These restaurant currents could go either way

Reality Check: A number of ripples were evident in the business during the first half of the year. The question is, do they have staying power?

Financing

Starbucks' value offer is a bad idea

The Bottom Line: It’s not entirely clear that price is the reason Starbucks is losing traffic. If it isn’t, the company’s new value offer could backfire.

Trending

More from our partners