Arts center provides wealth of benefits to Costa Mesa
Jerry E. Mandel
The Orange County Performing Arts Center would like to thank and
applaud the members of the Costa Mesa City Council and others who are
focusing on the benefits our community will receive with the success
of our expansion. The City Council’s far-seeing decision to waive
traffic fees for the Center’s expansion of a concert hall, music
theater and education center represents a win for the city -- not a
loss.
There is no denying that Costa Mesa, whose city seal bears the
phrase “The City of the Arts,” benefits greatly from being the home
to the Orange County Performing Arts Center, a nonprofit
organization. Not only has the Center’s presence brought the city
positive local, national and international press, but it has also
contributed dramatically to the local economy.
The most recent study from the Orange County Business Committee
for the Arts reports that the direct and indirect spending on the
arts contributed $408 million to our local economy in 2001. The
performing arts alone generated more than $64 million in indirect
audience spending on restaurants, hotels, transportation, parking and
other goods and services. Nearly all of this spending generates tax
revenues to local governments: nationally this amounted to more than
$6 billion in revenue for local governments, according to a 2002
study by Americans for the Arts. These figures rose nearly 45% from
the previous survey.
It is clear that the economic impact of the expansion will drive
this income to even greater amounts, contributing additional revenues
to the city for decades to come. Add to that the positive benefit we
provide to any employer who struggles to recruit and retain top-notch
talent. A world-class arts center provides incredible incentive for
luring potential employees to the region and enables us to bring the
best and brightest talents to work here.
The Center also actively continues to fill the gap created by
funding cutbacks that have all but eliminated arts education from our
schools. Last year alone, more than 300,000 school children enjoyed
live arts experiences through the Center’s education and community
programs department. These numbers will grow exponentially with our
additional facilities, allowing more young people to develop critical
cognitive thinking skills and other benefits derived from exposure to
the arts.
Local and state governments across the country, from Los Angeles
to Philadelphia to Miami to New York, regularly invest in projects
such as the Center’s original facility or our current expansion to
add a concert hall, theater and education center. They understand the
economic and civic importance of a vital arts center, contributing
cash to the sum of hundreds of millions of dollars. Unlike all of
these other centers, the Orange County Performing Arts Center is the
only performing arts center in the country to be built and to operate
solely with private funding.
As is common in cities throughout the world that understand the
benefits that an investment in a cultural center can bring, the city
of Costa Mesa has previously waived fees for other cultural projects
benefiting the public. The Center, a nonprofit organization with a
mission of providing performances and education opportunities for our
community, is without question worthy of such consideration.
We look forward with great anticipation to fulfilling the dream of
a completed art center for our community and serving the needs of the
area for generations to come.
* JERRY E. MANDEL is the president of the Orange County Performing
Arts Center.
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