Posted on 05/02/2014 11:53:13 AM PDT by MichCapCon
As the prospect draws closer of a state bailout of Detroit at the expense of other critical needs, voters might want to examine more closely politicians skittishness toward selling off city assets. In particular, artwork owned by the citys museum, an institution sustained by tax dollars (including a regional property tax favored by many of those same politicians in 2010).
Lawmakers should reject a bailout and instead insist that Detroit whose problems are the product of its own fiscal malpractice take responsibility for cleaning itself up. It is fundamentally unfair to make other Michigan residents pay for such infamous mismanagement. If avoiding this inequity requires the city to sell some assets, including paintings from the museum, so be it.
In fact, government support for the arts is itself another form of inequity: Tax dollars taken from the many subsidize the highbrow recreation of a relative few. Now Lansing politicians want Michigan taxpayers to give up another $350 million for a bailout that proponents admit is largely about preserving an amenity for the elite.
Selling off some art could go further to reducing bankruptcy pain than bailout advocates admit. They downplay this potential by pointing to a low-ball value estimate of $867 million for the art, but one bond insurer has solicited bids that could generate $2 billion. Putting a ring-fence around this asset leaves money on the table that could reduce the hit to the citys pensioners and others.
Among those others are people and institutions who have lent money to the city and for whom there has been little sympathy. In some cases that may be understandable, but stinging creditors could increase future borrowing costs for all Michigan communities, making needed infrastructure improvements that much harder, plus adding another obstacle to Detroits own long-awaited Renaissance.
The first priority of legislators should be to protect their constituents from a misguided bailout of Detroit. Sell some art and other assets, contract out many services and end unnecessary ones. Any other solution would be fundamentally unfair and would encourage more bad behavior in Detroit and other poorly managed cities.
I can think of millions of people who would miss the museum, it's one of the top 6 museums in the United States and VERY well attended.
The Detroit Institute of Arts just won a huge millage from the surrounding three counties to raise taxes to support the museum because it's so important, so very important.
The DIA is the first museum in the United States to have a Van Gogh, and now it has several.
It has Bernini’s model for St Peter’s Chair from the St Peter’s Basilica in Rome, Picasso, Rembrandt, Caravaggio, Degas, Singer Sargent, murals by Diego Rivera, a complete colonial home, incredible Egyptian artifacts, medieval, roman.........I could go on.
Needless to say, the DIA is a bright jewel full of treasures, and this is coming from a person who has an apartment across from the Louvre.
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