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Input promised in arts planning

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L.A.’s arts policy will be under official scrutiny starting Friday as the new Mayor’s Council for the Arts, charged with evaluating the city’s Cultural Affairs Department, begins its work with a 9 a.m. public hearing at City Hall.

Outcry from the arts community over a preliminary proposal to abolish the department led Mayor James K. Hahn to promise it won’t be axed, but he wants savings and possible organizational changes in the face of a large budget shortfall. John Emerson, chairman of the Music Center, is heading the advisory council and says its soon-to-be-named roster of about 25 members will reflect the arts community’s diversity, including the small organizations that often depend heavily on the CAD’s $3.3 million in annual grants.

Emerson has promised a process that will be “very open, very transparent, with lots of opportunity for public input,” ending with a mid-May report of findings and proposals. Though the Cultural Affairs Department is off bureaucratic death row, General Manager Margie J. Reese says the mayor’s fiscal team wants the current $11.8-million budget to be reduced next year by 20% to 30%.

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Mike Boehm

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