It appears that the Dutch zoos won't reopen until the 1st of June, as all "events" and "gatherings" are forbidden in the Netherland until then.
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It appears that the Dutch zoos won't reopen until the 1st of June.
In that case the Dutch will sadly probably have to say goodbye to most if not all of their great zoos.
No they won't. The main zoos are currently all financially healthy and/or backed by a wealthy owner. The main exception would be Wildlands, but given the political backstory they won't let it disappear, which would also be a folly given the long-term returns of the huge investment made. Recent years have been good for most zoos and most have been able to save substantial sums of money.
By far the largest cost of running a zoo is paying all employees, this is exactly where zoos are already saving costs with the grounds closed.
Large investments will probably get postponed, but I am not afraid of any of the larger zoos in the Netherlands closing.
Two Dutch zoos (Ouwehands and Artis) have already confirmed that they will remain closed until at least June 1st under the containment measures of the Dutch government. Two and a half months of closure is a very long time for zoos that are open year-round to have little revenue and no visitors, even after considering savings from years past and possible cost savings on some operating costs like staff and supplies for visitors. They still have to pay to feed and keep the animals and that isn't cheap at all.
The kind of funds Lintworm describes is known here as an endowment. It is money that has been given by large donors strictly for the purpose of having funds for such an emergency and to earn interest that can be used either for general needs on occasion of to reinvest to make the endowment larger. As organizations like private schools, hospitals, museums, and theatre companies reach a certain size and impact more and more people, they have admiring large donors whose support can start an endowment. As Lintworm explains it, Artes has two endowments, one to support general operating expenses and one to support one-time capital programs like infrastructure, exhibits, and with zoos, perhaps even expensive animals. The statement of financial position (profit/loss) Kevinb looked at will likely not indicate this at all, with only the unearned income from its investments possibly reflected on the balance sheet. The bulk of the endowment information will appear in a separate portion of the year- end report, possibly with indication of what major sums were used for.
Except that they are not endowments, but self-earned cash reserves.
The Living Desert has laid off 2/3 of their staff to cut costs. This really sucks as I know some of the folks that have lost their jobs. Hopefully they will get them back when all this is over.
Living Desert lays off two-thirds of staff as coronavirus closure cuts out revenue stream
There's always the possibility that these employees are being temporarily laid off so they can collect unemployment while the zoos are closed since there's no need for many of them atm anyway. That is what my uncle did with all 14 of his restaurants, and each employee will be welcomed back once they reopen again.
~Thylo