ayco%board%position%andpremise:% the%nitty%gritty:% … · 2020. 12. 17. · ! 2!...

22
1 AYCO Board position and premise: The youth circus sector market is growing far more rapidly that it did in its first 17 years of life A generation of youth (aged 2 – 21) have agedout of being youth. What is next for them? Circus in America is on the ropes, even with the Renaissance it is experiencing with youth circus. Where does a 21year old go after their youth experience with circus? Turn pro? Train and teach? Choreograph? Study? How do we change the perception of circus as being ‘low’ art? How do we advocate at the highest levels of funding to expand the financial resources for youth circus and circus arts? Traditional circus is not thriving. Older organizations such as CFA will soon lose enough members as to make it almost obsolete. Even they know the future of circus is youth. How do we engage youth, young adults, professionals, and continue this growth? There is no corporate funding (that we have been able to secure) for AYCO on its own; nor for ACE; nor for CN. Making a united organization creates an attractive organization to funders/donors. AYCO/ACE/CN each (and together) need full time employees to move forward: executive director, development director, grantwriter. AYCO, on its own, cannot generate enough money from Festivals to grow into better serving the youth it was created to serve. If all stays the same as it is now, AYCO will not grow; it will get smaller. We scaled up in 2010 to meet the needs of the whole youth circus community; now, AYCO finds itself in the unique position of needing to scale up to meet the needs of the entire circus arts industry. Circus and youth circus and circus arts are life tools and an art form. THE NITTY GRITTY: All programs of each organization will remain intact A legal merger with Circus Now will reduce redundancy of message and members; it will also not dilute funding streams. It will enhance advocacy. Circus Now supports the category of emerging artists, has one committee (the artistic advisory committee) and has a strong social media following. AYCO supports emerging artists insomuch as it trains youth to become artists. It does not necessarily advocate for them after they are done being youth. ACE was formed because a large sector of circus artists and young adults did not identify as ‘youth’. They did not come through a ‘youth circus school’. They entered the ring from a different place, but still wanted a place to be and grow. CN was formed in the same breath, in the same way. A segment of our industry did not have a place to be. The emerging artist now found a place to at least orient themselves in their newfound profession. The AYCO Board’s proposed vision does not eliminate any youth services or programs – it only adds to them. If this new idea does not bear fruit, then AYCO will need to seriously revise what is possible within its capacity and things will still shift over the next year. It will need to assess which members of its leadership (both staff and board) will stay on with an understanding that there is not a trajectory of growth. If the plan goes through, we expect our circle and networks will grow and bring with them opportunity. The circus education community has different needs than it did when AYCO was founded Think of this idea as a Venn Diagram: part of AYCO overlaps into ACE which overlaps into CN and will overlap into other organizations, each retaining their own identity but simply housed in a united organization.

Upload: others

Post on 03-Aug-2021

4 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: AYCO%Board%position%andpremise:% THE%NITTY%GRITTY:% … · 2020. 12. 17. · ! 2! OPENING%REMARKS:%! Kevin%Maile%O’Keefe%(Founder%of%AYCO,%past%AYCO% BoardPresident,%Founder/Director,%CircusMinimus,%OneM

  1  

AYCO  Board  position  and  premise:  -­‐   The  youth  circus  sector  market  is  growing  far  

more  rapidly  that  it  did  in  its  first  17  years  of  life  

-­‐   A  generation  of  youth  (aged  2  –  21)  have  aged-­‐out  of  being  youth.  

-­‐   What  is  next  for  them?  -­‐   Circus  in  America  is  on  the  ropes,  even  with  

the  Renaissance  it  is  experiencing  with  youth  circus.  

-­‐   Where  does  a  21-­‐year  old  go  after  their  youth  experience  with  circus?  Turn  pro?  Train  and  teach?  Choreograph?  Study?  

-­‐   How  do  we  change  the  perception  of  circus  as  being  ‘low’  art?  

-­‐   How  do  we  advocate  at  the  highest  levels  of  funding  to  expand  the  financial  resources  for  youth  circus  and  circus  arts?  

-­‐   Traditional  circus  is  not  thriving.  -­‐   Older  organizations  such  as  CFA  will  soon  lose  

enough  members  as  to  make  it  almost  obsolete.  Even  they  know  the  future  of  circus  is  youth.  

-­‐   How  do  we  engage  youth,  young  adults,  professionals,  and  continue  this  growth?  

-­‐   There  is  no  corporate  funding  (that  we  have  been  able  to  secure)  for  AYCO  on  its  own;  nor  for  ACE;  nor  for  CN.  

-­‐   Making  a  united  organization  creates  an  attractive  organization  to  funders/donors.  

-­‐   AYCO/ACE/CN  each  (and  together)  need  full  time  employees  to  move  forward:  executive  director,  development  director,  grantwriter.    

-­‐   AYCO,  on  its  own,  cannot  generate  enough  money  from  Festivals  to  grow  into  better  serving  the  youth  it  was  created  to  serve.  

-­‐   If  all  stays  the  same  as  it  is  now,  AYCO  will  not  grow;  it  will  get  smaller.  

-­‐   We  scaled  up  in  2010  to  meet  the  needs  of  the  whole  youth  circus  community;  now,  AYCO  finds  itself  in  the  unique  position  of  needing  to  scale  up  to  meet  the  needs  of  the  entire  circus  arts  industry.  

-­‐   Circus  and  youth  circus  and  circus  arts  are  life  tools  and  an  art  form.            

THE  NITTY  GRITTY:  -­‐   All  programs  of  each  organization  will  

remain  intact  -­‐   A  legal  merger  with  Circus  Now  will  reduce  

redundancy  of  message  and  members;  it  will  also  not  dilute  funding  streams.  It  will  enhance  advocacy.  

-­‐   Circus  Now  supports  the  category  of  emerging  artists,  has  one  committee  (the  artistic  advisory  committee)  and  has  a  strong  social  media  following.  

-­‐   AYCO  supports  emerging  artists  insomuch  as  it  trains  youth  to  become  artists.  It  does  not  necessarily  advocate  for  them  after  they  are  done  being  youth.  

-­‐   ACE  was  formed  because  a  large  sector  of  circus  artists  and  young  adults  did  not  identify  as  ‘youth’.  They  did  not  come  through  a  ‘youth  circus  school’.  They  entered  the  ring  from  a  different  place,  but  still  wanted  a  place  to  be  and  grow.    

-­‐   CN  was  formed  in  the  same  breath,  in  the  same  way.  A  segment  of  our  industry  did  not  have  a  place  to  be.  The  emerging  artist  now  found  a  place  to  at  least  orient  themselves  in  their  newfound  profession.  

-­‐   The  AYCO  Board’s  proposed  vision  does  not  eliminate  any  youth  services  or  programs  –  it  only  adds  to  them.  

-­‐   If  this  new  idea  does  not  bear  fruit,  then  AYCO  will  need  to  seriously  revise  what  is  possible  within  its  capacity  and  things  will  still  shift  over  the  next  year.  It  will  need  to  assess  which  members  of  its  leadership  (both  staff  and  board)  will  stay  on  with  an  understanding  that  there  is  not  a  trajectory  of  growth.  

-­‐   If  the  plan  goes  through,  we  expect  our  circle  and  networks  will  grow  and  bring  with  them  opportunity.    

-­‐   The  circus  education  community  has  different  needs  than  it  did  when  AYCO  was  founded  

-­‐    Think  of  this  idea  as  a  Venn  Diagram:  part  of  AYCO  overlaps  into  ACE  which  overlaps  into  CN  and  will  overlap  into  other  organizations,  each  retaining  their  own  identity  but  simply  housed  in  a  united  organization.  

   

Page 2: AYCO%Board%position%andpremise:% THE%NITTY%GRITTY:% … · 2020. 12. 17. · ! 2! OPENING%REMARKS:%! Kevin%Maile%O’Keefe%(Founder%of%AYCO,%past%AYCO% BoardPresident,%Founder/Director,%CircusMinimus,%OneM

  2  

OPENING  REMARKS:    Kevin  Maile  O’Keefe  (Founder  of  AYCO,  past  AYCO  Board  President,  Founder/Director,  Circus  Minimus,  One-­‐Man  Circus  In-­‐A-­‐Suitcase,  Co-­‐Founder,  CircusYoga)  At  every  critical  juncture  in  our  organizations’  existence  we  have  been  faced  with  decisions  and  directions.  These  might  be  summarized  with  the  choice:  grow  or  die.  Change  is  the  nature  of  all  things.  What  I  hear  from  this  report  is  that  the  staff  and  current  board  are  already  at  capacity  and  if  we  wish  to  continue  to  grow  we  must  change.  One  fear  is  that  our  community  might  splinter  over  even  just  the  discussing  these  choices.  We  are  strong  enough  to  question  our  direction  and  growth.  These  are  good  questions  and  situations  for  any  thriving  organization  and  community  to  have.  Every  voice  must  be  heard,  even  those  that  come  with  fear.  This  current  board  has  my  full  confidence  and  I  wholly  support  this  discussion.    My  first  take  is  that  this  board  has  thoughtfully  and  carefully  laid  out  one  direction.  A  simple  "No"  is  not  a  direction.  If  there  are  other  directives  from  the  community  for  growth  let's  hear  them.    What  does  Circus  want  from  us?      IN  SUPPORT:    RUTH  SCHULTZ    (A  Circus  Youth,  seventeen  years  old,  has  been  participating  in  various  youth  circuses  in  New  Jersey  since  2009.  She  is  part  of  the  Youth  Advisory  Committee  for  AYCO):  

I  would  like  to  express  my  conditional  support  of  AYCO’s  proposed  growth.  The  proposed  changes  address  all  of  the  expressed  “threats”  and  “weaknesses”  of  the  organization  in  the  strategic  update  document,  so  from  that  perspective,  creating  the  umbrella  is  a  logical  move.    

I’ve  heard  concerns  that  AYCO’s  focus  will  fall  from  youth,  and  instead  turn  to  serving  older/professional  people.  Though  it  is  explicitly  expressed  in  the  documents  that  AYCO  intends  on  maintaining  its  current  youth  programming  while  

also  adding  on,  I  would  like  to  see  the  plan  for  doing  this  before  giving  my  full  support.    

Additionally,  if  AYCO  expands  to  the  degree  the  documents  envision,  I  would  expect  it  to  simultaneously  scale  up  its  youth  programming.    

Some  of  the  visions  elements  seem  lofty  or  vague  —  specifically  10  (universal  access),  11  (circus  in  PE),  and  20  (scholarly  journals).  All  three  of  those  would  be  wonderful  things,  but  they  seem  to  be  on  a  different  level  from  the  rest  of  them.  

Personally,  I  think  having  an  umbrella  organization  is  very  much  in  line  with  the  needs  of  youth,  especially  those  of  my  age  group  who  are  aging  out  of  youth  circus  and  have  few  options  for  continuing  the  pursuit  of  circus  arts  as  an  adult  without  going  abroad  to  circus  school  or  giving  up  the  prospect  of  getting  a  college  degree  right  after  high  school.    

Additionally,  I  think  merging  the  organizations  will  give  more  credibility  to  AYCO  and  American  circus,  simultaneously.  It’ll  make  the  creation  of  high-­‐level/professional  companies,  schools,  etc.,  seem  more  viable  and  beneficial,  to  people  outside  the  circus  world/potential  funders.    

Elements  1  (pathways),  4  (resources  for  emerging  groups),  6  (quality  of  work),  7  (fair  compensation),  18  (pathways),  and  19  (safety  culture)  of  the  strategic  update’s  vision  are  most  exciting  to  me.  If  those  things  had  been  in  place  as  I  was  growing  up  in  circus,  I  am  fairly  sure  I  would  currently  be  prepping  to  apply  for  circus  schools,  instead  of  traditional  colleges.    

When  I  imagine  American  circus  twenty  years,  I  can’t  imagine  it  without  some  sort  of  central  organization  to  provide  resources  and  a  common  backbone.  AYCO  seems  like  it’s  in  line  to  become  that  organization.    

I  look  forward  to  seeing  a  viable,  realistic,  long-­‐term,  and  specific  plan  so  I  can  fully  support  the  expansion  into  an  umbrella  organization.  I  anticipate  seeing  what  will  come  out  of  the  

Page 3: AYCO%Board%position%andpremise:% THE%NITTY%GRITTY:% … · 2020. 12. 17. · ! 2! OPENING%REMARKS:%! Kevin%Maile%O’Keefe%(Founder%of%AYCO,%past%AYCO% BoardPresident,%Founder/Director,%CircusMinimus,%OneM

  3  

meeting  in  Trenton,  and  also  how  American  circus  will  move  forward  in  conjunction  with  AYCO.      TARA  JACOB  (SHOW  Circus  Studio  Instructor,  AYCO  Accounts  Manager,  AYCO  Board  Member  2016-­‐2017):    I  love  this  idea!  I  think  that  one  big  circus  organization  would  be  able  to  get  more  funding,  more  publicity,  more  support,  and  better  serve  youth,  adults,  and  older  youth  as  they  transition  into  adult  circus  roles.  Right  now  AYCO  works  with  youth  &  youth-­‐serving  organizations,  but  ACE  serves  circus  educators  who  work  with  youth,  youth  and  adults,  adults  only,  professional-­‐track  folks,  recreational  folks...  AYCO/ACE  is  already  such  a  diverse  community!  I  work  at  SHOW  Circus  Studio  (a  Partner  member  of  AYCO)  where  kids,  teens,  and  adults  learn  the  skills  and  joy  of  circus  arts.  I  think  an  expanded  AYCO  would  better  serve  our  school  and  many  others  like  it.    CHRIS  OAKLEY  (Executive  Director,  SHOW  Circus  Studio):    I’m  writing  on  behalf  of  myself  and  my  business,  SHOW  Circus  Studio  in  Easthampton,  MA,  regarding  the  recent  inquiry  to  the  circus  community  about  the  growth  of  AYCO.  I  am  very  excited  to  see  AYCO  expanding  and  becoming  a  larger  organization  that  serves  not  just  youth,  but  also  adults  and  teens.  I  feel  that  this  transition  will  be  a  great  step  forward  in  the  national  recognition  of  circus  arts  in  the  United  States  by  showing  that  we  are  united  and  ready  to  move  forward  as  an  industry  towards  bigger  and  better  things.  This  union  under  AYCO  will  also  give  a  place  for  transitional  teens  who  are  moving  from  youth  into  adult  circus,  a  large  group  that  I  feel  is  under  represented  with  the  idea  of  Youth  VS  Adults.  With  this  restructuring,  AYCO  will  be  able  to  focus  on  all  ages,  which  will  mean  a  more  inclusive  plan  for  the  future  of  circus  in  the  United  States.      I  am  very  much  in  support  of  this  change  and  I  don’t  feel  that  including  other  groups  under  the  AYCO  umbrella  will  take  away  from  the  current  Youth  focus  of  the  organization.  If  anything,  it  will  make  it  stronger  by  showing  students  that  they  can  

continue  on  a  circus  path  beyond  their  youth,  which  is  the  best  way  to  ensure  circus  keeps  on  growing  and  being  supported  throughout  the  years  and  generations  to  come.    If  you  have  any  questions  or  if  I  can  help  in  any  other  way,  please  don’t  hesitate  to  reach  out.  Thanks  so  much  and  best  of  luck!      TIM  ROBERTS  (Higher  Education  Program  Director  at  l’Ecole  de  Cirque  de  Quebec,  former  president  of  FEDEC):  “I  have  been  following  all  your  developments  with  a  lot  of  interest.  The  latest  one  is  very  good  news.  Pulling  all  the  aspects  together  into  one  organisation  is  a  smart  move  and  shows  that  the  different  aspects  of  the  sector  are  willing  to  work  together.”    IGGY  PARKER  (AYCO  Youth  Advisory  Committee,  Circus  Maine):    I  think  in  this  time  of  transition  in  circus  arts,  with  the  closing  of  Ringling  and  the  (very  exciting!)  growth  of  accessibility  to  circus,  it  is  entirely  appropriate  for  AYCO  to  be  expanding  their  vision  and  mission  alongside  that.  It  doesn't  seem  like  there  will  be  all  that  much  change,  besides  in  branding,  which  might  get  a  little  confusing  in  the  beginning  (speaking  from  experience,  having  to  always  refer  to  the  school  I  began  my  training  with  as  "the  company  that  would  become  Circus  Maine"),  but  I  think  it  will  all  work  out  fine.  I'm  happy  to  see  the  inclusion  of  the  goal  of  promoting  "lifelong  engagement  with  circus",  since  it  is  something  that  everyone,  at  every  age,  can  be  a  part  of  and  find  an  important  place  in.  I  think  there  is  a  tendency  to  think  that  it  is  only  a  young  person's  art,  but  that  simply  isn't  true.  There's  also  the  implicit  support  in  this  statement  for  people  like  us  [the  YAC]  —those  who  are  navigating  transitions  like  youth  to  adult  circus,  adult  to  senior  circus,  from  performing  to  coaching,  from  coaching  to  performing,  from  basic  to  intermediate/advanced  coaching  and/or  training.      These  transitions  can  be  kind  of  overwhelming,  and  I  am  excited  to  have  and  be  a  part  of  an  organisation  who  helps  guide  people  through  those  

Page 4: AYCO%Board%position%andpremise:% THE%NITTY%GRITTY:% … · 2020. 12. 17. · ! 2! OPENING%REMARKS:%! Kevin%Maile%O’Keefe%(Founder%of%AYCO,%past%AYCO% BoardPresident,%Founder/Director,%CircusMinimus,%OneM

  4  

transitions  smoothly  and  naturally,  aiding  the  learning  process  inherent  in  those  transitions.      TERRY  VOLTAGGIO  (Parent  of  Hup  Squad  teen  Allie  Voltaggio):    I  think  it's  great  that  AYCO/ACE  is  expanding  to  be  more  inclusive.    I  also  hope  AYCO's  youth  mission  is  strengthened  by  the  incorporation  of  adult  programming,  rather  than  diluted.  

Page 5: AYCO%Board%position%andpremise:% THE%NITTY%GRITTY:% … · 2020. 12. 17. · ! 2! OPENING%REMARKS:%! Kevin%Maile%O’Keefe%(Founder%of%AYCO,%past%AYCO% BoardPresident,%Founder/Director,%CircusMinimus,%OneM

  5  

NOT  IN  SUPPORT:    SELECT  SOCIAL  CIRCUS  NETWORK  MEMBERS  (NOTE:  the  network  as  a  unified  whole  has  not  issued  a  statement  against  the  proposed  growth  at  this  time;  this  is  a  summary  of  statements  made  by  members  on  a  specific  conference  call):    

•  Members  are  disturbed  at  the  idea  that  we  are  changing  AYCO’s  focus  away  from  youth.    Many  point  to  this  focus  as  the  reason  for  our  strength  and  historic  success.  

•  Members  are  concerned  that  a  small  group  of  people  is  making  decisions  for  AYCO  without  sufficient  consultation  with  stakeholders.  

•  Members  are  concerned  that  if  AYCO  embraces  a  wider  mission  beyond  serving  youth  that  our  members’  power  to  raise  funds  will  be  diminished.  

•  Members  are  concerned  that  funds  they  pay  for  AYCO  membership  should  be  used  to  further  the  interests  of  youth,  and  not  for  any  wider  cause.  

•  Members  are  concerned  that  the  current  constitution  of  the  Board  is  not  sufficiently  representative  of  the  sector  it  wishes  to  serve.  

•  Members  would  like  the  AYCO  Board  to  reconsider  plans  to  combine  operations  with  Circus  Now,  and  to  delay  any  final  decision  until  after  wider  stakeholder  consultation  is  possible.  

 ANONYMOUS:      I  am  grateful  for  the  work  you  put  into  the  strategic  report  and  it  has  helped  me  a  great  deal  in  seeing  why  you  are  considering  the  changes  you  are  suggesting  -­‐  and  I  share  many  of  these  concerns.      However,  I  do  still  feel  strongly  that  it  is  not  the  best  path  to  merge  the  organizations.  Multiple  organizations  collaborating  and  aligning  their  services  for  maximum  impact  and  minimum  redundancy  is  a  better  path  -­‐  allowing  for  each  

organization  to  keep  its  core  goals  while  working  in  alliance  to  make  the  larger  community  stronger.      I  see  collaboration  as  the  model  most  funders  are  interested  in  currently  and  believe  merging  will  actually  lessen  the  funds  within  our  reach.    I  have  very  specific  reasons  for  not  renewing  my  membership  with  Circus  Now  that  I  feel  might  go  unheard  in  the  climate  of  this  large-­‐scale  organization.      I  have  lots  of  logistical  questions  and  concerns  on  how  merging  will  be  helpful  and  not  just  spread  us  all  thinner  -­‐  creating  more  work  for  our  already  taxed  board.      DAVID  HUNT  (Executive/Artistic  Director,  Prescott  Circus  Theatre):    I  do  want  to  state  that  I  want  AYCO  to  stay  youth-­‐centric.  Youth  and  youth  serving  programs  have  unique  needs,  challenges,  and  interests  that  deserve  concentrated  attention.  Setting  youth  out  of  the  center,  thinking  we  can  serve  youth  by  serving  professionals,  is  so  brilliantly  in  line  with  our  Trump-­‐era  practices  and  trickle-­‐down  theories.  Bigger  isn't  always  better.    AMY  CHRISTIAN  (Artistic  Director,  Wise  Fool  New  Mexico):    Yes,  I  think  it's  important  to  create  clear  pathways  for  youth  as  they  grow  into  adult  circus  artists  or  circus  lovers  BUT  why  does  one  organization  have  to  do  it  all?  Can't  we  create  collaborations  and  networks  that  can  work  together  on  a  larger  picture  of  needs  and  services?  I  do  not  believe  "merging"  is  the  best  way  to  go  -­‐  I  think  it  will  water  everything  down  and  burn  people  out  by  scattering  the  focus.  Our  local  education  board  has  convinced  everyone  in  our  city  that  we  need  "community  schools"  that  are  big  and  "serve"  youth  from  pre  K  thru  middle  school  -­‐  but  guess  what  -­‐  every  family  in  town  is  desperately  trying  to  get  their  kid  transferred  the  few  small  schools  left.    

Page 6: AYCO%Board%position%andpremise:% THE%NITTY%GRITTY:% … · 2020. 12. 17. · ! 2! OPENING%REMARKS:%! Kevin%Maile%O’Keefe%(Founder%of%AYCO,%past%AYCO% BoardPresident,%Founder/Director,%CircusMinimus,%OneM

  6  

Anyway  -­‐  that  is  just  one  example  -­‐  there  are  many  -­‐  growing  something  bigger  does  not  necessarily  mean  it  is  better  in  my  view  -­‐  it  just  means  certain  types  of  people  get  lost  in  the  shuffle...    ELENA  BROCADE  (Aerial  Coach  and  Safety  Consultant  for  ACE):    I  also  don't  see  the  benefits  of  having  one  organization.  I  like  an  umbrella  organization  to  bring  different  groups  to  the  table  but  putting  all  groups  under  one  organization  could  lead  to  a  one  shoe  fits  all  situation.    CARRIE  HELLER  (Founder/Director,  Circus  Arts  Institute):    I’m  not  in  favor  for  a  name  change.    I  actually  feel  that  we  have  been  growing  quite  nicely  and  did  not  think  that  major  changes  needed  to  be  made.    I  love  the  focus  of  AYCO  on  youth,  and  I  love  the  new  ACE  for  educators;  honestly,  I  feel  like  things  are  pretty  awesome  lately  for  AYCO  &  ACE  in  terms  of  our  growth.      BETTY  BUTLER    (Co-­‐Founder,  Artistic  Director,  Circus  Juventas):      I  just  read  a  post  from  Jessica  Hentoff  about  a  potential  shift  of  focus  from  the  strictly  youth  circus  art  mission  to  an  all-­‐encompassing  umbrella  of  ‘everything  circus’.      I  think  this  is  a  particularly  bad  idea  as  it  really    muddles  the  mission  of  an  organization  founded  over  17  years  ago  whose    sole  purpose  was  to  advocate  for  youth  circus  arts,  primarily  recreational  and  social.      This  veering  away  of  the  original  mission    could  unravel  consciously  or  unconsciously  into    advocacies  of  tangential  ideas  and  concepts  having  nothing  to  do  with  where    the  focus  of  AYCO  has  always  been  and  should  be.      

While  the  circus  arts  are  clearly  experiencing  a  rebirth  in  our  country  we  also  don’t  want  to  stretch  the  focus  of  such  a  valuable  organization  as  AYCO  into  a  vast  canvas  of  positions  and  mindsets  that  we  end  up  weakening  the  core  values  and  heart  of  what  AYCO  represents  to  our  youth  in  America.      I  would  encourage  a  separate  identity  and  organization  for  emerging  artists,  technicians  and  even  professional  schools,  personally.      Thank-­‐you  for  allowing  me  to  express  my  concern  and  please  note  that  if  the  board  is  discussing  this  on  the  agenda,  there  should  be  transparency  to  all  of  AYCOS  funders,  supporters  and  participants.      YASKO  ENDO    (Researcher;  Mom  to  Issac  Endo  age  22,  first  student  in  the  post-­‐undergraduate  Creation/Director  Program  at  National  Circus  School  Montreal,  and  Yoshi  Endo,  age  19,  Junior  in  the  National  Circus  School  Montreal  baccalaureate  program  (who  lost  his  battle  with  the  brain  disease  Bipolar  1  on  October  25,  2016)   I  am  writing  as  an  educator  and  a  parent  to  oppose  the  plans  to  change  AYCO  from  a  youth  and  children  focused  organization  into  a  'for-­‐all-­‐ages'  organization.    I  am  a  research  faculty  member  at  the  University  of  Colorado  Boulder,  working  both  with  undergraduate  and  graduate  students,  on  projects  that  involve  students  in  the  preschool  -­‐  12th  grade  public  and  private  school  education  system.    I  have  program  managed  three  major  National  Science  Foundation  grant  projects,  and  four  corporate  Google  grant  projects  in  my  tenure  at  the  university.      I  can  tell  you  without  a  doubt,  that  working  with,  promoting,  recruiting,  and  meeting  the  needs  of  students/families  in  the  P-­‐12  population  is  vastly  different  from  that  of  the  higher  education/adult  population.    Much  research  has  been  conducted  in  these  differences,  which  is  why  government  and  

Page 7: AYCO%Board%position%andpremise:% THE%NITTY%GRITTY:% … · 2020. 12. 17. · ! 2! OPENING%REMARKS:%! Kevin%Maile%O’Keefe%(Founder%of%AYCO,%past%AYCO% BoardPresident,%Founder/Director,%CircusMinimus,%OneM

  7  

corporate  funding  for  research  specifically  asks  for  reasonable  and  sensible  division  of  target-­‐population  groups  based  on  desired  outcomes.    Given  this  known  body  of  knowledge  about  providing  education,  information,  support  to  children  vs.  adults,  I  wonder  why  you  are  planning  to  take  a  growing  organization,  AYCO  and  instead  of  continuing  to  invest  in  the  assets  of  the  group,  you  are  changing  tracks  to  try  to  serve  vastly  different  population  groups?    I  run  a  research  program  that  receives  the  highest  dollars  of  public  support  in  its  field.  Many  other  projects  try  to  make  impact  through  too  many  deliverables  to  too-­‐diluted  a  population  group,  in  the  hopes  that  the  project  will  group  faster  by  throwing  a  wider  net.  It  doesn't  work  that  way  -­‐  these  folks  don't  get  funding.  The  only  times  we  have  received  'scale-­‐up'  and  'expansion'  funding  is  when  we  have  capitalized  on  every  aspect  of  research  and  educational  impact  to  the  population  to  which  we  began  working  with,  in  a  variety  of  ways,  and  helped  create  a  self-­‐sustaining,  self-­‐growing  foundation  in  that  population  group.  At  that  point,  corporate  and  government  funding  allows  us  to  extend  the  impact  work  to  different  population  groups.    From  my  professional  experience,  AYCO  has  not  nearly  exhausted  or  even  approached  middling  impact  on  the  current  population  of  parents  and  their  children  who  are  1.  already  heavily  involved  in  circus,  2.  dabbling  in  circus,  3.  creating  the  demand  and  market  to  start  circus,  and  4.  creating  a  Community  of  Practice  to  support  the  continuum.    The  other  piece  here  is  that  you  can  talk  to  the  best  circus  coaches  and  they  will  tell  you  that  serious  training  in  circus  to  get  to  a  world  class  level  has  to  begin  in  childhood.  The  same  will  be  the  case  in  other  sports/arts  worlds.  So  long  term  growth  for  the  industry  is  dependent  on  early  introduction  of  and  more  available  access  to  circus  as  children.    To  have  a  strong  and  viable  circus  industry  in  the  USA  and  beyond,  the  unique  and  special  world  of  childhood  and  youth  circus  must  remain  a  focus  of  

the  industry.  Also,  for  the  Social  Circus  discipline,  the  earlier  a  child  is  exposed  to  structure,  challenge,  diversity,  community,  the  more  likely  they  will  adopt  these  positive  aspects  into  their  character.    And  as  a  parent,  even  though  my  boys  were  already  in  the  professional  circus  world  when  AYCO  was  gaining  some  ground,  I  would  have  really  valued  having  the  parent  and  professional  community  that  is  in  the  infancy  of  developing.    I  do  not  disagree  that  a  national  American  circus  organization  should  exist.    But  taking  something  that  is  working,  that  is  niche,  that  has  so  much  more  to  grow  and  impact,  and  taking  that  away  and  diluting  the  efforts  to  grow  the  industry  from  the  ground  up  -­‐  children  -­‐  makes  no  sense  to  me.    JOE  REICHLIN:  Youth  circus  in  the  US  is  an  entirely  different  proposition  than  adult  training.  I  just  finished  a  2-­‐week  camp  with  mostly  elementary-­‐aged  beginners,  probably  none  of  whom  will  go  on  to  circus  careers,  but  *all*  of  whom  left  the  camp  with  a  positive  experience  of  Circus  and  the  circus  arts  (including  a  brief  discussion  about  performing  animals,  which  I  did  not  initiate,  but  I  did  enjoy).    This  is  absolutely  as  important  a  constituency  as  those  who  will  eventually  be  on  the  circus  "travel  teams",  and  needs  an  organization  that  is  exclusively  focused  on  the  challenges  and  opportunities  of  working  with  children.  I  joined  AYCO  in  order  to  learn  and  grow  as  a  teacher  and  mentor  of  all  the  kids  who  could  love  Circus  with  the  right  experience  -­‐  NOT  to  train  future  circus  artists  as  they  age  up,  much  as  I  love  to  see  that  happen.  But  the  rest  of  these  kids  will  grow  up  to  be  the  supporters  of  the  circus  arts  in  this  country!              

Page 8: AYCO%Board%position%andpremise:% THE%NITTY%GRITTY:% … · 2020. 12. 17. · ! 2! OPENING%REMARKS:%! Kevin%Maile%O’Keefe%(Founder%of%AYCO,%past%AYCO% BoardPresident,%Founder/Director,%CircusMinimus,%OneM

  8  

MATTHEW  ‘PHINEAS’  LISH  (AYCO  Twitter  Correspondent,  Former  Hup  Squad  member,  White  Tops  writer,  former  Ringling  Bros.  Clown):    I  don't  believe  that  the  circus  umbrella  represents  a  universal  standard  that  practitioners  can  rely  upon.  I  have  met  circus  professionals  who  believed  PETA  propaganda,  and  I  have  met  people  who  don't  consider  Cirque  to  be  circus.  Instead  of  trying  to  create  one  giant  umbrella  that  satisfies  everyone's  definition  of  "circus"  and  what  should(n't)  be  included,  it  would  probably  be  much  more  effective  and  efficient  to  decide  what  we  want  AYCO's  umbrella  to  be,  and  create  a  support  system  for  those  ideals.    Identifying  circus  as  an  art  form  is  really  just  a  PR  thing.  The  recent  Smithsonian  celebration  is  a  good  indication  that  people  will  accept  circus  as  art,  now  it's  just  time  to  push  the  message.  Press  releases,  websites,  and  promotional  materials  for  shows  should  include  the  word  "art,"  in  addition  to  being  used  in  conversation  between  professionals.    Removing  the  word  "youth"  from  AYCO  is  just  a  bad  idea.  We  are  an  organization  built  upon  circus  arts  in  YOUTH.  We  do  encompass  other  aspects  of  circus,  but  those  are  all  just  smaller  branches  off  the  youth  tree.  Removing  youth  waters  down  the  organization  and  weakens  the  correlation  between  the  mission  and  the  identifier.      I've  always  had  mixed  feelings  about  circus  as  a  degree  in  higher  education,  probably  because  I  don't  know  people  who  have  such  degrees.  It  has  not  been  made  clear  to  me  the  benefits  someone  with  a  degree  in  circus  would  have  in  terms  of  getting  hired  for  gigs  over  someone  who  didn't.  My  circus  and  performing  friends  are  pretty  much  split  down  the  middle  between  those  that  have  degrees  in  drama  or  dance,  and  those  that  have  degrees  in  completely  unrelated  fields.  I'm  extremely  ignorant  of  the  situation  (and  would  LOVE  for  someone  to  educate  me  on  the  topic),  but  I  don't  know  if  the  demand  for  having  a  BA  in  circus  is  there  yet.    I  am  all  in  favor  of  emphasizing  the  importance  of  circus  history.  With  my  time  on  Ringling,  I  have  

discovered  for  many  Americans  that  the  American  circus  was  defined  by  Ringling,  and  with  its  closure  I  get  asked  all  the  time  about  the  circus  being  dead  in  America.  A  push  explaining  that  American  circus  is  bigger  than  Ringling  and  is  still  alive  and  well,  in  addition  to  the  role  that  the  circus  has  played  in  the  history  of  this  country,  is  nothing  but  a  positive.    An  increase  in  scholarly  articles  will  be  a  result  of  all  of  the  other  initiatives.  You  need  changes  and  effects  to  report  before  you  write  an  article.      JEAN  ST.  JOHN  (Co-­‐Founder,  My  Nose  Turns  Red;  grant  manager,  Kentucky  Arts  Council):    I  strongly  oppose  the  change  and,  as  a  paying  member  of  a  support  organization,  I  expect  the  name  and  the  mission  to  stay  the  same.      I  have  no  problem  with  extending  the  age  range  and  supporting  emerging  circus  forms.      From  my  point  of  view,  having  a  youth  development  organization  that  promotes  circus  arts  is  significant.  It  gives  the  youth  circus  sector  clout.  None  of  the  proposed  changes  will  replace  the  significance  and  clout  that  the  American  Youth  Circus  Organization  gives  to  the  field.      [The  Editors  of  this  document  decided  to  put  in  David  Hunt’s  and  Jessica  Hentoff’s  emails  and  AYCO  responses  to  their  points  because  their  points  seemed  to  echo  many  people’s  feelings.  The  responses  in  red  are  from  Carlo  Pellegrini,  AYCO  Board  member  designated  to  answer  emails  to  ‘planning’]    DAVID  HUNT  (Executive/Artistic  Director,  Prescott  Youth  Circus;  former  AYCO  Board  President):    Dear  "[email protected]"      I've  shared  my  thoughts  and  feelings  about  AYCO's  proposed  changes  with  both  Amy,  Zoe,  and  briefly  with  Jen  Agan.    And  I  know  Zoe  clearly  heard  the  nearly  unanimous  discomfort  and  disagreement  

Page 9: AYCO%Board%position%andpremise:% THE%NITTY%GRITTY:% … · 2020. 12. 17. · ! 2! OPENING%REMARKS:%! Kevin%Maile%O’Keefe%(Founder%of%AYCO,%past%AYCO% BoardPresident,%Founder/Director,%CircusMinimus,%OneM

  9  

with  theses  changes  from  the  members  of  the  Social  Circus  Network  at  the  last  call.      But  it's  my  understanding  that  the  lack  of  emails  received  to  this  particular  email  address  is  viewed  as  an  overall  acceptance  of  these  changes  from  the  AYCO  community.      David,  emails  have  been  coming  into  this  Inbox.  I  am  designated  to  answer  them  as  best  I  can.  I  usually  look  at  'planning'  after  camp  and  before  teaching  at  night.  The  Board  is  in  no  way  considering  the  volume  of  emails  to  this  Inbox  to  be  indicative  of  a  percentage  of  members  supporting  or  not  supporting  the  issues  in  discussion.    So,  I  am  sending  this  to  ensure  the  inbox  is  getting  some  action.    Without  a  lot  of  time,  I'm  laying  my  thoughts  out  in  a  disjointed  and  perhaps  conceptually  repetitive  email.        First  I  want  to  stress  that  I  think  the  Board,  Amy,  the  social  media  managers  have  a  responsibility  to  use  your  Facebook  page(s)  to  more  fully  share  what's  on  the  table,  what's  at  stake,  AND  formally  invite  dialog,  thoughts,  feelings,  etc.  And  to  announce  the  meeting  at  the  festival.    Email  is  phasing  out  for  a  lot  of  people.  Fewer  and  fewer  people  read  emails  and  we  all  get  so  many  e  newsletters  that  we  tend  to  gloss  over  the  information  that  lies  within.      I  think  (I  honestly  think)  we  have  been  doing  a  good  job  of  sending  out  emails  and  posting  to  Fb  requesting  comments:  supportive,  non-­‐supportive,  et  al.  We  are  having  a  lot  of  dialogue  with  members  and  non-­‐members  who  have  opinions  based  on  different  input  from  different  sources.  Some  of  our  time  is  being  spent  re-­‐framing  the  misinformation,  and  restating  intentions.  The  rest  of  our  time  is  spent  listening  and  attempting  to  make  this  an  open  and  respectful  dialogue.    Here  are  a  few  of  my  feelings  and  thoughts:      -­‐  using  a  youth  centered  organization's  membership  funds  and  revenue  to  do  anything  but  

serve  youth  and  youth  serving  organizations  is  unethical.    I  realize  ACE  has  been  created  and  I  pay  dues  into  that  with  an  understanding  of  its  purpose.  But  I  am  not  a  paying  member  of  Circus  Now  nor  do  I  want  my  money  going  to  Circus  Now  nor  do  I  want  my  money  supporting  time  and  energy  planning  to  merge  with  Circus  Now.  That's  not  what  I  personally  signed  up  for  nor  why  I  choose  to  have  Prescott  Circus  Theatre  as  an  organizational  member.      David,  I  will  restate  here  for  you,  as  I  have  for  others,  that  in  no  way  are  your  dues  or  the  dues  of  any  AYCO/ACE  participant  being  used  to  do  anything  other  than  operate  AYCO/ACE.  Your  money  in  no  way  supports  time  and  energy  on  this  process  of  possible  merger  with  Circus  Now  or  the  exploration  of  a  different  way  to  support  youth  circus.  As  you  well  know,  every  Board  member  volunteers  their  time  to  AYCO/ACE.  All  discussions  for  this  process  of  discernment  have  been,  and  continue  to  be,  SEPARATE  from  AYCO/ACE  business.    That  being  said,  AYCO/ACE  Board  members  have  a  fiduciary  responsibility  to  explore  whether  this  idea  makes  sense.  We  are  charged  with  doing  everything  we  can  in  the  best  interests  of  AYCO/ACE  to  keep  it  healthy  and  fulfill  its  mission  and  expand  its  ability  to  do  this  in  a  healthy  way.  In  this  particular  case,  the  AYCO/ACE  Board  recognized  an  area  to  explore  that  we  deemed  important  and  we  followed  the  path  toward  this  with  everyone's  best  interests  at  the  heart  of  this  exploration.  Your  money  was  not  used  to  do  this.      -­‐  How  many  hours  have  already  been  used  to  develop  this  plan  that  could  have  been  used  to:  raise  money  for  more  scholarships  and  subsidize  youth  to  participate  in  this  summer's  festival?    Create  marketing  materials  and  national  publicity  efforts  to  bring  more  attention  /  highlight  the  achievements  of  youth  circus  programs  in  their  towns,  regions,  state?  Time  is  money  and  I  know  you  all  know  this.    you  all  put  a  LOT  of  time  and  vision  into  this.  It  feels  like  you  put  a  concept  of  "circus"  at  the  center  of  all  of  this.  I  can't  even  fathom  what  could  have  been  achieved  if  youth  

Page 10: AYCO%Board%position%andpremise:% THE%NITTY%GRITTY:% … · 2020. 12. 17. · ! 2! OPENING%REMARKS:%! Kevin%Maile%O’Keefe%(Founder%of%AYCO,%past%AYCO% BoardPresident,%Founder/Director,%CircusMinimus,%OneM

  10  

and  youth  programs  were  placed  at  the  center  of  the  planning.      Thank  you  for  your  opinion,  David.  We  have  actually  spent  more  time  responding  to  everyone  during  this  'paused'  time,  on  this  email  string,  on  phone  calls  to  make  sure  everyone  is  heard  and  on  follow-­‐up  board  conference  calls,  than  we  put  into  exploring  this  idea.  It  wasn't  hard  to  do.  It  all  started  making  sense  when  we  realized  we  could  raise  some  serious  money  for  this  idea  from  serious  donors.  To  allay  your  fears,  we  have  spent  the  rest  of  our  usually  allocated  time  this  board  spends  fundraising  for  scholarships  and  publicity  for  the  good  of  youth  and  educators  everywhere.    -­‐  The  vision  of  the  new  plan  appears  to  be  based  on  some  kind  of  "trickle  down"  theory  -­‐  that  trying  to  reshape  the  public  image  of  circus  (however  or  why-­‐ever  one  can  or  will  do  that  outside  of  just  creating  good,  quality  circus)  and  promoting  and  supporting  professional  training  programs  will,  in  fact,  "promote  the  participation  of  youth  in  circus."  leaves  a  lot  of  pieces  out  of  the  puzzle.      Please  expand:  what  pieces  of  the  puzzle  do  you  feel  are  left  out?    -­‐  The  attitude  of  the  board  "Now,  we  need  to  scale  up  in  order  to  meet  the  needs  of  the  whole  circus  sector,  with  the  addition  of  artists,  circus  companies,  venues,  adults  who  participate  in  circus  arts,  and  a  myriad  of  other  stakeholders"  is  one  in  which  I  strongly  disagree.  I  don't  believe  it  is  the  job  of  the  American  Youth  Circus  Organization  nor  the  American  Circus  Educators  Assoc.  to  "meet  the  needs  of  the  whole  circus  sector."  Circus  is  amorphous.  It  will  grow  and  shape  on  it's  own  just  fine  without  much  intervention  and  guidance.  Youth-­‐centric  associations  and  organizations  are  critical  right  now  as  we  see  continued  cuts  to  education  on  a  local  and  national  level,  there  is  an  expansion  of  DIY  circus  programs  that  do  engage  in  unsafe  practices  with  young  learners,  and  there  are  more  youth  circus  programs  /  opportunities  in  the  US  than  ever  before  -­‐  for  this  reason  there  should  remain  an  organization  exclusively  dedicated  to  supporting  coaches  and  organizations  working  with  

young  people.  I'm  not  talking  about  circus  educators  /  coaches.  I'm  talking  the  field  of  working  with  youth.  It  is  not  the  same  thing.  They  simply  do  not  have  the  same  needs,  issues,  and  challenges.    This  is  an  opinion  some  share  with  you,  and  some  do  not.    Some  other  thoughts.    When  I  read  the  following  in  American  Youth  Circus  Organization  /  American  Circus  Educators  Strategic  Update  for  our  Community  June  2017:      “Issues  of  access  and  equity  aside,  I  believe  that  seeing  professional  circus  (live  or  recorded)  is  key  to  promoting  the  participation  of  youth  in  circus  arts  -­‐  whether  or  not  youth  want  to  become  performers  when  they  grow  up..."    I  got  very  nervous.  I  cannot  put  access  and  equity  aside  when  we  talk  about  "promoting  the  participation  of  youth  in  circus."      The  writer  intended  this  to  be  a  positional,  not  a  political  statement.  This  statement  is  not  intended  to  say  'issues  of  access  and  equity'  are  not  important.  They  are  relative  issues  in  segments  of  our  industry,  singly  and  together,  across  various  demographics  and  geographic  regions.  Thus,  instead  of  delving  into  the  psychographics  of  that  particular  issue,  the  writer  chose  to  focus  on  the  concept  that  a  youth  can  be  in  circus  for  their  whole  lives  and  not  have  to  turn  professional.    And  "I’m  left  with  the  question  of  what  is  more  true  to  our  mission-­‐  a  smaller  organization  that  serves  only  youth  and  educators  but  really  doesn’t  have  the  strength  or  capacity  to  grow  as  the  sector  grows  around  us,  or  a  more  comprehensive  organization  that  serves  multiple  demographics,  and  can  provide  more  services  to  promote  youth  participation  in  circus  arts.”    1)  there  is  absolutely  nothing  wrong  with  a  small  organization  that  focuses  on  youth  and  educators.  Yes,  that  is  the  mission  of  AYCO.  It  always  has  been.  

Page 11: AYCO%Board%position%andpremise:% THE%NITTY%GRITTY:% … · 2020. 12. 17. · ! 2! OPENING%REMARKS:%! Kevin%Maile%O’Keefe%(Founder%of%AYCO,%past%AYCO% BoardPresident,%Founder/Director,%CircusMinimus,%OneM

  11  

2)  There  is  nothing  to  stop  an  organization  that  serves  youth  and  educators  from  growing  "as  the  sector  grows"  while  still  keeping  youth  at  the  center.  There  are  hundreds  of  large  youth-­‐focused  organizations  that  represent  the  educational  side  of  a  larger  disciplinary  landscape.      I  have  to  ask:  who  are  the  hundreds  of  large  youth-­‐focused  organizations  you  refer  to?  Are  you  referring  to  the  youth  circus  sector?  I  don't  know  how  that  is  possible.  If  you  are  referring  to  organizations  outside  of  the  youth  circus  sector,  I  would  be  interested  to  know  more  of  your  thoughts  around  this  comment.  There  may  be  a  nugget  here  we  can  plumb  to  examine  their  model  of  growth.  We  used  several  organizational  models  to  make  our  explorations.  Others  would  be  good  to  know  about.    And  YES,  exactly!  There  is  nothing  to  stop  an  organization  that  serves  youth  and  educators  from  growing  as  the  sector  grows...AND  keeping  youth  at  the  center.  That  is  what  the  Board  is  trying  to  say,  but  you  said  it  best.      If  the  current  board  of  directors  and  operations  team  is  passionate  about  the  future  of  "circus  now"  and  the  new  PR  circus  movement,  growing  professional  programs  and  promoting  theaters  to  book  new  circus  companies,  etc.    -­‐  then  it  may  be  time  that  they  do  move  to  do  this  work.  It  is  exciting  and  relevant.    Maybe  that's  where  their  personal  sensibilities  are  going.    But  don't  cast  aside  youth  purposefulness  because  there's  an  exciting  tide  happening  in  the  circus  world.  AYCO's  work  for  youth  and  youth  serving  organizations,  its  possibilities  to  grow  within  this  arena  are  FAR  from  over.      Thank  you,  David.  This  is  a  thought  that  has  crossed  the  mind  of  this  Board  many  times...and  has  been  a  recurring  theme  in  other  responses  to  this  email  address.  Generally  speaking  (very  generally  speaking),  responses  to  this  email  address  are  a  bit  split:  leave  AYCO  alone  but  do  form  a  national  organization  that  includes  youth,  educators  and  performance  and  advocacy.  It's  quite  interesting.      

'Casting  aside  youth'  is  not  what  we  are  attempting  to  do.  Enhancing  youth  programs,  increasing  capacity  to  increase  youth  participation,  increasing  youth  funding  and  scholarships  which  will  come  from  capacity-­‐building,  is  exactly  what  we  are  attempting  to  explain  that  an  organization  can  do  that  grows  all  sectors.  It's  like  a  Venn  diagram.  All  the  overlapping  areas  support  all  the  other  areas  and  everyone  gets  stronger  for  it.    You  feel  that  the  possibilities  to  grow  within  the  youth  sector  are  FAR  from  over.  The  Board  feels  the  same  way.      I've  stated  the  same  things  in  multiple  ways  above.    I  ask  that  the  Board  and  operations  team  reconsiders  and,  instead,  recommits  the  organization  to  supporting  organizations  and  coaches  working  with  youth  in  circus  arts  training,  education,  and  performance.  And  promoting  the  participation  of  youth  in  circus  arts.    The  Board  is  considering  all  opinions,  concerns,  thoughts,  new  thoughts,  and  old  thoughts.  We  are  looking  forward  to  the  Festival  where  we  will  all  be  together  to  have  face-­‐to-­‐face  discussions.  We  are  committed  to  listening  to  all  thoughts,  all  feelings,  all  beliefs.      Thank  you  for  your  time.    With  Gratitude,    David  Hunt  Executive  /  Artistic  Director  Prescott  Circus  Theatre    David,  it  is  with  great  gratitude  and  respect  from  me/us,  as  well,  to  you  for  your  service,  your  respect,  your  good  thinking.              

Page 12: AYCO%Board%position%andpremise:% THE%NITTY%GRITTY:% … · 2020. 12. 17. · ! 2! OPENING%REMARKS:%! Kevin%Maile%O’Keefe%(Founder%of%AYCO,%past%AYCO% BoardPresident,%Founder/Director,%CircusMinimus,%OneM

  12  

JESSICA  HENTOFF  (Artistic/Executive  Director  and  Founder,  Circus  Harmony;  circus  performer;  former  Board  member  AYCO):    I  AM  COMPLETELY  OPPOSED  TO  THIS  IDEA.  I  believe  it  is  important  and  impactful  to  have  a  totally  youth-­‐centric  circus  organization!  I  think  it  beyond  best  to  have  a  separate  organization  that  focuses  on  those  other  aspects  of  circus  arts  in  this  country  and  then  the  two  organizations  can  powerfully  partner  to  promote  circus  arts  in  America.  …..  Everything  you  are  doing  makes  me  feel  that  you  are  totally  determined  to  push  through  what  you  have  already  decided  and  are  not  willing  to  give  anyone  else  a  chance  to  communicate  with  other  AYCO  members.  Any  strategic  planning  should  have  included  talking  to  numerous  stakeholders  around  the  country  and  very  obviously  did  not.  It  may  be  that  people  agree  with  your  vision.  I  live  in  a  country  where  Trump  is  President  even  though  I  did  not  vote  for  him.  But  you  have  not  been  forthright  in  any  aspect  of  this  proposed  merger  since  you  first  sent  out  a  letter  to  a  few  people  asking  they  not  talk  about  it.  If  you  have  faith  in  your  vision,  you  should  allow  for  free,  fair  discussion  that  presents  all  sides.  I  am  asking  you  to  allow  that  web  page  and  anything  you  send  out  or  post  to  include  other  people’s  points  of  view.  To  change  the  entire  scope  and  mission  of  an  organization  should  not  be  done  by  a  handful  of  people  who  do  not  truly  represent  all  stakeholders.      …….    My  opinion:  Bad  decision.  Bad  process.      The  'bad  decision'  you  mention  is  a  subjective  matter.  It  seems  like  a  bad  decision  to  you  and  others  who  share  your  viewpoint.  It  doesn't  seem  like  a  bad  decision  to  others  who  support  the  move.    We  will  have  a  forum  for  discussion  at  the  Festival  in  NJ  and  see  how  it  all  shakes  out.    On  top  of  that,  when  I  send  in  dues  from  my  organization  to  AYCO-­‐  which  I  just  had  to  do  to  register  for  the  festival-­‐  I  expect  the  money  to  go  to  

youth  circus  and  you  have  already  said  that,  for  at  least  a  year,  it  will  go  to  helping  to  cover  running  Circus  Now-­‐  which  I  am  totally  against.  Kind  of  feels  like  my  government  and  my  taxes  and  like  Trump's  inner  circle.  Please  register  me  as  angry,  upset  and  feeling  unrepresented.      Regarding  where  you  expect  your  money  to  go  to  when  you  pay  your  dues:      -­‐  When  you  pay  your  dues  to  AYCO/ACE,  those  monies  go  to  operating  the  organizations  (plural)  that  serve  youth  AND  educators:  AYCO  and  ACE.  The  educators  served  by  ACE  are  not,  as  far  as  I  can  tell,  designated  as  'youth'.  Of  course,  if  you  want  to  get  into  how  one  defines  the  word  'youth'  by  age,  we  can  do  that.  There  is  the  government's  definition,  the  military's  definition  (which  more  concerns  who  is  an  'adult'),  the  social  services  definition  and  the  United  Nations  definition...all  different.  Let's  agree  to  something:  your  dues  are  used  to  operate  both  organizations  called  AYCO  &  ACE  and  your  monies  are  used  to  support  youth  in  general.    -­‐  The  specific  monies  (i.e.,  your  dues)  that  may  go  to  programs  operated  by  Circus  Now  are  negligible.  I  was  going  to  use  the  word  'minimal',  but  that  could  mean  anything  comparatively.  'Negligible'  means  almost  nothing...and  that  is  exactly  what  I  mean.  I  trust  that  gives  you  some  comfort.    -­‐  Since  you  did  sit  on  this  Board  at  one  point,  you  had,  as  each  of  us  on  the  Board  currently  have,  fiduciary  responsibility  for  the  financial  health  and  well-­‐being  of  the  organizations  we  represent.  You  saw  our  budgets  and  saw  how  the  dues  monies  were  collected  and  allocated.  Pretty  much  nothing  has  changed  since  then...except  for  the  fact  that  we  are  serving  our  members  and  this  industry  twice  as  well  on  a  similar  amount  of  dues.  We  expanded  the  Hup  Squad,  we  have  more  volunteers  working  for  and  with  us  and  we  continue  to  expand  offerings  to  the  vital  sectors  of  our  industry:  youth,  educators  and  youth  who  have  'aged  out'  of  being  circus  youth  who  now  perform  and  young  adults  who  perform  or  simply  take  classes  in  the  circus  arts.  

Page 13: AYCO%Board%position%andpremise:% THE%NITTY%GRITTY:% … · 2020. 12. 17. · ! 2! OPENING%REMARKS:%! Kevin%Maile%O’Keefe%(Founder%of%AYCO,%past%AYCO% BoardPresident,%Founder/Director,%CircusMinimus,%OneM

  13  

 The  point  I  would  like  you  to  consider  is  this:  our  industry  is  growing,  and  not  necessarily  only  at  the  'entry  level'  of  youth.  These  days,  people  (meaning  anyone  at  any  age)  interested  in  'circus  arts'  enter  our  'circus  arts  ring'  from  all  different  points  in  their  life,  interests  and  career.      PS  I  don't  know  what  you  are  going  to  name  the  new  organization  but  American  Circus  anything  seems  like  a  misnomer  to  me!    Regarding  your  PS...I  don't  understand  your  point.  We  currently  have  the  words  American  and  Circus  in  our  AYCO  name,  and  American  and  Circus  in  our  ACE  name.  Would  you  care  to  elaborate?    -­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐  Dear  All,  I  have  been  involved  in  Circus  Arts  for  over  43  years.  Being  at  the  Smithsonian  Folklife  Festival  was  like  being  at  a  Family  Reunion  for  me.  I  pretty  much  knew  or  had  worked  with  everyone  there!  Pedro  and  I  had  performed  our  aerial  acts  on  the  same  show  and  had  rigged  in  a  horrible  ceiling  together.  Joe  Bauer,  on  the  wheel  of  death,  had  announced  Hentoff  and  Hoyer  in  the  80s.  I  had  stood  on  Sacha  Pavlata’s  back  on  giraffe  unicycles  and  on  horses  and  the  list  goes  on.  The  head  of  the  World  Circus  Federation  is  a  friend  of  mine.  Gypsy  Snider  and  I  go  back  25  years.  The  Wallendas  and  I  go  back  even  further.  I  think  I  was  actually  one  of  the  few  in  attendance  at  both  the  Folklife  Festival  and  the  NEA  who  had  a  personal  relationship  with  so  any  of  the  participants.  Part  of  all  that  is  just  because  I’m  61  and  have  been  in  many  aspects  of  this  industry  for  so  long.      I  AGREE  WITH  YOU,  there  is  a  need  for  a  national  circus  organization  that  includes  everyone  as  Michael  Orlove  noted  in  his  report  on  the  Town  Hall  (https://www.arts.gov/article/celebrating-­‐art-­‐circus*).      It  needs  to  include  representatives  from  all  aspects  of  circus  in  America,  including  groups  like  circus  historians  (who  I  also  have  known  for  years)  and  

Circus  Fans  (I  just  spoke  at  their  national  convention).      ALL  I’m  saying  is  that  it  should  be  a  separate  organization  and  AYCO  should  stand  on  its  own.  I  believe  there  are  more  than  enough  passionate,  dedicated  smart  people  to  develop  a  new  organization  and  ALSO  keep  AYCO/ACE  growing.  I  believe  you  can  achieve  all  the  goals  stated  in  your  vision  BETTER  if  you  are  separate  but  working  together.      If  there  were  a  National  Circus  Organization,  I  would  not  only  support  it,  I  would  be  a  great  asset  to  it  because  I  already  have  connections  to  so  many  people  in  so  many  areas  of  the  circus  world  in  America  and  beyond.  Do  this.  Create  this  organization.  I  will  help  you  win  over  the  people  in  the  circus  community  who  do  not  know  you  and  are  offended  (at  best)  that  you  want  to  do  this  (if  you  were  not  aware  of  this,  you  should  be).    Ask  my  kids,  biological  and  otherwise,  my  main  loves  are  circus,  coffee  and  my  kids  (again,  biological  and  otherwise).  I  served  as  a  judge  at  the  International  Circus  Festival  of  Monte  Carlo.      I  want  circus  to  be  as  respected  here  as  an  art  form  as  it  is  there.    I’ve  dedicated  my  life  to  performing  and  now  teaching  circus  arts.      Do  this.  Start  a  NEW  organization.  Let  AYCO  represent  circus  in  youth.  Let  this  new  organization  represent  your  grand  vision.      I  would  rather  work  with  you  than  against  you.      For  Circus,  Jessica    Thank  you,  Jessica,  for  your  email,  your  dedication  to  circus  arts  as  we  know  and  love  it  today.    You  have  made  so  many  major  contributions  to  this  art  form,  to  this  life-­‐form,  that  it  is  hard  to  separate  the  two  from  you.  You  inspire,  inform,  educate  and  then  inspire  all  over  again.  You  work  harder  than  10  people  I  know.  Your  love  of  coffee  is  legend,  as  is  your  love  of  teaching  circus  arts/life  arts  to  

Page 14: AYCO%Board%position%andpremise:% THE%NITTY%GRITTY:% … · 2020. 12. 17. · ! 2! OPENING%REMARKS:%! Kevin%Maile%O’Keefe%(Founder%of%AYCO,%past%AYCO% BoardPresident,%Founder/Director,%CircusMinimus,%OneM

  14  

children  and  teens.  You  know  people,  who  know  people,  who  know  people.  Thank  you  for  all  that.    Each  of  the  directors  of  many  circus  arts  organizations,  both  large  and  small,  have  a  story  about  a  life  being  saved  because  of  this  art  form  we  all  love  and  serve.  I  can  tell  you  about  five  kids  that  I  have  personally  saved  in  30  years  that  acknowledged  this  to  funders  of  AGC.  David  can  tell  you  his  stories,  Kate  can,  Leah  can,  Zoe,  Amy,  Ed...heck,  all  of  us  are  in  the  business  to  save  lives.  We,  the  Board,  are  not  trying  to  take  that  away.      If  all  this  discernment,  deliberation,  consternation,  insight,  inspiration  leads  to  a  wholly  different  and  separate  national  organization  that  focuses  on  circus  in  all  its  permutations  and  forms,  then  all  this  back  and  forth  has  contributed  to  the  greater  good  of  circus  arts  for  everyone.  None  of  us  know  what  the  outcome  of  this  discernment  will  be...not  yet...that  is  to  come.    What  I  would  like  is  your  vast  source  of  energy  to  be  directed  to  facilitating  solutions.  In  this  last  bastion  of  democracy  (the  idea  and  concept  of  a  Board  of  Directors  who  are  charged  with  the  responsibility  of  running  an  organization  that  has  no  voting  members),  this  Board  is  charged  with  the  fiduciary  responsibility  of  exploring  all  options  for  its  constituency  to  make  life  better  for  everyone.      We  can  hold  a  vote  of  10  people  (who  actually  do  represent  the  world  of  AYCO  very  well),  and  these  10  people  can  absolutely  without  question  (according  to  the  current  by-­‐laws  of  AYCO)  make  decisions  for  this  organization  without  consulting  its  constituency  based  on  how  we  represent  the  constituency.  You  should  know  that  as  a  former  Board  member  of  AYCO.  You  lived  and  ruled  by  these  same  by-­‐laws.  You  want  to  change  the  by-­‐laws?  Be  a  Board  member  again.  Or  suggest  to  the  current  Board  that  they  should  consider  changing  the  by-­‐laws.  And  then  suggest  some  changes.    This  Board  is  listening;  the  Board  is  doing  everything  it  can  to  make  this  a  worthwhile  discernment  process  that  will  yield  a  welcomed  

and  satisfying  outcome  for  the  majority  of  the  constituency  of  AYCO,  ACE  and  CN.      No  decision  will  be  made  before  the  Festival  on  any  subject  or  topic.  We  are  too  far  down  this  path  of  gathering  constituent  opinions  and  best-­‐thinking...which  is  actually  the  path  we  were  on  prior  to  June.  I  personally  believe  this  upset  with  a  new  path  has  been  the  best  thing  that  has  happened  to  AYCO  in  a  very  long  time.  People  are  awake  and  thinking  seriously  about  where  we  are  right  now,  right  now,  in  this  world  we  all  know  and  love.  Did  the  Board  approach  this  concept  that  absolute  best  way  it  could  have?  Nope.  And  we  have  admitted  that,  and  here  we  are.    Again:  you  disagree  with  our  approach.  That  is  your  right.  We  are  now  into  the  discernment  of  best-­‐thinking  process.  You  have  a  problem  with  our  idea?  Come  to  the  Festival  with  a  solution.  A  National  Circus  Organization?  Great.  Flesh  it  out,  think  it  through,  come  up  with  a  model  for  it.  Bring  it  to  the  small  meetings  we  are  setting  up.  Present  it  at  the  Large  Meeting.  Find  some  money  for  it.  Give  us  all  an  insight  and  a  blueprint  for  it.  We  are  all  ears.    Respectfully,  Carlo    -------------------------------------------- In  response  to  your  detailed  and  well-­thought  out  letter.  I  still  keep  coming  back  to  this: “Our  primary  purpose  is  to  promote  the  participation  of  youth  in  circus  and  support  circus  educators.”  I  am  continually  floored  that  you  think  it  is  OK  to  totally  change  this.    We  are  not  changing  it.   You  say  you  have  total  legal  rights  do  to  do  so  but  that  does  not  mean  it  is  right  to  do  so. I  trusted  the  AYCO  board  to  represent  the  interests  of  YOUTH.

Page 15: AYCO%Board%position%andpremise:% THE%NITTY%GRITTY:% … · 2020. 12. 17. · ! 2! OPENING%REMARKS:%! Kevin%Maile%O’Keefe%(Founder%of%AYCO,%past%AYCO% BoardPresident,%Founder/Director,%CircusMinimus,%OneM

  15  

You  say  you  just  ‘skipped  a  step’.  It  is  much  larger  than  that,  in  my  opinion. Note:  Your  board  does  [not]  represent  a  diverse  cross-­section  of  the  youth  circus  community.  I  am  surprised  you  think  so.  …… Jessica      If  I  may  respond  to  just  Jessica's  email:    -­‐  the  BOARD  proposal  in  its  current  form  continues  to  support  the  participation  of  youth  and  support  circus  educators.  Actually,  it  will  enhance  the  participation  of  youth  in  circus.  That  is  how  it  reads.  That  is  the  intent.      -­‐  the  AYCO  Board  represents  the  interests  of  all  youth:  always  has,  always  will.  It  is  your  opinion,  Jessica,  that  we  have  deviated  from  this  focus.  May  I  suggest  you  re-­‐read  the  documents  Jesse  attached  and  the  Strategic  and  Vision  documents  we  have  supplied.    -­‐  Jessica,  ….If  you  meant  to  say  that  our  Board  DOES  NOT  represent  the  youth  circus  community,  please  explain  to  me  how  our  Board  DOES  NOT  represent  a  cross-­‐section  of  our  youth  circus  community.  I  look  around  our  Board  table  and  I  see  two  social  circus  representatives,  four  circus  school  representatives,  one  of  the  three  largest  youth  circuses  in  the  country  represented  at  the  table,  one  of  the  smallest  youth  circuses  in  the  country  represented  at  the  table,  a  youth  advisory  committee,  and  one  performer.  What  am  I  missing?    ……  Carlo        

Page 16: AYCO%Board%position%andpremise:% THE%NITTY%GRITTY:% … · 2020. 12. 17. · ! 2! OPENING%REMARKS:%! Kevin%Maile%O’Keefe%(Founder%of%AYCO,%past%AYCO% BoardPresident,%Founder/Director,%CircusMinimus,%OneM

  16  

CONCERNS/QUESTIONS/MIXED  FEELINGS:    VICTORIA  QUINE:    I  would  just  like  to  start  out  by  saying  that  I  am  a  huge  supporter  of  AYCO  and  ACE.  I  think  it's  incredibly  important  that  we  have  a  national  circus  community  and  it  offers  the  closest  thing  to  a  cohesive  group  that  we  have.    I  recently  saw  the  plans  that  AYCO/ACE  might  expand  to  include  "emerging  artists,  professionals,  creatives,  technicians,  and  recreational  circus  students  of  all  ages?”  and  change  the  name  and  remove  the  youth-­‐centric  mission.  I'm  opposed  to  this  idea.    Frankly,  I  do  agree  that  we  could  use  an  organization  to  support  emerging  artists,  professionals,  creatives,  technicians,  and  rec  students  across  the  board,  but  I  don't  think  it  needs  to  be  AYCO  2.0.  AYCO  is  youth-­‐centric,  and  I  feel  that's  where  the  value  is.  Kids  have  a  community  of  peers  and  adults  who  actively  support  them,  and  that's  an  incredible  thing.    I  would  love  an  organization  that  is  focused  on  adults  or  the  broader  spectrum,  and  it  would  be  a  perfect  ally  for  AYCO.  Perhaps  it  becomes  a  larger  umbrella  organization,  under  which  AYCO  falls.  Perhaps  it  becomes  a  partner  organization  alongside  AYCO.  But  AYCO's  mission  is  important:  to  promote  the  participation  of  youth  in  circus  arts  and  support  circus  educators.  Please  don't  lose  sight  of  that.  By  getting  broader,  you'll  be  supporting  other  circus  communities,  but  it's  not  worth  dissolving  AYCO  and  its  mission.  Developing  a  new  partner  organization  alongside  AYCO  is  a  brilliant  idea;  it'll  smooth  the  transition  for  college  kids  into  the  broader  world,  support  professional  performing  youth  who  work  in  adult  professional  circles  as  well  as  youth  circles,  and  it'll  draw  a  hub  of  circus  people  who  can  refer  each  other  to  both  organizations.      But  I  believe  that  AYCO  should  stay  youth-­‐centric.  Among  other  things,  it'll  mean  we  can  continue  to  

offer  more  to  youth  without  them  getting  swept  under  the  rug.      ALTHEA  YOUNG:    I  love  AYCO,  they  are  family  and  I  think  they  always  genuinely  have  their  hearts  in  the  right  place...  but...  I  also  will  say  I  am  disappointed  that  the  focus  on  youth  is  being  redistributed.  Maybe  not  disappointed,  but  concerned.  I've  done  circus  for  15  years,  I  started  at  age  3,  by  age  11  I  was  internationally  recognized  and  performing  for  pay  in  high  level  troupes  and  shows.  I  can  say  from  personal  experience,  it  is  very  frustrating  being  a  high  level  performer  at  a  young  age.  Your  voice  is  cut  out  from  the  community,  your  art  is  taken  less  seriously,  and  your  skill  is  the  subject  of  a  lot  of  resentment  from  older  people.  AYCO  was  a  place  for  me  to  be  taken  seriously  and  have  my  voice  heard,  as  a  youth.  Organization  and  festival  wise,  AYCO  was  the  only  place  where  I  felt  didn't  have  to  hold  back.  I  could  throw  any  trick,  share  my  art  and  say  how  I  feel,  with  out  being  condescended  or  having  my  opinions  devalidated.    Does  American  circus  as  a  whole  need  improvement?  Yes.  But  I  think  that  more  and  more  these  days,  circus  is  shaped  by  what  we  teach  youth.  How  can  we  keep  young  people  in  circus  when  they  graduate?  How  do  we  educate  youth  performers  at  a  high  enough  level  that  they  do  not  need  to  go  out  of  country  for  school?  How  to  we  convince  high  school  student  to  get  degrees  that  support  the  circus  art  community  in  the  US?      There  is  nothing  wrong  with  change.  But  I  really  hope  that  the  voice  of  youth  will  continue  to  serve  a  role  in  this  organization.  We  need  a  festival  in  the  US  that  showcases  youth.  I  take  an  organization  seriously,  if  they  take  me  seriously.  Growing  the  mission  is  great,  but  don't  forget  about  us  AYCO.    I  love  you  all,  AYCO  has  changed  my  life  and  I  will  always  support  the  organization ©©©        

Page 17: AYCO%Board%position%andpremise:% THE%NITTY%GRITTY:% … · 2020. 12. 17. · ! 2! OPENING%REMARKS:%! Kevin%Maile%O’Keefe%(Founder%of%AYCO,%past%AYCO% BoardPresident,%Founder/Director,%CircusMinimus,%OneM

  17  

TIM  GAULT  (Clown,  Membership  Chair  of  CFA):    Recently,  the  proposed  expansion  of  mission  for  AYCO,  along  with  a  potential  merger  of  the  organization  with  Circus  Now  has  been  brought  to  my  attention.    As  someone  involved  with  the  larger  circus  community,  and  a  supporter  of  advancement  in  the  growth  of  circus  arts  in  American  culture,  especially,  my  initial  impression  was  that  this  could  be  a  very  good  thing.      However,  I  have  also  taken  note  of  the  sincere  reservations  expressed  about  this  endeavor  by  numerous  AYCO  members,  some  of  with  whom  I  am  personally  acquainted  and  highly  respect.      From  what  I  understand,  they  have  reservations  about  whether  such  an  expansion  of  mission  may  actually  undermine  the  necessary  support  system  to  youth  involved  with  circus  (and  the  organizations  which  foster  their  education)  that  AYCO  presently  provides.    I'm  not,  especially,  a  direct  stake  holder  here  (as  I'm  not  involved  with  any  AYCO  affiliated  organization),  though  I  do  engage  in  a  bit  of  informal  circus  arts  education  of  youth,  I  suppose,  just  in  gigging  as  a  performing  clown/juggler/family  entertainer.    However,  I  have  been  seriously  involved  with  other  circus  related  organizations  which  face  struggles  and  challenges  of  their  own,  especially  in  areas  of  growth,  mission,  resources,  and  future  direction.    I  often  enough  hear  similar  discussions  about  mergers  between  these  traditional,  long  standing,  circus  related  membership  groups,  such  as  Circus  Fans  Association  of  America;  Circus  Historical  Society;  Circus  Model  Builders;  Windjammers.      The  idea  there  is  intriguing,  as  the  groups  tend  to  have  crossover  in  membership.    So,  the  concept  is  one  of  combined  resources  and  efforts  being  stronger  together.    The  challenge,  however,  involves  issues  such  as  an  imbalance  of  finances,  waning  public  popularity  and  attention  in  certain  interest  areas,  leadership  and  management  which  may  be  better  or  worse  from  one  group  to  the  next,  and  the  importance  of  distinct  focuses  which  presently  exist  for  each  organization.      Who,  then,  would  take  

the  lead  in  a  combined  endeavor?      Does  one  aspect  of  emphasis  fall  to  the  wayside  in  favor  of  another?        Would  a  merged  organization  lead  to  a  greater  diversity  in  mission  or  a  confusion  of  focus?    Having  served  as  the  membership  chairperson  of  the  Circus  Fans  Association  of  America  (CFA),  for  a  time  in  recent  years,  one  of  my  most  significant  efforts  was  outreach  and  relationship  building  with  younger  people  involved  in  circus  endeavors  (recognizing  a  serious  need  for  renewal  and  expansion  into  these  areas  for  my  own  aging  organization.)    This  led  me  to  dedicated  networking  with  leaders  of  various  endeavors  from  youth  circus,  to  contemporary  circus,  to  circus  schools.      It  also  involved  more  serious  dialogue  with  leaders  of  AYCO  and  Circus  Now.  Certainly,  there  is  an  essential  element  of  identity  for  every  organization.    Who  are  we?    What  are  we  really  about?    How  does  such  an  understanding  help  direct  our  efforts  of  development?      I,  also,  see  some  of  the  same  challenges  in  areas  of  needed  growth,  and  lack  of  sufficient  access  to  resources  which  must  be  made  available  in  order  to  foster  organizational  building  and  professionalization  that  is  required  in  order  for  such  growth  to  be  reasonably  assured.    Moreover,  I  do  think  that  there  is  greater  room  for  collaboration  between  like-­‐minded  groups  towards  this  end.      But,  perhaps,  I  wonder  whether  we  sometimes  look  to  the  wrong  places.    And,  again,  this  gets  us  back  to  issues  of  identity  and  core  mission.    So,  a  fan  group,  while  it  may  benefit  from  history  or  illustrative  models,  really  would  be  better  off  looking  to  other  organizations  involved  with  arts  advocacy  and  audience  development,  even  if  that  is  not  circus  related,  for  collaboration  and  growth  in  their  development  efforts  of  contemporary  times.    A  history  oriented  group,  though  they  could  properly  partner,  say,  with  circus  schools  and  youth  endeavors  in  their  mission  of  education  (something  I  heartily  endorse  and  encourage),  ought  not  limit  

Page 18: AYCO%Board%position%andpremise:% THE%NITTY%GRITTY:% … · 2020. 12. 17. · ! 2! OPENING%REMARKS:%! Kevin%Maile%O’Keefe%(Founder%of%AYCO,%past%AYCO% BoardPresident,%Founder/Director,%CircusMinimus,%OneM

  18  

themselves  to  circus  interests.        Circus  model  builders  can  shed  light  upon  the  historical  subjects  that  they  often  favor,  as  a  form  of  education,  but  in  practice  will  often  find  the  greatest  camaraderie  with  others  who  enjoy  modeling,  even  if  the  topic  isn't  circus.    And  an  organization,  like  Windjammers,  dedicated  to  the  preservation  and  passing  on  of  circus  band  music,  should  certainly  reach  out  to  others  who  share  an  interest  in  music.    To  apply  these  connective  tissues  towards  the  current  discussion  and  discernment,  then,  one  might  speculate  as  to  how  a  collaborative  effort  between,  say,  CFA  and  Circus  Now  (who,  ultimately,  are  dealing  in  the  same  sort  of  essential  stuff,  even  if  they  are  approaching  it  from  different  angles)  might  look  like  or  take  shape.    Could  it  better  enable  a  greater  focus  and  effective  collaborative  than  the  worried  potential  splintering  or  stretching  too  far  of  an  expanded  AYCO  endeavor,  over  which  some  are  concerned?      Or,  what  sort  of  expanded  role  could,  say,  Circus4Youth,  of  CFA,  play  in  a  scenario  such  as  the  current  discussions  create  the  opportunity  to  explore,  to  complement  the  work  of  AYCO  in  reaching  the  board's  expressed  goals?    Not  to  mention  what  sort  of  role  could  the  Circus  Historical  Society  play  in  developing  an  expanded  academic  curriculum,  as  part  of  larger  goals  and  endeavors?  All  this,  just  from  the  circus  side  of  relationships.    However,  a  genuine  inquiry  can  (be)  posed  as  to  whether  the  sort  of  connective  collaborations  which  would  best  benefit  an  organization  dedicated  to  the  education  of  youth  in  circus  skills  and  artistry  is  primarily  or  solely  with  other  circus  oriented  endeavors  (though  that  should  certainly  be  an  essential  part  of  the  equation)  or  if  it  ought  to,  instead,  focus  first  upon  partnerships  with  similar  groups  seeking  to  support  the  involvement  of  arts  in  schools  and  those  endeavors  designed  to  promote  the  value  of  physical  education.    Ultimately,  are  collaborations  or  consolidations  the  better  approach  to  all  of  our  challenges?      (And,  

moreover,  with  whom?)    What  roles  can  each  sort  of  circus  interest  group  (or  other  non-­‐circus,  but  related,  interest  groups  with  similar  missions)  play,  in  the  bigger  picture  of  achieving  the  desired  end?    I'll  admit  I  have  no  easy  answers,  and  perhaps  just  more  questions.      But,  perhaps,  that's  the  point:  the  discussion  needs  to  continue  and  be  widened  a  bit.    In  conclusion,  I  readily  recognize  the  need  and  opportunity  which  leaders  of  AYCO  and  Circus  Now,  especially,  are  attempting  to  meet  in  the  situation  at  hand.    I  appreciate  and  applaud  the  desire  to  respond  to  these  overarching  and  growing  needs  in  our  contemporary  time,  particularly  as  concerns  cultural  (and  marketplace)  appreciation  and  understanding  of  the  circus  arts,  and  in  more  completely  fulfilling  the  needs  of  young  people.    Whether  the  proposed  plan  is  the  right  route  of  response,  or  if  there  might  be  something  better  while  respecting  the  need  for  specific  focal  points  that  ought  not  be  lost,  is  an  issue  that  I  think  deserves  greater  discussion.    Indeed,  it's  an  important  dialogue  to  have.      KELLY  KNOWLES:  (PARENT)    I  lifted  my  head  out  of  my  work  fog  long  enough  to  read  the  post  on  the  AYCO  FB  page  about  the  future  of  AYCO.  The  Strategic  Update  addresses  many  of  the  things  our  family  is  thinking  about  as  Lila  (all  too  quickly)  approaches  adulthood.  Thanks  for  the  great  research  and  report!    I  am  a  bit  concerned  about  the  combining  of  the  two  organizations,  based  on  my  understanding  of  how  funders  tend  to  view  their  particular  funding  stream,  in  that  trying  to  do  too  many  things  in  one  organization  can  discourage  funders  who  are  generally  looking  to  give  money  to  organizations  who  focus  on  more  specific  missions.    I  do  feel  quite  adamantly  that  there  needs  to  be  an  organization  that  helps  kids  involved  with  youth  

Page 19: AYCO%Board%position%andpremise:% THE%NITTY%GRITTY:% … · 2020. 12. 17. · ! 2! OPENING%REMARKS:%! Kevin%Maile%O’Keefe%(Founder%of%AYCO,%past%AYCO% BoardPresident,%Founder/Director,%CircusMinimus,%OneM

  19  

circus,  who  plan  on  keeping  circus  in  their  lives,  transition  into  young  adult/adult  circus,  and  wonder  if  a  "sister"  organization,  with  its  own  board  and  mission,  modeled  on  the  structure  of  AYCO  rather  than  built  on  top  of  it,  wouldn't  be  a  stronger  way  to  go  forward?  Pardon  me  if  you've  been  inundated  with  questions  already.  This  is  a  very  big  change,  and  making  the  first  steps  strong  and  wise  ones  will  be  important  to  the  health  of  this  youth  organization  that  we  (and  everyone  I  know  who  is  involved)  have  come  to  love  so  much.    I'm  sure  there  are  many  in  the  community,  way  more  invested  and  involved  than  I,  who  have  questions/comments.  Is  there  a  forum  anywhere  for  people  to  post  questions,  and  for  AYCO  to  address  them,  that  we  can  access  prior  to  the  meeting  at  the  Festival?  I'd  like  to  be  as  informed  as  possible  prior  to  the  Festival  :-­‐)    Also,  I'm  not  sure  how  the  meeting  is  being  structured-­‐from  the  announcement,  it  sounds  like  it  is  an  open  meeting,  which  would  be  fantastic  for  those  of  us  with  an  interest  in  how  circus  grows  in  America.      KATE  MAGRAM  (Circus  instructor)  and    LEAH  ABEL  (Founder,  Executive  Director,  Circus  Up!,  Circus  performer  and  coach)    (Note:  the  first  five  paragraphs  are  from  a  group  email  that  was  sent  to  the  board  from  Leah  Abel,  Kate  Magram,  and  Jessica  Hentoff;  following  those  paragraphs,  we  include  another  section  from  our  group  email  –  a  selection  of  questions  that  we  sent  to  the  board  along  with  their  replies  (in  red).  The  questions  below  that  section  were  added  later  and  are  from  Kate  and  Leah  specifically.)    Dear  Zoe  and  other  members  of  the  AYCO  Board:    We  want  to  start  by  saying  how  much  we  appreciate  your  latest  email  (June  11),  your  honesty,  and  the  acknowledgement  of  our  concerns  and  objections.  We  look  forward  to  continuing  to  work  with  the  board  on  transparency,  communication,  and  improving  the  organization.      

We  appreciate  the  incredibly  hard  work  that  has  been  done  by  the  staff  and  board  of  AYCO,  and  we  recognize  and  are  so  thankful  that  it  has  contributed  to  countless  positive  changes  in  the  organization.  We  acknowledge  the  extraordinary  contributions  of  time,  energy,  and  passion  that  have  transformed  AYCO  from  a  volunteer  collective  to  the  more  structured  model  it  is  today,  with  annual  national  festivals,  smaller  regional  festivals,  a  committed  board  of  directors,  paid  staff,  teams  of  dedicated  volunteers  who  enthusiastically  work  each  festival,  a  dedicated  paying  membership,  a  safety  program,  the  Hup  Squad,  and  the  continuation  of  excellent  volunteer-­‐led  workshops  and  stellar  student  showcases,  as  well  as  countless  other  unseen  contributions.    We  continue  to  be  proud  of  belonging  to  such  a  dedicated  and  hard-­‐working  organization  and  are  so  happy  to  be  connected  to  this  amazing  community  of  people  who  are  passionate  about  educating  and  supporting  youth  in  circus.    We  hope  you  are  able  to  hear  that  our  concern  about  this  change  and  our  desire  for  improvement  is  rooted  in  our  love  for  the  youth  that  we  serve,  and  in  our  pride  for  the  wonderful  work  that  you  and  our  community  have  done  over  the  years.  We  would  like  to  see  the  wonderful  work  continue,  so  that  we  may  in  turn  continue  to  support  our  youth  as  they  pursue  their  endeavors  in  circus  in  a  variety  of  settings.        We  are  excited  about  finding  new  systems  and  structures  that  will  ultimately  serve  AYCO,  its  membership,  the  youth  the  membership  serves,  and  this  community  better.  ALL  of  us  circus  folk  strongly  believe  in  the  power  of  circus  and  in  a  strong,  resilient  circus  family  that  can  endure  grit  of  any  sort.    Our  objecting  to  certain  processes  and  decisions  is  not  a  “fight”,  rather  an  opportunity  for  growth  for  all  of  us.  We  agree  that  "our  organization  is  strong  when  we  pull  together,"  and  are  looking  forward  to  ways  AYCO  will  include  the  members  more  and  focus  on  transparency,  building  on  the  different  strengths  we  all  bring  to  the  ring  to  make  AYCO  even  stronger.      

Page 20: AYCO%Board%position%andpremise:% THE%NITTY%GRITTY:% … · 2020. 12. 17. · ! 2! OPENING%REMARKS:%! Kevin%Maile%O’Keefe%(Founder%of%AYCO,%past%AYCO% BoardPresident,%Founder/Director,%CircusMinimus,%OneM

  20  

-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐  We  wanted  to  share  just  a  few  of  the  questions  that  we  sent  to  the  board  7/20,  along  with  the  replies  you  sent  7/27.  We  thought  that  these  would  be  helpful  for  other  community  members  to  read.  Answers  from  the  board  are  in  red  and  italics.    QUESTION  3:  In  order  to  help  put  many  circulating  rumors  to  rest,  we  are  requesting  some  clarification  about  the  intended  merger:  A  detailed,  written  explanation  or  why  this  MAJOR  decision  has  been  made  by  the  AYCO  leadership  without  consultation  or  communication  with  AYCO  stakeholders.  We  recognize  that  not  every  decision  can  be  made  with  everyone’s  input  –  but  a  decision  this  large  made  by  so  few  people  without  consulting  the  general  stakeholders  is  problematic,  from  our  perspective.      ANSWER:  Legally,  the  AYCO  board  has  the  power  to  make  decisions  about  the  future  of  the  organization  without  consulting  its  full  membership  (bylaws  are  attached).  This  process  has  happened  organically  over  the  course  of  many  years.  Our  board  represents  enough  diverse  viewpoints  that  we  felt  our  inner  workings  would  represent  the  whole.  As  soon  as  we  found  out  this  wasn't  so,  we  halted  the  process  to  include  others.      QUESTION  3a):  A  session  was  held  in  October  2016  at  the  ACE  EdCon  to  address  what  members  want  from  AYCO.  This  would  have  been  an  excellent  time  for  the  board  to  share  their  vision  for  the  future  direction  of  the  organization  AND  solicit  feedback  from  the  membership.      ANSWER:  Had  we  had  a  more  comprehensive,  thought-­‐out  idea  of  how  this  might  all  play  out,  we  would  have  brought  it  up  at  that  time.      QUESTION  4a):  Depending  on  the  type  of  nonprofit,  sometimes  mergers  may  not  happen  in  a  nonprofit  without  the  approval  of  the  majority  of  its  membership.  That  may  not  be  the  case  here,  but  we  would  like  to  see  if  the  current  bylaws  state  the  precedent  either  way.      

ANSWER:  Our  by-­‐laws  state  clearly  that  there  are  'no  members'  of  this  corporation.  Therefore,  "the  approval  of  a  majority  of  'membership'  '  does  not  exist.  The  word  'merger'  is  mentioned  in  the  second  to  last  paragraph  of  the  by-­‐laws  referencing  how  officers  are  to  be  treated  in  the  event  of  a  merger...meaning,  they  are  accorded  the  same  status  as  officers  of  the  organization  they  are  being  merged  into.  Simply  put,  our  bylaws  are  in  support  of  the  way  AYCO  is  managing  this.      QUESTION  4b):  We  also  think  it  would  help  us  understand  if  you  gave  us  a  clear  statement  as  to  whether  AYCO  is  board-­‐driven  (where  the  board  makes  all  decisions)  or  member-­‐driven  (where  the  members  have  some  say  in  decisions).      ANSWER:  AYCO's  decision  making  power  lies  with  its  board  exclusively  (see  bylaws).  This  is  due  to  the  specific  type  of  non-­‐profit  organization  that  we  created  so  many  years  ago.  Because  the  current  board  are  circus  owners,  circus  arts  educators,  circus  trainers,  circus  arts  employees,  circus  arts  everything  -­‐-­‐  just  like  you  -­‐-­‐  we  take  our  role  and  actions  very  seriously.  We  think  deeply  about  this  stuff  and  argue  with  each  other,  and  argued  against  every  aspect  of  this  idea  to  get  us  to  this  point.  And  then  we  skipped  a  step:  we  didn't  come  to  everyone  first  and  say:  "Hey,  what  do  you  think  about  this?  We  are  pretty  sure  we  have  to  do  this.  Are  you  on  board?  Yes,  there  are  kinks  to  work  out,  but  it  feels  like  the  right  direction."  So,  as  humans,  we  made  a  mistake  in  judgement.  And  here  we  are  saying  to  our  'stakeholders':  we  really  believe  this  is  in  everyone's  best  interests...give  us  a  listen."    -­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐-­‐  Some  further  questions  (specifically  from  Kate  and  Leah,  added  later  (board  has  not  yet  had  an  opportunity  to  respond)):    

1.   Is  the  board  willing  and  able  to  consider  the  possibility  that  while  it  may  be  a  good  and  appealing  idea  to  form  a  national  circus  organization  at  this  time,  and  it  may  be  what  appeals  to  the  various  board  members  of  AYCO/ACE/Circus  Now  as  individuals,  and  it  may  be  the  easiest  thing  to  make  

Page 21: AYCO%Board%position%andpremise:% THE%NITTY%GRITTY:% … · 2020. 12. 17. · ! 2! OPENING%REMARKS:%! Kevin%Maile%O’Keefe%(Founder%of%AYCO,%past%AYCO% BoardPresident,%Founder/Director,%CircusMinimus,%OneM

  21  

AYCO/ACE/CN  become  that  national  organization  in  terms  of  time,  money,  staffing,  and  infrastructure,  it  may  actually  not  be  the  best  choice  for  AYCO  as  an  organization?  

 2.   Regardless  of  what  happens  going  forward,  

assuming  that  AYCO  as  an  organization  does  continue  in  some  capacity,  would  the  board  be  willing  to  open  up  some  venues  with  stakeholders  to  discuss  ways  in  which  we  all  might  improve  two-­‐way  communication  going  forward?  We  understand  that  from  your  perspective,  communication  has  been  very  successful.  And  we  appreciate  all  the  ways  in  which  you  have  received  and  tried  to  respond  to  the  wide  range  of  feedback  that  you  receive  from  AYCO  members.  What  we  have  tried  to  communicate  is  that  –  to  some  of  us  -­‐  there  currently  does  not  appear  to  be  a  truly  effective  or  accurate  way  for  AYCO  members*  to  assess  community  needs  as  a  group  and  communicate  them  to  the  board.  Or  for  the  board  to  accurately  take  the  temperature  of  the  group  and  make  decisions  for  AYCO  as  an  organization  that  reflect  the  needs  of  the  community.  

*(whom  we  are  told  are  not  actual  “members”  because  “there  are  ‘no  members’  of  this  corporation”  per  the  bylaws  (email  from  the  board,  7/27/17))  

 3.   What  I  (Kate)  continue  to  have  trouble  

understanding  is  how  the  existence  or  non-­‐existence  of  a  national  circus  organization  is  going  to  help  young  people  do  any  of  the  following  in  a  way  that  they  can’t  currently  do  using  the  resources  at  their  disposal  (Google,  their  coaches,  social  media,  their  own  elbow  grease):  find  training  programs  in  the  U.S.  and  beyond,  evaluate  the  quality  and  appropriateness  of  said  training  programs  for  themselves,  find  circus  schools  in  the  U.S.  and  beyond,  apply  to  circus  schools  and  training  programs,  get  into  circus  schools  and  training  programs,  

and/or  have  greater  success  as  performers.  I  understand  that  many  people  in  our  circus  community  (which  –  it  must  be  clarified  –  is  not  THE  circus  community,  because  we  have  very  few  (if  any)  members  from  the  traditional  circus  world)  are  frustrated  by  lack  of  opportunity  and  lack  of  sufficient  income  to  be  able  to  pursue  a  performing  career.  I  understand  that.  Performing  artists  have  been  facing  this  challenge  for  hundreds  of  years  in  America,  in  every  discipline.  America  is  not  a  country  that  values  performing  arts.  America  is  also  a  country  –  especially  now  –  where  we  believe  that  everyone  can  and  should  be  able  to  follow  their  dreams.  So  it’s  a  challenging  dichotomy.  It  is  also  a  country  of  mass  inequity,  and  the  majority  of  the  people  who  are  able  to  pursue  circus  at  a  recreational  or  professional  level  are  people  who  come  from  backgrounds  of  privilege.  I  truly  struggle  to  comprehend  how  forming  a  national  circus  organization  will  solve  what  is,  to  me,  a  cultural  and  structural  issue.  If  we  look  to  the  people  we  know  who  have  created  successful  lives  as  performers,  teachers,  designers,  directors,  and  artists  –  how  did  they  do  it?  There  was  not  an  organization  to  guide  them.  So  what  did  they  do?  Perhaps  it  would  be  useful  to  ask  them  questions  and  learn  from  those  who  have  gone  before.  But  perhaps  someone  could  explain  to  me  –  in  minute  and  exacting  detail  –  exactly  what  this  national  organization  would  do.  Create  a  page  on  a  website  that  lists  all  the  professional  circus  programs?  Find  the  funding  to  create  more  professional  circus  programs?  Evaluate  the  professional  circus  programs?  What,  exactly?  

 4.   While  I  appreciated  the  information  in  the  

AYCO  Strategic  Update  (email  sent  6/28),  for  me,  it  is  lacking  far  more  information  than  it  provides.  It  appears  to  me  more  of  a  vision  than  a  business  plan.  If  you  want  to  convince  your  stakeholders  that  your  plan  is  a  good  investment  and  has  been  thoroughly  

Page 22: AYCO%Board%position%andpremise:% THE%NITTY%GRITTY:% … · 2020. 12. 17. · ! 2! OPENING%REMARKS:%! Kevin%Maile%O’Keefe%(Founder%of%AYCO,%past%AYCO% BoardPresident,%Founder/Director,%CircusMinimus,%OneM

  22  

invested  and  thought  out,  it  would  be  helpful  to  see  a  business  plan.  

 5.   For  example,  where  you  say:  "We  (the  

Board  of  AYCO/ACE)  used  many  models  of  national  organizations  that  consolidated  resources  over  time  to  make  their  industry  sector  stronger  for  multiple  years  into  their  future.  Funding  for  their  larger  organizations  seemed  to  have  flowed  better  after  their  umbrella  organizations  were  formed.  This  informed  our  explorations."  I  would  be  very  curious  to  see  the  research  that  led  you  to  this  conclusion.  Because  I  have  heard  conflicting  evidence,  and  information  that  would  indicate  that  the  opposite  is  true.  And  it  may  also  depend  on  the  situation.  If  you  are  merging  two  organizations  that  both  serve  cello  players,  for  example,  that  would  make  sense.  But  youth  circus  is  one  group,  and  The  Entire  Circus  Community  is  actually  a  very,  very  different  group.  So.  What  organizations  in  particular?  What  financials  were  you  able  to  review?  Etc.    

 6.   Is  there  a  possibility  that  Circus  Now  could  

become  the  "next  phase"  organization  for  where  "youth"  can  turn  after  they  age  out  of  AYCO,  if  they  don't  end  up  being  educators?      

 7.   While  we  appreciate  the  response  you  gave  

to  our  7/20  email  regarding  the  conflict  of  interest  policy,  we  continue  to  have  concerns  due  to  there  previously  being  members  on  the  board  of  both  AYCO  and  Circus  Now,  and  then  three  CN  board  members  joining  AYCO  just  prior  to  this  merger  being  announced.  It  is  difficult  for  us  to  articulate  and  to  assess  whether  or  not  this  violates  AYCO’s  conflict  of  interest  policy.  However,  it  makes  the  lines  extremely  blurry.  And  makes  it  difficult  to  assess  whether  people  were  able  to  truly  objectively  make  decisions  about  what  was  best  for  AYCO  rather  than  what  was  also  best  for  Circus  Now.  

We  thank  the  board  for  taking  the  time  to  thoughtfully  continue  to  engage  in  dialogue  with  us.  We  appreciate  that  this  has  been  a  challenging  process  for  all  involved.