Curtain call?
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Tariq Malik
To play -- or not to play?
That’s the question on the minds of some Huntington Beach Playhouse
officials who fear that a potential increase in rent costs could push the
group out of the Library Theater at 7111 Talbert Ave.
Last week, the city’s library board unanimously approved a lease
proposal that would, if passed by the City Council, ultimately require
the playhouse to pay an additional $110,000 a year on its lease.
“That’s literally almost half our annual budget,” said Don Stanton,
treasurer for the playhouse. “If the council votes to approve [the
lease], they’ll be essentially evicting us from the library.”
The lease proposal includes a staged increase over the next few years,
adding on to the current annual rent of more than $28,680 until it
reaches about $130,000. That lease price, board members said, will
completely cover the theater rent, as well equipment replacement and
other costs.
During the April 17 meeting of the library board, officials outlined a
possible lease schedule for the playhouse, spanning four years and
starting with 2001. The first year would see no increases, serving
instead as a time for business planning to explore the possibility of
fund-raisers and foundations as funding sources.
Raising ticket prices by $2 in 2002, and then by $1 each of the next
two years, would generate added revenue, about $55,000 initially and
$27,500 each following year, to help meet the lease.
Increasing ticket prices could prevent senior citizens and students,
who receive discounts, from attending community theater, playhouse
officials said.
Only by substantially raising ticket prices will the playhouse
survive, though another alternative, he added, includes “going dark” for
a season and finding another theater.
Library officials said they understand the playhouse’s frustration,
but the rent increase is necessary largely because of the city’s effort
to cut 5% from the budget of each of its departments.
“I think everyone is supportive of the playhouse because they do
wonderful things,” said Patricia Bril, a member and former chair of the
library board. “But the demand of the public for desired facilities
outstrips our resources.”
Ron Hayden, the city’s director of library services, said about 60% of
the library budget cuts will be in books.The playhouse has called the
Library Theater home since 1995, when it began a five-year lease with
rent set at about $28,680 per year and adjustments made according to the
consumer price index. That lease, library officials said, was a
substantial discount to the traditional $121,000 rental fee charged to
theater-users. It ran out in December 1999. The playhouse has operated on
a month-to-month basis ever since.
Last October, the council put off a decision on a three-year lease
proposal supported by the library board, while an ad hoc committee
studied the city’s approach to nonprofit enterprises, such as the
playhouse and the surfing museum.
Playhouse officials said they are the only nonprofit group in the city
paying their own rent, with many others subsidized by the city with a $10
or $1 payment.
Councilman Peter Green, who chairs the ad hoc committee, said its goal
is to find some means of standardizing that process, and results may
appear before the full council in the next few months.
“It feels like we’re in a slumlord situation,” Stanton said. “We’re a
nonprofit that’s not part of the city, and have been receiving overtures
about our business plans and finances pointing us to report to the
library. And then we’re criticized for not having fund-raisers, but we do
. . . they’re called plays.”
Library officials said their playhouse lease decision last week is far
from final, with the last vote sitting in the lap of City Council. The
issue, however, will wait until Green’s ad hoc committee reports back to
the council, and any provisions required are in place, before appearing
for discussion.
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