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Hollywood producers make final offer to actors



By RYAN NAKASHIMA, AP
30 June 2008 @ 11:49 pm EST

LOS ANGELES - Hollywood producers said they made a final offer to actors Monday hours before the current labor contract was to expire, but the Screen Actors Guild responded by saying the offer failed to address some key areas.


Holywood Labor
In this June 25, 2008 file photo, Screen Actors Guild president Alan Rosenberg talks about current negations in the Sherman Oaks area of Los Angeles. Rosenberg said Sunday, June 29, 2008 the union remains committed to negotiating a new deal with Hollywood producers as contract expiration looms. (AP Photo/Gus Ruelas, File)
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The Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers said the offer was worth more than $250 million in additional compensation to members of the guild over the three years of the proposed contract.

The current pact was to expire at 12:01 a.m. PDT Tuesday, but both sides said they would continue to work under the old contract after the deadline passes.

"In short, our final offer to SAG represents a final hope for avoiding further work stoppages and getting everyone back to work," the alliance said in a statement. The alliance said film production had been "virtually shut down" because of uncertainty about a deal.

The AMPTP will meet with guild representatives Wednesday afternoon to explain the offer, but will not entertain counterproposals, alliance spokesman Jesse Hiestand said.

The guild said it would prepare a formal response once it analyzes the 43-page offer. However, SAG's chief negotiator, executive director Doug Allen, immediately criticized it.

"This offer does not appear to address some key issues important to actors," he said in a statement.

For example, residual payments to actors for reruns of productions that were made only for the Internet were "incalculable," he said, adding it would "mean the beginning of the end of residuals."

The offer, made less than five months after the 100-day writers strike, was in line with deals cut with directors and writers guilds, as well as the tentative deal reached in May with the smaller actors union, the American Federation of Television and Radio Artists, both sides said.

The guild, however, has waged an all-out campaign against the AFTRA deal, which some 70,000 members were asked to ratify.

Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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