National Aquarium in Baltimore Diving

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I found this blurb...apparently the interpretation of a public institution is not definite...meaning they don't have a piece of paper saying one thing or the other and they can very well be a 501 c 3 organization:

In U.S. law, there are five major factors used by courts to determine if an institution is a public or a private institution and whether the court has jurisdiction in the case (see Powe v. Miles for an example).

what amount of control does the state have in the governance of the institution
what amount of state funding is used to support the institution's activities
what amount of the institution's property is owned by the state
does the institution have tax-free status
is there a contract between the state and the institution

At least two of those questions are easy to answer. Pier 3 and Pier 4 expansion are government parcels
They receive a large amount funding from the state.
Also during revitalization back in the 1980s the state assisted in providing the aquarium room to build, not sure if that entails contract...but it would certainly seem there is a case to be made
 
I just found this article in Time: Living: Symphony on Pier 3 - TIME

It certainly seems, that if the federal government declared it a national aquarium, then the jump to public institution is becoming smaller and smaller.

Its pyramidal glass roof juts proudly into the sky, 157 ft. its splash of gaily colored panels shimmers in the sun's bright glow. As architecture, the new National Aquarium in Baltimore is striking; as a scientific and educational showcase, it already ranks among the nation's best.

Perched on Pier 3 at the eastern end of the harbor, the aquarium—city-owned and built without federal funds—was begun in 1976. Although Congress did not contribute funds for its construction, it nevertheless designated the rising structure a national aquarium in 1979. By July its three huge tanks were filled with almost 500,000 gal. of salt water (most of it synthetic, since the genuine briny from the Inner Harbor does not have enough salt to sustain many marine creatures) and were ready to receive the first of some 5,000 fish, mammals, birds and amphibians that the aquarium now contains. A hoped-for completion date of July 4 was not met, but last week, amid fish-shaped kites, an appearance by Roy Rogers and fireworks at night, it officially opened. Said Executive Director James Kepley, 38, a muscular, red-bearded marine biologist: "Working toward this day has been a perpetual high for 3½ years."

Designed by Peter Chermayeff, 45, chief architect of Cambridge Seven Associates, the building improves upon concepts the firm used in 1970 for Boston's successful New England Aquarium. Chermayeff describes the layout as similar to a symphony, with a linear structure following an "ABA" rhythm. The exhibits constitute the A elements, or as Chermayeff puts it, "something to read, confront, evoke a response." Long escalator rides from one floor to another through a dramatically high-ceilinged central space provide the release, or B elements. The building begins with a low-key introduction to water—large, blue bubble-tubes at the entrance—and after a long, steadily mounting crescendo ends on a sort of coda of quiet contemplation: a globe, 8 ft. in diameter and cut in half, frames the exit, graphically demonstrating the fragility of the oceans in relation to the earth's huge mass. Observes Chermayeff: "Museum fatigue is a serious problem, and I did not want that to happen here."

The aquarium's orchestrated splendors include plenty to justify the quote from the late anthropologist Loren Eisely that is lettered on a plaque at the start of the exhibits: "If there is magic on this planet, it is contained in water." Suspended majestically over the central space is a 63-ft. skeleton of a finback whale donated by the New York State Museum in Albany, where it had been on display from the 1890s to 1978. The dolphin pool, or "tray," is visible from almost every vantage point in the building, its rippling surface broken by the frothy play of four bottle-nosed dolphins. Recorded sounds of surf, sea birds, sea lions and even snapping crustaceans can be heard on the escalator rides.

Among the exhibits are re-creations of the watery environments of coral reefs and a section of the Maine coastline (assembled, ironically, from casts of rock taken along the shore of Massachusetts). The last is sure to be a hit with schoolchildren, since they will be able to pick up and handle living tidal organisms such as horseshoe crabs, moon snails and sand dollars. The 13-ft.-high viewing windows of two gigantic "race track" tanks, one atop the other, reveal the dark worlds of an Atlantic coral reef and the deep sea. Scores of trigger fish, tiger fish, parrot fish, grunts and blow fish swim in a traffic jam of color through the coral reef. Below, sea turtles and rays settle into the simulated depths, sometimes with understandable uneasiness, as eight species of shark hover near by.

The spiritual as well as the physical apex of the aquarium is the tropical rain forest, housed in the 64-ft. glass pyramid that is the building's most distinctive feature. The rain forest illustrates the variety of environments dependent on water, and contains tall, exotic Amazonian trees, vines, shrubs, a waterfall, a stream and leafy ground cover, as well as lizards, snakes and frogs. From the visitors' platform one can take in the full glory of a complete ecosystem almost ten stories above the Inner Harbor, and at the same time view the vista of a redeveloped Baltimore embracing the horizon.
 
Interesting questions. From what I know of the Baltimore National Aquarium it will come out as a private not-for-profit, but when things go to court ... you never know.
 
Chris it is public knowledge they are a 501 c 3. What I was offering for Thalassamania, was that the term "public institution" is not a status or a filing class or something that you get in writing like a 501 c 3.

Thalassamania, I agree it is always up for interpretation. The thing I found interesting was that Congress officially declared them a National Aquarium...that must mean something...I wish I knew what. Guess that's what those guys learn in law school...haha.
 
Wow, I hadnt thought of that aquarium in many years. In the mid 90s I donated a substantial amount of reef/marine animals to them and received not only a nice letter/private entry etc but a letter for tax deduction if I remember correctly. Its hard to be sure that was so much nitrogen ago. I always thought it was a public aquarium, guess I was wrong.
 
This is also found on the National Aquarium's Website: Who owns the land and building, and who directs the Aquarium?

Who owns the land and building, and who directs the Aquarium?

The land and the buildings are owned by the City of Baltimore.

The Aquarium is run by a non-profit corporation, the National Aquarium in Baltimore, Inc.,which consists of a volunteer 25-member Board of Governors and larger Advisory Board, plus a full-time paid staff.

Under the terms of its management agreement with the City, the non-profit corporation strives to remain self-supporting for operations.

So it seems there is a contract and in addition, the actual buildings are owned and were constructed by the city government...looking closer and closer like a public instituion. Perhaps Ken should just contact the city mayor...
 
Chris it is public knowledge they are a 501 c 3. What I was offering for Thalassamania, was that the term "public institution" is not a status or a filing class or something that you get in writing like a 501 c 3.

Thalassamania, I agree it is always up for interpretation. The thing I found interesting was that Congress officially declared them a National Aquarium...that must mean something...I wish I knew what. Guess that's what those guys learn in law school...haha.

Search for Charities, Online Version of Publication 78 Search Results

Hopefully this will work.
 
Its posted on their website, no one is contesting that its a 501 c 3. We know that it is. I have a non profit too, Laughter Arts Foundation Inc. That comes up on a search too, so it is obvious who is one.
 
It used to be that way at the Pittsburgh Aquarium. One shop seemed to control access. Don't know what happened but now you go thru the aquarium itself. I don;t know why anyone would pay that much money to dive in a fishtank. Epcot was bad enough at 135 but I was able to write that off. So who cares if they have to go thru one shop.

Here's an idea. Undercut them. Charge 125 and give all of it to the Aquarium! Don't keep anything for yourself. The goodwill you will generate should be reward enough. Oh maybe you can add 10 bucks to cover airfills and rental gear if needed and a couple bucks for gas and a sandwich. People will flock in and you'll have publicity you could not buy. Hell offer a specialty- Charity Diver.
 

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