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Dallas City Council Unanimously Approves New Cultural Plan

Dallas sculptor Dan Lam inside her home studio. One of the proposals in the new plan is to improve local artists' quality of life by finding a group healthcare plan or co-op.
Hady Mawajdeh, KERA
Dallas sculptor Dan Lam inside her home studio. One of the proposals in the new plan is to improve local artists' quality of life by finding a group healthcare plan or co-op.

By a unanimous vote, the Dallas City Council approved a new cultural plan on Wednesday – the first the city’s had since 2002. 

After 16 months of neighborhood meetings, hiring consultants and surveying artists and arts groups, the Office of Cultural Affairs presented a 112-page draft to the council. Strategies include:

• Finding private sources of funding to remedy issues created by Dallas’ deferred maintenance of its cultural centers
• Developing artist residencies with area schools
• Making improvements to the quality of life for local artists by trying to find a group healthcare plan or co-op for them.

Kenneth Novice, president ofDallas Summer Musicals, Charles Santos of TITAS Presents and Joshua King, co-founder of the AURORA festival, all spoke before the vote. They encouraged council members to support it, emphasizing not only its benefits butthe enthusiastic input and hard work from community members that it took to shape the final proposal and usher it through the council's Arts & Cultural Advisory Committee.

The only hiccup came when Councilmember Philip Kingston, who represents District 14, offered a "friendly amendment" that some of the plan's wording be corrected. The Arts & Cultural Advisory Committee, for example, was regularly referred to by its older title, the Cultural Affairs Committee. 

In the end, eight of the 13 council members spoke in favor of the plan, praising Councilmember Sandy Greyson (District 12) for her work as chair of the committee. In particular, they all hailed the plan for emphasizing arts support for different ethnic and minority groups — and in neighborhoods outside the downtown Arts District.

Omar Narvaez, who represents District 6, which includes West Dallas, was typical in saying, "The thing that I like the most about this plan is the attention to diversity and inclusion. This is paramount for the city that we understand that our city’s changing. It changed a while ago, and we just haven’t caught up."

Read the draft planhere.

This story first appeared on KERA's arts portal, Art&Seek. See more North Texas arts news and profiles here, and use the Art&Seek calendar to find arts events happening near you here.

Jerome Weeks is the Art&Seek producer-reporter for KERA. A professional critic for more than two decades, he was the book columnist for The Dallas Morning News for ten years and the paper’s theater critic for ten years before that. His writing has appeared in the San Francisco Chronicle, Los Angeles Times, Newsday, American Theatre and Men’s Vogue magazines.