The Lincoln Arts Council has paused operations due to fiscal issues, but a board member says it intends to return after an assessment and reorganization period.
“We have no intention of shutting down like everyone is saying,†said LAC board member John Badami. “We are making an assessment. We want to be sure we’re meeting all the commitments we already have and find ways to move forward.â€
The nonprofit arts council, which has increased its programming over the past few years, including taking on the Lincoln Calling music festival this year, essentially ran out of cash sufficient to sustain its programs and staff, he said.
That led the board last week to suspend its ongoing programs, put a halt on some future contracts and temporarily lay off staff members, Badami said.
Troy Gagner, who had served as the council's executive director since October 2021 and oversaw the council’s takeover of Lincoln Calling, resigned Oct. 7.
The pause has suspended the council’s upstArt program, which provides afterschool and communitywide art programming, and put in limbo its traditional major events, including the annual Mayor’s Arts Awards and Lincoln Arts Festival.Â
If, how and when any of those programs resume will be determined during the assessment and reorganization, Badami said.
For now, as it does the assessment and reorganization, Badami said, the arts council isn’t, as has been rumored, flat broke.
Listen now and subscribe: | | | |
"The good news is we’ve got enough money to meet our obligations now," he said. "We hope to get back to a position where we can operate like we have been.â€
The arts council expects to release more information about the pause and plans for the immediate future in the next week, Badami said.
According to its most recent tax filing, which was from 2022, the arts council had revenue that year of about $645,000 and expenses of about $537,000, producing about $108,000 of income.
Salaries, including about $61,000 for Gagner, made up about 37% of its total budget that year.
The arts council reported about $540,000 in assets at the end of 2022.
The organization, which receives some city funding along with donations from local businesses and patrons, has met with the mayor’s office about the pause and reorganization.Â
The city provided $110,609 in general fund dollars to the Lincoln Arts Council in the most recent contract, which just expired. City officials have not yet finalized the current year's contract and have requested more information from the board about the organization's financial situation before determining their next step, Chris Triebsch, chief city communications officer, said Tuesday.
60+ pieces of public art in Lincoln
Torn Notebook
Reflection
Old Glory
Pitch, Roll & Yaw
Watchful Citizen
Mbera
Gettysburg Lincoln
Clocktower
Rebekah at the Well
Sculpture of child
Groundwater Colossus
Ascent Tower
Tem and Ptah
Acklie Fountain
Iron Horse Legacy
Floating Figure
Vase with Five Flowers
Bench
Doorways to Hope, Garden of Faith, Hope and Love
Illuminating Lincoln
Bicycle
Star Art
Snowplow art
Look Ma, No Hands
Noos
Jay Tschetter mural
Mural on Kiechel building
Solar Semaphore
Double Spinner
War and Victory sculpture
Candy Box
Mountain Monarch
27th Street Hearth
If I Had My Child To Raise Over Again sculpture
Rarin' to Ride
Frog Baby
Daydreams
Standing Bear Sculpture
Harvest sculpture
Four Seasons Terminals
Kneeling figure
Ako's Enso II
Baroque Cherub
"Nautilus" sculpture installation
Arietta II
Tilted Donut #7
Ascot
Archie
Balanced / Unbalanced Wheels #2
Palo Alto I
Dementia
Bop and Crazed
Sluice Scythe & Wedgie
Our Community / Larger than Life
Breach
Bather
Liberty bell
Nanticoke
Bicentennial Cascade Fountain
Rotary Pavilion
Greenpoint
Kaneko head sculptures
Reach the writer at 402-473-7244 or kwolgamott@journalstar.com. On Twitter @KentWolgamott Â
A stage adaptation of Henry James' famous ghost story "The Turn of the Screw" will close the Flatwater Shakespeare Company's 2024 season.
Visitors take in the sights and various booths on display during the Lincoln Arts Festival on Canopy Street in June. The Lincoln Arts Council, which organizes the festival, paused its operations last week.