Private-public partnership agreed upon for arts and education
center
Noaki Schwartz
NEWPORT -- An ad-hoc committee of library board and city Arts
Commission members decided Tuesday on a governance model for a proposed
arts and education center.
The model will be presented to the public as part of a study to
determine the community’s need for such a facility. It also will be shown
to companies when soliciting private donations.
Roberta Jorgensen of the Arts Commission and Patrick Bartolic, a
library trustee, presented the committee with six different options, with
varying degrees of private or public control.
The committee swiftly narrowed the selection down to three models and
eventually chose one in which the city owned the building, but the center
had a separate governance.
Under the model, the Newport Arts Foundation or another nonprofit
group would oversee the board, and the Arts Commission, public members,
library trustees and Newport Beach staff would jointly make decisions.
Council members John Noyes and Jan Debay both supported the model because
it would allow the most people to get involved.
“It’s a great opportunity for partnership,” said Noyes, who added that
while he thinks the city is good at overseeing parks and other public
facilities, art “needs more freedom.”
But the voting was not without debate.
There was significant concern as to whether the governance should be
private or publicly controlled. Some members felt the city should oversee
the center, while others argued that under that scenario, the committee
could not then request private donations.
If left to the city, board Chairman Jim Wood said, taxpayers would be
responsible for about a half-million dollars a year -- something most
residents would not agree to.
The committee plans to meet again Sept. 22 to detail precisely how the
governance board would be structured.
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