All of New York City is going to feel the hurt that budget cuts have, no matter what the institution is. Whether it be less beds for the homeless to sleep in during the coming cold winter nights or higher property taxes for those that are lucky enough to have NYC real estate, the pain is coming in one way or another. Of course for some, like the poor, it'll be worse, but everyone is going to be affected by the slashing of our cultural budgets.
From PolitickerNY:
As Michael Bloomberg announced ways in which New Yorkers could enjoy cheap or free cultural activities in the city, Cultural Affairs Department head Kate Levin testified at a City Council hearing about how the mayor’s budget cutbacks are affecting the department and the cultural groups it supports.[...]
Here are a few items from a chart they prepared outlining how much money some institutions will lose by the end of Fiscal Year 2009:
--American Museum of Natural History: $2,790,746, a 22 percent reduction from the previous fiscal year;
--Carnegie Hall: $271,687, a 33 percent reduction;
--Lincoln Center: $1,035,290, a 42 percent reduction;
--Metropolitan Museum of Art: $1,691,246, a 13 percent reduction;
--Staten Island Children’s Museum: $170,146, a 31 percent reduction.
From Manhattan to Staten Island, the price of going to the museum or the opera is going to go up. While the arts can be easily overlooked by politicians, it is important to remember that when you make these institutions raise their prices, it shuts the door onto a form of higher learning. For those that can't afford to pay $20, $30 or $50 to see the myriad priceless treasures our city has to offer, it'll be one more way for Bloomberg to make our city serve the rich before anyone else.
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