Juneau — Gene McBryan, a downtown Juneau resident and member of the Friends board, asked the Juneau Assembly on May 27 to ensure the Juneau-Douglas City Museum receives sufficient staffing and financial support to continue exhibitions and outreach.
“The museum doesn't just safeguard these treasures, however. It brings them to life through exceptional seasonal exhibits and the vital school outreach program,” McBryan said. He warned that without a director and a programs curator “this vibrant space will stagnate into a warehouse” and urged the assembly to “fully fund the staff to protect and to share it.”
Why it matters: McBryan framed the museum as the city’s primary steward of local artifacts and community history. He said donors place irreplaceable family items with the museum so they can be shared with the public, and called the museum’s school outreach programs a key community benefit.
Assembly follow-up: Deputy Mayor Smith asked whether the Friends of the Juneau-Douglas City Museum conduct fundraising or provide financial support; McBryan said the Friends support grants and events such as First Fridays but deferred to the museum for specific budget numbers.
Next steps: The transcript records the request and the exchange but does not show a staff response or an appropriation decision; no vote or action on museum funding occurred at the meeting.