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Sarah Hicks and Sam Bergman

Monday, February 2, 2009

Taking It Out On The Kids

I ordinarily try to stay away from the kinds of debates that ensue when politicians threaten to cut arts budgets to deal with economic troubles. People who work in the cultural field tend to get all up in arms at times like this, claiming loudly that the arts are vital (which I agree with, obviously) and that arts groups are "always the first to be cut" when times get tough. And while it's true that the arts are an easy target for those wielding the budget knife, I generally have a tough time arguing that subsidies for theaters and museums should be treated as more vital than, say, school lunch programs. So I just choose not to engage the argument most of the time, and quietly thank the heavens that I'm not the one who has to make such decisions.

But I admit to being a bit indignant over this business of Minnesota Governor Tim Pawlenty wanting to essentially shut down a school that has been a beacon of arts education for the entire US since its inception. The Perpich Center for Arts Education was created with the primary support of former MN Gov. Rudy Perpich and his wife specifically to insure that a serious arts curriculum could exist in perpetuity in the state, even when economics dictated that many ordinary public schools trim or eliminate art, music, and dance programs. Furthermore, in its more than two decades of existence, it has made a point of accepting students from all economic backgrounds, and even offered a boarding option for outstate kids in order to insure that it didn't become the type of resource funded by the state that can only be taken advantage of by kids in the Cities.

Under Governor Pawlenty's budget plan, the Perpich Center would see its 2010-11 budget slashed by 30%, which would kill the boarding program immediately, and cause catastrophic cuts to the school's core educational offerings. The cuts would get even deeper in subsequent years. Furthermore, the governor wants to eliminate the center's unique admissions process, under which students audition much like they would for a college-level music, dance, or theater program, and replace it with the rules that govern charter schools. This would mean, among other things, that the school would be populated on a first-come, first-served basis, regardless of whether prospective students have any interest in or aptitude for the program they'll be enrolling in.

Now, as I said, I generally try not to get sucked into debates like this, because goodness knows, I have no idea how I would close a $4.8 billion budget hole. And if the Perpich Center were just another training academy for kids with wealthy parents, I wouldn't be writing this post at all, because those kinds of kids will always have options in life. But the Perpich Center isn't that kind of place. It's a model of what public education can be, and it inarguably has made a huge difference in the lives of countless Minnesota kids who otherwise might not have had any chance of making a career out of their assorted talents. Its graduates are just one more example of the value Minnesota has always placed on both education in general and the arts in particular. And I think it would be a great shame if that legacy were snuffed out, just to plug less than a half of one percent of that gaping hole in our state budget.

But that's just me. If you disagree - if you think the economic woes we're facing as a state and a nation are just too great to justify investing in anything more than bare-bones K-12 education at the moment - that's fine. I get that argument, and I don't share the traditional liberal view that fiscal conservatives are monsters who want to deprive children of a well-rounded education.

Still, I'll say this. A cut like the one facing the Perpich Center is very likely to get lost in the shuffle in a budget cycle like this, so if you don't think it ought to happen, well, it might be time to sit down and tap out an e-mail to your reps in St. Paul. They won't know how you feel unless you tell them, and believe me, they've got a lot of voices shouting in their ears right now.

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