Charges won’t ruin arts center
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We hope the news of an Orange County Performing Arts Center employee
being charged with embezzling more than $1 million from the arts
center won’t end up being a lasting black eye.
It shouldn’t.
As anyone who has attended a performance -- be it classical music,
a Broadway show or a modern ballet -- at the arts center knows, it is
a jewel of the county, one that is consistently improving its image
and prestige across the country and even around the globe. Each year
it seems able to bring in more impressive performers and more
financially successful shows. Next fall, after a $200-million capital
campaign (which thus far has topped $128 million), the center will
open the Renee and Henry Segerstrom Concert Hall and Samueli
Theater.
The future appears very bright.
One person’s alleged actions shouldn’t taint that.
It is, of course, understandable that people who have spent money
at the arts center or, even more so, donated money, would have
questions and concerns about the alleged embezzlement.
And it is incumbent upon arts center officials to be as open as
possible about how it happened, where the money was taken from (early
reports from the arts center suggest the money came from cash
accounts and not fundraising revenue) and what they are doing to
ensure nothing similar happens again.
Perhaps their openness will even be a catalyst to propel the arts
center’s fundraising to its lofty $200-million goal.
This is certainly a perfect opportunity for the center to show
that there is substance to its business practices that goes beyond
its stage shows.
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