Budget Hearings Continue - Libraries and Cultural Institutions on the Chopping Block
This week I participated in two important hearings on the Executive Budget that concerned cuts to our libraries and arts and cultural organizations. If the proposed Executive Budget passes as is, it will signify a regression of a decade's worth of hard-won progress for our city. In six weeks, the Brooklyn Public Library will be compelled to reduce services to a mere five days a week in over half of its locations, slash operating hours, shrink collections and programming, and drastically limit hiring while halving part-time staff hours. Such measures are indefensible, especially as we witness a surge in demand for library services in the COVID era and as our city continues to welcome asylum seekers, with visits, program sessions, attendance, and new card applications all up by over 40%. Instead of meeting this heightened and enthusiastic demand, Mayor Adams is defunding our libraries. If these cuts come to fruition, the ramifications are dire: teen programming will suffer a third reduction, Young Adult Literacy classes will be halved, citizenship classes will be slashed by over 50%, visits to senior centers and nursing homes will drop by 50%, visits to children and families in medical facilities will decrease by 30%, and creative aging classes for older adults will decline by 14%. I am imploring reconsideration of these detrimental proposals to safeguard the invaluable services our libraries provide to our communities.
I am also concerned about cuts to NYC’s cultural organizations proposed in the Executive Budget. As I’ve said before, culture is not a luxury, it’s essential to cultivating a stronger and safer city. I am frustrated that only a small restoration of cuts has been offered which still leaves cultural institutions with a funding gap of more than $60 million, compared to what the City Council is advocating for. At City Hall I joined arts workers and organizations, including District 39 based Arts & Democracy and Brooklyn Arts Exchange (BAX), and others representing all parts of our city, to rally against these cuts. I will continue to fight for an expansion of critical arts investments.