Bones of Contention

Beloved Dino Museum to Close its Doors, Shutting Down the Public

A tale of two dinosaur museums, in Wyoming and Montana, reveals the link between dinosaurs and democracy. Both of them can get buried.

By Guest Writer, 6-23-09

Revolution rages in Tehran and the world is transfixed by millions of Iranians demanding free speech. Laramie, Wyoming is light years away from the Islamic world, but amid charges of repression of free speech and totalitarian decisions, a revolt is gaining momentum against the University of Wyoming (UW) trustees—and its emblematic martyr is Big Al, the Allosaurus.

Facing an $18.3 million budget shortfall, UW decided to close the school’s Geological Museum in response to the state of Wyoming’s mandated 10 percent budget cuts. The museum will close to the public July 1; its director and assistant are among the people who will lose their jobs as a result.

Big Al, the star of the BBC’s Allosaurus - A Walking with Dinosaurs Special—whose incredibly preserved bones greet museum visitors—will become a recluse. Some researchers may be able to see him, but not the public. The same goes for other museum prizes, including one of the only mounted skeletons of an Apatosaurus (or Brontosaurus, as it was formerly called).

The closure has caused a stir among the dino world and the controversy has permeated both conventional media and the blog world (for a good overview and TV report from 9NEWS.com, click here). An online petition to save the museum has garnered more than 2,000 signatures from fans and paleo experts around the world, but the campaign has fallen on deaf ears.

This, against a backdrop in which “UW has given their president a $50,000 raise as well as put several million dollars into stadium renovations” in the past year,” according to the Daily Kos. Paleophiles have pointed out that while the 10 percent budget cut will close the museum and eliminate other academic programs, the athletic budget will only be reduced by five percent for fiscal year 2010.

Images of protest marches being shut down by Iranian clerics flashed across TV screens last week at the same time the university refused to allow public comment during its budget meeting. Admittedly there is all the difference in the world between folks wanting to keep a dinosaur museum open and Iranians being gunned down by government thugs for demanding basic freedoms. But it does seem that university leaders would have been sensitive to the expectation of open meetings.

It also seems they should have learned a few lessons from the 1960s and ’70s. Faculty, students and the public should have a say in how public funds are spent or retracted, and how decisions are made that affect the public.

The Wyoming Tribune Eagle reported that a trustees meeting scheduled for July 1 will be cancelled. Meanwhile, bloggers like Dinochick continue to appeal to the public to save Big Al by signing the online petition.

In contrast to the turmoil around Wyoming’s dino museum, the Museum of the Rockies (MOR) in Bozeman is on a reduced budget, but sound footing. While MOR cut its administrative budget to reflect less funding, its programs are still bringing school children from around Montana to see the hundreds of dinosaurs in its Seibel dinosaur complex, and it’s still teaching one quarter million visitors every year about the reptiles that lived in Montana over 100 million years ago.

While both museums boast impressive collections of fossils, MOR differs from the Geological Museum on several key points:

--Both are connected to universities, but MOR’s management and funding is somewhat independent of Montana State University.

--MOR is run by a separate and independent corporation, Museum of the Rockies Inc., whose board is comprised of community members.

--Only 20 percent of MOR’s funding comes directly from the state and the university.

It could be that the MOR’s independent, community-run board has made the decisive difference that will keep MOR’s Big Mike, the Tyrannosaurus Rex who presides over the entrance to the building, from suffering the fate of Big Al.

Keeping these fossils on view might not change the world, but it does help us understand it. And that’s worth making a noise about—and being heard.

[End of article]
Comment By Robert Hoskins, 6-24-09

Were it a museum devoted to livestock and the livestock industry, not only would it be kept open, but it would get increased funding.

Welcome to Wyoming.

Comment By Montucky, 6-24-09

Looks like UW top admin has graduated from the school for corporate raiders too. Ours is no longer a government of the people.

Comment By Jay J, 6-24-09

The "People" of the USA and WY and MT - gave Up their Gov't to OTHERS along time ago. Some of it was recovered last Nov., but ALOT is still in the hands of bean counting / money grubbing / soul-less minions of:cattle, oil and coal barons!! The average person is "still" to lazy, selfish or such - to TRULY take back their own Gov't. That would take self - less work and self education, too much for the majority!!
Sorry, but THAT is what "I've" seen here in WY and all over!

Comment By Tom, 6-30-09

How is it that the UW Geological Museum has sustained previous busts of our energy/mineral economy, but has gotten the axe in the recent bust, a bust that could be considered minor in comparison to those of the past? If the core mission of UW is to prepare new generations of young people to lead Wyoming into the future (and not leave the state for better jobs after graduation), what sense does it make to shut the door in the faces of our youth and others, to one of the best entrances into the very field upon which Wyoming’s economy is based? I believe UW’s decision to close the museum is a grave mistake on many levels.

I feel confident that I speak for many supporters far and near in wanting to know the truth regarding the decision to close the UW Geological Museum. Over the past couple of days, from more than one independent source, I heard rumor of a UW donor who offered to put up the funding necessary to keep the Museum open and the Director in place…and was flat-out told “no” by the University. Closure of the Museum appears to have nothing to do with money. Perhaps our unbiased media can conduct some investigative journalism to get past the budget-cut smoke-screen to the real story, because we certainly won’t get it from the representatives of the UW Trustees and Administration. Inquiring minds want to know.

Tom Nissen
B.S. Geology, UW, 1981
M.S. Geology, UW, 1985
As of now, Former UW Donor

This article was printed from www.newwest.net at the following URL: http://www.newwest.net/city/article/dino_museum_to_close_its_doors_shutting_down_the_public/C396/L396/