The Prince George Citizen

New York’s Met Museum charging fee

- Verena DOBNIK

NEW YORK — The Metropolit­an Museum of Art is partially abandoning its “pay-what-you-wish” admissions policy that has made it an egalitaria­n destinatio­n for generation­s of art lovers, even those who could barely afford a bus ticket into town.

Starting March 1, the museum will charge a mandatory $25 entrance fee to most adult visitors who don’t live in New York state, the Met’s president and CEO, Daniel Weiss, announced Thursday.

He said the extra money – an estimated $6 million to $11 million per year – is needed to help balance the Met’s $305 million operating budget, which registered a shortfall of about $10 million in its most recently completed fiscal year.

People from all over the world have been able to come to the museum for nearly nothing since its founding in 1870, but the number of people willing to pay a suggested donation of $25 has dropped off substantia­lly in recent years.

“The goal of the policy is to find a better balance for the institutio­n,” Weiss told The Associated Press. “The current policy has failed.”

Entrance will remain free for all children under 12 and pay-what-you-wish for students up to graduate school in New York, New Jersey and Connecticu­t. Students living outside the tri-state area will be charged $12 and seniors $17.

The fee change will affect about 30 per cent of the museum’s visitors. The rest are either state residents, Met members or they come in as part of a tour group or via a multi-attraction pass.

Weiss said the $25 fee will allow visitors to enter the Met over three consecutiv­e days, instead of just one.

The formal change follows years of debate and litigation over the museum’s admissions policies.

As part of the late 19th-century legislatio­n that allowed the museum to open in Central Park, admission was initially required to be free most days of the week. In 1970, city officials agreed to let the museum charge fees, as long as the amount paid was up to the visitor. Lawsuits in recent years have challenged signage at the museum listing a $25 “recommende­d” admissions price, saying some visitors were misled into thinking they had to pay that amount.

Since 2004, the number of adults who have paid the full suggested entrance price has dropped from 63 per cent to 17 per cent. The voluntary contributi­on now averages only $9, the museum said.

Factors that may have contribute­d to the diminution include the economic recession as well as Met programs aimed at drawing additional younger people to the Fifth Avenue complex.

“We’re not exactly sure, but the world is changing,” Weiss said, adding that the Met’s overall attendance has increased by 40 per cent in the past eight years, to a record seven million last year.

An entrance fee of $25 would be in line with admissions to other New York art institutio­ns, from the MoMA ($25) and the Guggenheim ($25) to the Whitney ($22).

Two other city institutio­ns – the American Museum of Natural History and the Brooklyn Museum – have retained their voluntary contributi­on policy, though both charge fees for certain special exhibition­s.

Several other museums around the U.S. offer paywhat-you-wish rates, but only during certain hours on some days of the week. For example, the Philadelph­ia Museum of Art does it on the first Sunday of every month from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., as well as every Wednesday evening after 5 p.m.

Some, like the 19 Smithsonia­n national museums, are free.

Asked how the museum will verify whether visitors are New York state residents, Weiss said they’ll be asked to present evidence such as a driver’s license, a utility bill or IDNYC, the free identifica­tion card for city residents.

However, “there will be significan­t opportunit­ies for people to cheat the system,” he said, for instance, by claiming to have forgotten to bring proof of residency. “We want to encourage people to do the right thing, but we’re going to be very generous about this.”

The new admissions policy has received the required approval from New York City, which owns the land on which the Met sits and subsidizes the museum for nine per cent of its operating budget. Separately, the Met has endowments of $3 billion.

 ?? THE METROPOLIT­AN MUSEUM OF ART PHOTO ?? New York’s Metropolit­an Museum will begin charging a mandatory entry fee of $25 in March. In the past admission was by donation, with a suggested donation of $25 to see exhibition­s like this one in the American Wing.
THE METROPOLIT­AN MUSEUM OF ART PHOTO New York’s Metropolit­an Museum will begin charging a mandatory entry fee of $25 in March. In the past admission was by donation, with a suggested donation of $25 to see exhibition­s like this one in the American Wing.
 ?? THE METROPOLIT­AN MUSEUM OF ART PHOTO ?? The Greek and Roman wing of the Metropolit­an Museum of Art in New York will start charging a fee to see exhibits like this one.
THE METROPOLIT­AN MUSEUM OF ART PHOTO The Greek and Roman wing of the Metropolit­an Museum of Art in New York will start charging a fee to see exhibits like this one.

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