{"id":22174,"date":"2017-06-15T11:24:10","date_gmt":"2017-06-15T15:24:10","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.wrfalp.com\/?p=22174"},"modified":"2017-06-15T11:24:10","modified_gmt":"2017-06-15T15:24:10","slug":"prendergast-library-board-meets-thursday-action-on-art-collection-possible","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.wrfalp.com\/prendergast-library-board-meets-thursday-action-on-art-collection-possible\/","title":{"rendered":"Prendergast Library Board Meets Thursday, Action on Art Collection Possible"},"content":{"rendered":"
The Prendergast Library art collection has been on display in the Prendergast Library’s Fireplace Room for the past several years.<\/em><\/p><\/div>\n JAMESTOWN – The James Prendergast Library<\/strong> board of trustees will hold its monthly meeting Thursday, with the possibility of library officials acting on a measure involving the future of the Prendergast art collection<\/strong>, with an estimated value of $1.17 million dollars.<\/p>\n Last month the library announced it had reached an agreement with the state\u2019s attorney general\u2019s office<\/a> that would allow it to sell the collection, but only if done so by auction. The agreement was necessary because the library had filed a request with Surrogate Court<\/strong> to allow the auction to proceed, but the AG\u2019s office was initially against the sale. The primary concern from the AG was that library, which is a nonprofit organization, may not receive the actual full value if it were to just sell the collection to any buyer. Instead, the AG insisted the sale only take place via an auction.<\/p>\n With the agreement in place, the board can now proceed with identifying an auction house to facilitate the sale, and there\u2019s a possibility they will select an auction house during today\u2019s meeting.<\/p>\n BOARD SUPPORTS SELLING COLLECTION, DESPITE LOCAL EFFORT TO SAVE IT<\/strong><\/p>\n The library board is in unanimous support of selling the collection, saying it would help with the financial challenges the library currently faces. In recent years the library has seen the amount of public donations decrease, and last year the Jamestown City Council<\/strong>, due to the city’s on financial challenges, voted to eliminate $250,000 in contributions to the library. That amounted to a 21 percent cut in operational revenue for the library.<\/p>\n Prendergast Library board president Tom Rankin talks with attendees, many of them in favor of saving the art collection, during an October 2015 public input session. Despite the support expressed during that meeting and other meetings the past two years, Rankin has recently said there is overwhelming public support to sell the artwork.<\/em><\/p><\/div>\n Board president Tom Rankin<\/strong> also recently said in an op-ed piece<\/a> that there is overwhelming support in the community to sell the collection, with 99 percent of the participants saying that “the library should no longer have an art collection or even be in the ‘museum business.'”<\/span><\/p>\n<\/a>