Minnesota Orchestra management could be at risk of losing control of Orchestra Hall, according to a prominent legislator.
Rep. Alice Hausman, DFL-St. Paul, said Friday that the orchestra may be in violation of the law concerning use of the recently renovated hall.
Hausman, chairwoman of the House Capital Investment Committee, sponsored the 2010 bill approving $16 million in bonding authority for the renovation. She is concerned that what taxpayers paid for — a performance hall for a resident symphony — is no longer what they're getting, due to the ongoing labor dispute and lockout of musicians.
The hall, closed for more than a year during its $50 million renovation, was finished in August, but concerts have not resumed there, and none are currently scheduled.
"At this point, we don't have answers, just questions," Hausman said. "This is a real test, because to my knowledge nothing like this has ever happened in either Minneapolis or St. Paul."
Under the agreement to receive state bonding for the concert hall, Minneapolis must certify to the state each year that the venue is used as a performing-arts center.
Because the state may grant bonding money only to political subdivisions like cities and counties, not private entities, it is accepted practice for cities to take over large nonprofit arts facilities and lease them back for almost nothing. Minneapolis has also done this for the Guthrie Theater, as St. Paul has for Ordway.
Legally, Hausman said, "the city remains responsible for overseeing the public programming, even if the nonpublic entity, the orchestra, walks away. So the question becomes, how do we determine when a nonpublic operator has walked away?"