https://www.austinchronicle.com/arts/2008-06-13/634892/
The result, as happens sometimes, was a touch anticlimactic. Mayor Wynn, along with Council Members Sheryl Cole, Betty Dunkerley, Lee Leffingwell, Mike Martinez, and Brewster McCracken, listened politely as Cultural Arts Program Manager Vincent Kitch reviewed the planning-process timeline, then consultant Bill Bulick of Portland, Ore.-based Metropolitan Group laid out the "10 big ideas" that CreateAustin promotes for upgrading local creativity. Their demeanor didn't change when he highlighted the three top recommendations: Establish an ongoing Leadership Council, create a community-based Creative Alliance, and form a city Department of Arts and Culture. Even when Leadership Council Chair Cookie Ruiz described all the activity since planning was completed – conducting a survey of arts education programs, building an inventory of cultural venues, researching structures for the Creative Alliance (efforts in which this writer has been active) – and alluded to a substantial private grant for funding such an alliance (thereby freeing the city from another financial obligation), they remained restrained. The only question from the dais, raised by Martinez, concerned models and costs for a Department of Arts and Culture. With city resources at stake, you can expect more council dialogue on that front. Meanwhile, the CreateAustin participants who came for the presentation – and many of their colleagues who didn't – have gone back to work at making their plan reality. (For more on CreateAustin, see "Shape of Things to Come," March 7, or visit www.cityofaustin.org/culturalplan.)
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