This Week in the Mercury

Workhorse Wines
Filming the Great Oregon Novel

Books

Filming the Great Oregon Novel

The Making of Sometimes a Great Notion



Friday, August 13, 2010

State History Museum Will Run Out of Cash in 2011, Pitches Tax to Stay Afloat

Posted by Sarah Mirk on Fri, Aug 13, 2010 at 12:14 PM

OHSlogo.png
The state historical museum threatens to shut its doors in 2011 unless Multnomah County voters approve a new five-year $10 million tax levy that the historical society hopes will land on the November ballot.

This historical society, located on Portland's South Park Blocks, isn't just a bunch of old books gathering dust. This is the state history museum, and if it closes its doors the entire collection of Oregon's films, photos, trail diaries, propaganda posters and maps will become inaccessible to the public. "They even have the penny!" exclaims Liz Kaufman, a political consultant who is working on the new levy campaign. "You know how Lovejoy and Pettygrove flipped a penny to decide Portland's name? They have the penny!"

But why should county taxpayers shoulder the financial burden for running the STATE historical museum? Because the state has fallen through on keeping the museum and library afloat. Oregon's legislature paid about a third of the operating cost of the museum all the way from 1899 through 2003. Then from 2003-2007, the state gave the museum zero dollars. Though the state tossed $1.7 million to the society since 2007, the museum and library have been running almost entirely on its own cash reserves. They'll run out of cash in spring of next year. "We are dead last out of all 50 states for how much the state gives to its historical society and library," says Kaufman.

More on the finances of the state history museum—and the museum's chances at the ballot—below the cut.

The historical museum has been in dire financial straights for a while: The announcement in March 2009 that the society would shut its library sparked an impassioned librarian protest.

The proposed property tax, which the county commission will vote on sending to the ballot Thursday morning, would come to $10 a year for a $200,000 home. In exchange for approving the tax, the historical society would make its museum and library free to Multnomah County residents. Since the normal entry fee is $10, says historical society executive director George Vogt, "One visit to the museum and you'd get your money back."

But this is the second tax increase pitched for the November ballot just this week. Between the fire bond and TriMet's bond, saving the history museum might not stand a chance. "Voters will decide each measure on its own merits," says Kaufman... but winning this will definitely require a serious campaign on the part of the historical society. Though 40,000 visitors check out the museum or library each year, the society isn't beloved or well-known locally, in my experience.

The museum and library's budget expenses costs came to $5.1 million in 2009, while its income amounted to $4.8 million. Only $470,000 of that came from admissions and sales of historical photos and other products, while memberships made the society $259,000, state and local government funding came to $683,000. Private grants and contributions made up the largest slice of the income pie, bringing in $1.33 million.

"We went back to the state to see if there was any chance of throwing us a lifeline in the upcoming [2011 legislative] session. They said they're expecting even bigger cuts," says executive director Vogt. "The belief is the voters do need to weigh in on this."

Other ideas for raising cash: What about selling the building? The land and building the historical society occupies is worth $10.4 million. Kaufman says that's not a good option. "This isn't the best time to be selling a building," says Kaufman. And moving all the fragile historical documents would make moving a costly measure.

For now, it looks like Multnomah County voters will be deciding whether saving their history is worth $10 a year.

 

Comments (7) RSS

Oldest First Unregistered On Registered On Add a comment
1
"We are dead last out of all 50 states for how much the state gives to its historical society and library," says Kaufman.

Obviously, the long term, sustainable solution to this is to establish state funding. Let's do that now instead of in 5 years.
Posted by Blabby on August 13, 2010 at 12:40 PM · Report
2
Without the OHS Library, I wouldn't have been able to do this

http://communique.portland.or.us/05/06/rev…

or this

http://www.fingerpublishing.com/
Posted by The One True b!X on August 13, 2010 at 12:55 PM · Report
3
Imagine that, when the money dries up services are cut. Colorado Springs handled it, we can too.

Cut her off and then some.
Posted by NIG GER on August 13, 2010 at 3:16 PM · Report
4
Care for the fiscal responsibility of a nonprofit organization begins and ends with the board of directors. For OHS it's http://www.ohs.org/about-ohs/board-members…

Our state is strapped for cash for GOVERNMENT programs - much less private organizations which have failed to take their own business interests seriously.

According to the OHS 2008 990s they have $17 million dollars in the bank, and were $200,000 under revenue, its former executive earned just about $200,000 (including a membership at the Arlington Club), and they spent about $400,000 on marketing in a market crash year. Guess what? OHS received over $1.5 million in government grants in 2008.

Wearisomely they've hired a political fixer instead of a fundraiser. No no no. These folks need a serious tactical overhaul and a public fiscal plan starting with major gifts from its board of directors prior to any public support.
Posted by J Renaud on August 14, 2010 at 1:22 PM · Report
5
This is a more deserving recipient for public subsidy than a privately owned soccer team (Timbers), a privately owned playhouse (Gerding Theater), or a hippie commune (Tryon Life Community Farm).
Posted by bruce123456 on August 16, 2010 at 11:35 AM · Report
6
Thousands of school kids visit the History Museum every year. What they experience brings alive what they are studying in school. They get to see and touch real objects that were used by native peoples, those who came over the Oregon Trail, and many others who have created this state. It will be a HUGE contribution to children to secure this funding and keep OHS alive. Vote YES for the levy.
Posted by Sharon Thorne on August 16, 2010 at 3:36 PM · Report
7
"They get to see and touch real objects that were used by native peoples, those who came over the Oregon Trail, and many others who have created this state."

We already have several private and public museums that provide those exact functions, yes they don't seem to be begging for public cash or threatening closure in a recession.

Posted by NIG GER on August 17, 2010 at 10:49 AM · Report

Add a comment

/images/adoftheweek.gif

ad of the day

The Handyman Pro - Your Honey-Do Specialist
Don’t let our name fool you. The Handyman Pro, LLC is a repair and remodel service provider with over 25-years experience. We cover all aspects of construction and repairs for residential and commercial clients.go


post an ad

All contents © Index Newspapers, LLC

115 SW Ash St. Suite 600
Portland, OR 97204

Contact Info | Privacy Policy | Production Guidelines | Terms of Use