Human rights museum could get more funds - Action News
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Manitoba

Human rights museum could get more funds

Manitoba Premier Greg Selinger is not ruling out more government money for the Canadian Museum For Human Rights.
Architect Antoine Predock's model of the Canadian Museum for Human Rights. ((CBC))

Manitoba Premier Greg Selinger is not ruling out more government money for the Canadian Museum For Human Rights.

Museum organizers have approached all levels of government for more cash, but have been told to first try to raise as much money as possible in the private sector, Selinger said.

He would not say whether the province is open to putting up more money if private funds cannot be raised.

"We want the museum to be successful here in Manitoba," Selinger said in a year-end interview with The Canadian Press.

"We're very pleased that the museum has been designated here in Manitoba and that it is going ahead and we want them to be successful and we are going to support them to do that, but we would like them to continue with their fundraising arrangements."

The museum is slated to open in 2013, and will be Canada's first national museum outside the Ottawa region. Itwill belocated in Winnipeg, near the forks of the historic Red and Assiniboine rivers.

Exhibits will be intended to tell the story of human rights in Canada and will include displays on First Nations rights and the Holocaust. Other programming was being developed in a series of cross-Canada focus groups and meetings throughout 2010.

Fundraising in earnest for the project began in 2003 with a $30-million federal grant from the then-government of Liberal Jean Chrtien.

Since then, the three levels of government have committed $160 million in construction costs, and the federal government has also agreed to cover operating expenses estimated at $21 million a year.

Organizers have raised $125 million in private donations, but announced in early December they need another $25 million to complete the building.

The late media mogul, Izzy Asper, spearheaded the project, which has been hit by escalating construction costs risingfrom an original estimate of $260 million to $310 million and pushed the opening back from 2012.