Poll suggested to test support for arts center
Mathis Winkler
NEWPORT BEACH -- The city’s arts commissioners might have the money to
poll residents and prospective donors about their willingness to support
a proposed arts and education center, but city officials have informed
them that only the City Council can approve such a study.
“The commission does not have the ability to contract with”
consultants to conduct a study, said Hallie Strock, the city’s cultural
arts coordinator.
The Arts Commission’s hands will be tied until a council-appointed ad
hoc committee on the center concludes its work, Strock told commissioners
last week. No deadline has been set, however.
Councilwoman Norma Glover, who has chaired the ad hoc committee until
now, said she didn’t expect to continue in that role after the new
council members are sworn in Dec. 12.
“The new mayor will be naming a new committee,” she said Friday,
adding that she expects Councilman-elect Steve Bromberg to take her post
because the land for the arts center is in his District 5. “I will not be
working with the committee.”
The $12-million project on 3.5 acres of open space behind the Newport
Beach Central Library has pitted the Arts Commission against members of
the city’s Parks, Beaches and Recreation Commission.
Along with community groups such as Stop Polluting Our Newport, the
parks commission opposes the center on the vacant land.
With only a few parcels of open space left in the city, arts center
opponents have said the project would diminish Newport Beach’s greenbelts
even further.
Still, arts commissioners began talking about studying the proposal at
their meeting Wednesday, which was held at the library, just a few yards
below the proposed site of the arts center.
Commissioner Don Gregory said an anonymous donor had agreed to put up
an undisclosed sum to pay for the study.
In addition, the donor already has pledged to contribute a minimum of
$1 million to the project, he said, adding that the amount might increase
if the study shows overwhelming community support for the center.
“Then that minimum [pledge] of $1 million could turn into more,”
Gregory said.
While he supports the study, Gregory said he is concerned about
polling people on their willingness to make donations.
“Politically, it’s more important to have general support” for the
project, he said.
Fellow Commissioner Catherine Michaels said getting information on
potential financial backers was equally necessary.
“We don’t just want to find out for ‘X’ thousands of dollars that
people support a location” for the center, she said. “We also want to
find out whether they are willing to pay for it.”
Michaels, a management consultant for nonprofit organizations, said
she had conducted similar studies for other projects.
Although she said it was impossible to put a price tag on the study,
such endeavors typically range from $15,000 to $75,000, depending on how
many people are interviewed.
But talk about hiring consultants to do the study is premature, said
LaDonna Kienitz, the city’s community services director and librarian,
who serves as liaison to the arts commission.
The commission was “really just gathering information,” said Kienitz,
who did not attend the meeting.
“They are in no position to be doing anything,” she said. “This is a
council issue.”
Kienitz said council members would have to accept a donation for the
study before the city could commission such a survey.
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