Wednesday, July 6, 2011

The Cost of Doing Business

I am lucky enough to live in a city where five large cultural institutions are supported by tax-payer dollars, which means that most of these institutions charge no admission. However, many museums must charge at least a small, if not cost-prohibitive to some, fee. Without some sort of fee, many museums would be unable to preserve artifacts and offer educational programming. Many would not even be able to keep their doors open.

Anyone in the museum profession will tell you that it's expensive to keep a museum running. Just keeping the power on can be costly to smaller institutions. Preservation, storage and management of collections, at the heart of many art and history museums, can be a challenge to fund. Then there's also educational programs, public programs, group tours, etc, that all cost something to provide. And there's always something else we wish we could do, if we had the money.

The public seems to mainly object to two things: staff salaries and high admission prices at institutions that receive or have received public funding. Neither objection is unreasonable, though much of the public does not know where museum money goes because most of the information is usually not available. Perhaps if a budget displaying where the money goes was shown next to how much it costs to get in, the public would at least have the opportunity to understand how the money is used.

2 comments:

  1. Very timely piece. I think in this economic climate it's especially important for museums to be transparent about use of funds--people want to know what they're buying. Even with visitor concerns about staff salaries, this is an opportunity to educate--show people what the staff in the museum are doing. Otherwise, they're only get the media end of the tale, which is not pretty.

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  2. Thanks for your comment! My own institution is struggling with public perception from a newspaper article. I'm not sure how it will all turn out, but I'd like to see both sides learn from each other.

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