The City of Albuquerque’s 1% for Art program was established in 1978.  The funding is tied to the General Obligation bonds that are issued every two years that are managed by the Capital Implementation Program (CIP).   The bonds usually consist of Streets, Libraries, Parks and Recreation, Public Safety (Fire/Police), Storm Drain, Family and Community Services (Senior affairs, Community Centers), Cultural Services (Museum, Libraries, Special Events) and other Capital projects that the City is proposing.  The  1% is added  to each proposed bond that the public then votes on,  the public art program usually receives around 1 million (give or take) every two years for funding of public art projects. 

 

Our ordinance breaks down the funding so that 80% is used for art and 20% is used for administration and the conservation of our collection.   We currently have 4 full time Public Art Staff that works with the City, Arts Board, City Council and the Public in identifying locations for public works throughout the City of Albuquerque. 

 

I have attached a link to our webpage were you can download our ordinance. 

 

https://www.cabq.gov/culturalservices/public-art/about-public-art

 

If you have any questions please feel free to contact me.  Hope this helps,

 

Matt

 

COA Logo_Horizontal_CulturalServces-SMALLERRRR

 

MATTHEW CARTER

project planner, uetf/public art/vmrc

p:505-768-3804

c:505-379-3952

public art urban enhancement division

city of albuquerque

cabq.gov/publicart

 

 

 

From: public_art_network@americansforthearts.simplelists.com [mailto:public_art_network@americansforthearts.simplelists.com] On Behalf Of Sarah Dresser
Sent: Friday, December 20, 2019 8:32 AM
To: public_art_network@americansforthearts.simplelists.com
Subject: Re: Enforcement of percent for art ordinance

 

In the City of Columbia, Missouri -- we have a 1% for art ordinance for capital improvement projects over $1 million. 

 

Attached is the ordinance, and you will see in Section 7 that the City Manager (and staff) recommend which CIP would be eligible during the budget process. We then have our Commission on Cultural Affairs recommend to City Council to officially designate the project. 

 

In Section 2, it defines what costs can be included in the 1%(costs for architects and engineers but excluding land costs). 

Hope this helps! Let me know if you have any questions about our process here in Columbia. 


Sarah Dresser
Manager, 
Office of Cultural Affairs
City of Columbia, Missouri

573.874.7512 | comoarts.com

 

 

On Thu, Dec 19, 2019 at 6:14 PM Megan Berner <bernerm@reno.gov> wrote:

Hi all,

 

We have a 2% for Public Art Ordinance at the City of Reno for all city capital improvement projects. However, when the ordinance was created, there weren't really any procedures put in place to ensure that those projects were allocating those funds appropriately. Our ordinance is somewhat unclear on which costs are eligible and which aren't. Also, unclear on where the allocation gets enforced--there is some language in the ordinance that the CIP Review Committee will put together a report at the start of the fiscal year with the budgets for all CIP projects and calculate that 2% but whether that happens or not is unclear (in other words, our department and commission does not see that report or those numbers).

 

I'm wondering if any cities with percent for art programs can share any procedures they have in place for ensuring those funds do get allocated. (For example, if that happens in a budget form where the costs of the project are broken down explaining which costs are eligible and which aren't and showing the 2% for each CIP.) We are looking to implement some sort of checks to make sure that the 2% is allocated properly for each project. 

 

Another question: If you have a % for art ordinance, where is the funding taken from? Is it CIP or something like a hotel or tourism tax?


Thank you all for your help with this!


Best,
Megan


Megan Berner

Public Art Program Coordinator

City of Reno

Arts, Culture, & Events

Office of the City Manager

McKinley Arts & Culture Center

925 Riverside Drive

Reno, NV  89503
w. 775.326.6333

 

 

 

CONFIDENTIALITY NOTICE: This e-mail transmission, and any documents, files or previous e-mail messages attached to it may contain confidential information that is also legally privileged. If you are not the intended recipient, or a person responsible for delivering it to the intended recipient, you are hereby notified that any disclosure, copying, distribution or use of any of the information contained in or attached to this transmission is prohibited. If you have received this transmission in error, please immediately notify the sender and immediately destroy the original transmission and its attachments without reading or saving in any manner. Thank you.

To unsubscribe from this list please go to http://archives.simplelists.com

To unsubscribe from this list please go to http://www.simplelists.com/confirm.php?u=Kkpiuj0TDODb2lQjlNAxXZknS2WmbQgC

======================================================= 
This message has been analyzed by Deep Discovery Email Inspector.