A big story out of Florida is putting a rather chilling twist on the unemployment crisis. Erinn Alberts actually had a job with Digital Domain ... or at least, she thought she did. That is until she and her husband sold their furniture, packed their kids in the car, and drove all the way from their home in New Hampshire to Florida, where she was greeted with the news that the company behind Titanic and The Transformers was filing for bankruptcy.
The job Erinn had been promised was cut in the process, along with about 280 positions at Digital Domain's offices in Port St. Lucie, Florida. Now she's out of a job, 30 hours from home, and she and her husband have to try to figure out how to feed their three kids.
It's the kind of story that's so terrifying because it could happen to any of us, to anyone who follows the "rules" when it comes to job hunting. You don't just up and move until you have a plan, but they did. Erinn had a job, what seemed like a good job.
Both of the Alberts had worked for major media companies like MTV and Universal Pictures. The job as a production accountant with Digital Domain seemed to fit right in. The production company was going to pay her $46,000 a year. They even had a specialist assisting the family in finding temporary housing. Moving for a job, even moving a long distance like the Alberts, is not uncommon in this economy. You take a job where you can find it.
I feel for the Alberts because it seems they're another family victimized by a system that gives corporations the power to put profits ahead of people.
Digital Domain has clearly been having trouble. It listed debts of $214.9 million on its bankruptcy statement. And yet, they were hiring? They allowed their human relations department to extend the offer of relocation assistance to a woman, bringing not just her but a husband and three kids all the way from New Hampshire? That's callous and cruel, inexcusably so.
It never should have gotten this far. No company in that position should be hiring, and no potential employee should have to put themselves in such a risky position.
I'm sure the people at the top will be fine, of course. They always are. Digital Domain was able to sell its production business to Searchlight Capital Partners for $15 million, so the big guys will make out just fine. It's people like Erinn Alberts, her husband Aaron, and their three kids who are left to scramble because a company played around with people's lives.
If you can help them with a job lead, Aaron is sharing his email: ajalberts11@hotmail.com.
What do you think of companies that hire people only to fire them because they can't keep the doors open? Should that be illegal?
Image via Nathan O'Nions/Flickr


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Comments 53
Against the law to fire people because you can't afford to pay them? Really?
I think your logic is faulty. If you are right then the government should stop hiring people right now and freeze pay increases until the deficit goes down. I'm sorry this happened to her, and really glad you put up their info to help them, but I don't feel we need to change any laws unless we start with our government.
Really.....they shouldn't have hired her in the first place because they ALREADY KNEW THEY COULDN'T PAY HER. Wow.
"they shouldn't have hired her in the first place because they ALREADY KNEW THEY COULDN'T PAY HER."
Actually, that's probably not true. More than likely the person who hired her wasn't high enough in the company to know that the company was about to file bankruptcy. I worked in the accounting dept of a large healthcare company and we didn't know our company was filing bankruptcy until the day it happened. For most compies it's business as usual until the day the bomb drops.
There should have been a hiring freeze. Stop excusing companies of sh*tty business practices!
OHMy I assume your comment was at me so I will respond. You don't know how business works and its obvious. Maybe there should have been a hiring freeze but that could have started a panic that could have had awful effects on the company and could have resulted in having to lay off more people. I don't work for the company so I don't know what all their reasons were and wont act like I do. My family survives off our small business and we believe in personal responsibility. We do charity and contribute to our community therefore expect others to do the same. These parents decided to uproot their family to move across the country for a job paying $47,000 a year and with $200 to their name and I am suppose to join their pity party. No one lined up to cry for us when we almost lost our business, and we didn't ask them too. Now my point about the government is we hire people we don't need to everyday with benefit programs we can't afford. It is ridiculous to want to put down one more regulations from a government that wont lead by example. Also if business's don't look out for their share holders they wont have anyone to invest in their company which also results in lay offs.
Haha, I TOTALLY think that pay increases should be freezed in the govt. I think there should be some pay DECREASES.
I agree there should be a hring freeze if they are thinking about going bankrupt, it might not look good, but it saves things like THIS from happening. COmpanies/politics/military and the like need to stop worrying about what LOOKS good and start working on what really IS.
So much more to this story. http://www.palmbeachpost.com/news/business/digital-domain-to-shut-down-port-st-lucie-operatio/nR5Zf/
I live near this project. This was a classic case of pump and dump. Executives are living in mansions. They took millions of incentive money from the state and ran the project into the ground on purpose.