Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Plan to Privatize the DIA Still Alive
Plan to Privatize the DIA Still Alive
Nov 5, 2025 8:14 PM

Earlier this year I argued for a plan that would privatize the DIA, allowing for the City of Detroit to cash in on a measure of the collection’s worth to satisfy creditors and simultaneously protect the DIA’s artwork from being parceled out in bankruptcy proceedings. At the time, I had doubts about the practicability of the idea. I figured that even if such a path were to be pursued that the DIA would likely end up torn apart like a chew toy. Once the city’s creditors realize that they might be able to extract something of value from the DIA, they have all the incentive in the world to demand an exorbitant price for privatizing the DIA. Likewise the city officials would have a massive bargaining chip they could use to extract as much as possible from potential donors.

I still have doubts about the privatization plan’s practicability, but the prospects do seem a bit brighter now that Judge Gerald Rosen has determined that the City of Detroit is eligible to file for bankruptcy. This is because Judge Rosen is one of the leading advocates for a privatization plan. Rumors like this have been simmering in the media for weeks, but according to the Detroit Free Press, now “some of the city’s most powerful leaders are working furiously to fashion a grand bargain in which nonprofit foundations would put up $500 million to spin off the Detroit Institute of Arts from the city, and that money would be used to reduce pension cuts and help rebuild city services.” Apparently Judge Rosen is using his influence to encourage “some of the country’s largest charitable foundations and their smaller local cousins to pony up the money.”

Half a billion dollars might sound like a lot, and it is, but it represents only a fraction of what the DIA collection might fetch. Christie’s recently valued the most easily liquidated and lucrative parts of the DIA’s holdings at somewhere between $452-$866 million.But this appraisal “covers only a small part of the collection in terms of numbers — less than 5 percent of the museum’s 66,000 works.” Previous rough estimates of the entire holdings of the museum were as high as $2.5 billion.

One of plications for any sale is the agreement reached with surrounding counties for a millage supporting the DIA. Selling off the DIA’s assets, even a portion of them, would likely invalidate the millage and dry up another already-established revenue stream for the museum. I have received word, however, unofficially at least that some county officials would not pursue voiding of the millage agreement if the works were to be sold to a non-profit and kept at the DIA. But if the works were to be moved out of Detroit, the surrounding counties would undoubtedly seek to have the agreement nullified.

The negotiations are delicate plex. They involve hundreds of millions of dollars, nonprofit foundations large and small, elected officials, missioners, judges, lawyers, and a wide variety of other interests. But at least the idea is receiving a hearing and is being earnestly pursued. I, for one, hope that Judge Rosen is successful and that the DIA can be successfully severed from the City of Detroit without the destruction of the institution itself.

It’s high time for the separation of city government and art in Detroit.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Imprisoned human rights activist Jimmy Lai receives Golden Pen of Freedom award
The founder of newspaper Apple Daily and his senior staff were recognized for their courageous pro-democracy activities in a Hong Kong suffering under a Beijing-imposed crippling of free speech and press freedoms. Read More… Hong Kong media mogul and fierce human rights advocate Jimmy Lai and the staff of the now-liquidated pro-democracy newspaper Apple Daily were awarded the Golden Pen of Freedom, the World Association of News Publishers’ annual press freedom award. Although imprisoned, longtime Acton friend Lai continues to...
When bookshops were miraculous, romantic places
Not even Amazon can put the original “Shop Around the Corner” out of business. Now, as for the remake … Read More… I began a series of essays on Christmas movies last week with The Bishop’s Wife (1947), a story about church, munity of the faithful, and spiritual responsibility. This week, I’m writing about a less lofty subject, munity of the workplace and the life merce, but a much better movie, The Shop Around the Corner (1940), one of the...
Religion in the public square strengthens public discourse
Robert Wuthnow’s new book demonstrates that religion has provided, not a moral majority, but innumerable moral minorities that uphold free expression and a vibrant culture of dissent. Read More… Religious expression in the public square is currently challenged by peting concerns. On the left, some worry that religion is an anti-rational monolith, quietly subverting legitimate expressions of democracy. Others, on the right, worry that religious diversity destroys cultural cohesion, which they see as necessary to democracy. In his latest book,...
The problem of the atheist economist
Entrepreneurs, to be truly successful, must know more than basic economics. They must also have a higher purpose, one not reducible to mere productivity. Read More… There is much in the classical liberal economist that I find attractive. By classical liberal, I do not mean the sort of political liberalism that defaults to certain presumptions of big government. Rather, I mean one who adheres to a more libertarian adoption of free market principles. Yet the classical liberal economist without faith...
Finding a community of faith in The Bishop’s Wife
The classic Cary Grant film still has much to offer as a meditation on the true meaning of Christmas and how pride often interferes with the accepting of gifts. Read More… I try to write every year on old Christmas movies, and this year I’m doing an entire series on ’40s movies remade in the ’90s, which suggests we can bring back some of those heartwarming stories. So I give you The Bishop’s Wife (1947): a Christian fairy tale typical...
Practicing prudence and gratitude in the age of COVID
Too many conservatives are rejecting the gift of the COVID vaccines out of hand, which itself is very unconservative. Read More… When COVID hit Italy so badly back in the winter of 2020, I recall praying hard that a vaccine could be developed, as quickly as possible, so that the kind of devastation that a worldwide pandemic can induce would be avoided. As a classical liberal who spends a lot of time trying to convince people that things are actually...
Give thanks for economic efficiency
A grasp of how basic economics contributes to human flourishing in astonishing ways gives the so-called dismal science a whole new luster. Read More… I have never been to an event or cocktail party where raising the issue of economic efficiency engendered a particularly emotional discussion or any level of enthusiasm. I have never been to a Thanksgiving dinner table where someone gave thanks for GDP growth. I suspect this may happen in the economic departments of a few universities...
What the Kyle Rittenhouse trial taught America about assumptions, keeping peace
While questions of police brutality, persistent racism and criminal justice reform should concern all citizens, we must realize that violence and disorder provide no path to a more just future. Read More… On Nov. 19, Kyle Rittenhouse was found not guilty on all charges related to the fatal shooting of two men and the wounding of another on the third day of widespread rioting and civil unrest in Kenosha, Wisconsin, in August last year. The trial had for many Americans...
Episode of ‘The Simpsons’ is erased from Disney+ lineup in Hong Kong
An episode of the wildly popular animated series will not be available to Disney+ subscribers in Hong Kong owing to a crackdown on any form of anti-CCP dissent—even from cartoon characters. Read More… The streaming service Disney + made its long-awaited debut in Hong Kong this month, although with one episode from an extremely popular TV series missing. An episode from The Simpsons, which ridicules Chinese government leadership and pokes fun at the nation’s censorship of any mention of the...
Christmas 1991: The birth of freedom in the death of the evil empire
Whether the work of Providence, a pope and a president, or the inner contradictions of a bankrupt ideology, the collapse of the USSR meant hope of a free and democratic Russia. Has that hope been fulfilled? Read More… “You can have a very quiet Christmas evening,” wished Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev to American President George H. W. Bush. “I am saying good-bye and shaking your hand.” It was a long-distance handshake, done via telephone. And it came on Christmas Day,...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved