Mr. Murphy,
As one of the “bold names” in your blurb about the Milwaukee
International Film Festival, I feel that I have no choice but to point out the
multiple inaccuracies in the story.
I’ll start at the beginning- with your title: “Film Festival
in Danger?” At no point in your article
do you maintain that the Film Festival is actually in danger of being
suspended. And rightly so—there will
absolutely be a 2008 Milwaukee International Film Festival, and 2009, 2010,
2011—you get the idea. You do a great
disservice to the tens of thousands of Festival attendees when you suggest that
the Festival will not take place. Milwaukee’s Future Foundation has not “shut off funding” of the Festival,
and there will always be plenty of funding for such a great event- and one so
important to Milwaukee’s stature as a city with offerings every bit as diverse
as Chicago or Minneapolis.
You mention that the Festival benefited greatly from Chris
Abele’s donations through his Argosy Foundation. No one has made comments to the contrary, and
to imply that anyone did is to fan the imagined flames around this great Milwaukee institution.
At no point did Louis Fortis
demand that the Milwaukee International Film Festival repay $250,000 in
debt. The Shepherd Express has loaned
over $438,000 (all verified by third parties) to the Film Festival, and $106,000
of that amount is yet to be repaid. There is as much as $250,000 outstanding when one includes contributions
from the Shepherd Express to the film festival in categories such as paying for
their telephone service, internet service, rent, office supplies, and time
spent by Shepherd Express employees on Festival projects. Mr. Fortis has NEVER asked for repayment of
any of these in-kind contributions. To
imply that he did is to slander the one person who has spent more on the
festival than anyone else—both in time and money. All of this information was known by all
involved parties, and available to you for the asking.
Your article contains several more false implications and
inaccuracies which I’ll cover briefly:
- All
tax returns through 2006 related to the film festival have been filed
properly and within the time allotted for filing. The 2007 books have been audited by an
outside auditor and the tax return is being completed now.
- You
imply that over $90,000 was spent on advertising with the Shepherd
Express. That sum was spent on
advertising in the Milwaukee Journal, the Isthmus, and the Chicago Reader,
among other media outlets. Less
than 28% of the advertising expenditures of the film festival went to the
Shepherd Express- arguably the publication best aligned with the film
festival’s target demographic. All
the other publications were paid, only the balance due the Shepherd
Express remains outstanding.
- You
neglect to mention that Mr. Fortis has unconditionally agreed to all audit
requests, and that the requested audit is already in motion.
Finally, to the most important part as far as I’m concerned—your misrepresentation of my involvement with the Milwaukee International Film
Festival. You imply wrongdoing when you
state: “But it gets worse. In 2005, the
nonprofit’s books were in the care of Matthew Astbury, who is the
finance manager for the Shepherd.” You point out no evidence of wrongdoing of any kind, nor was there any wrongdoing on my part or
on anyone else’s part. Moreover, your
dates are incorrect. I had no
involvement with the Film Festival until the 2nd quarter of
2006. Since that time, I have merely
helped the Milwaukee International Film Festival keep books that adhere to
generally accepted accounting principles, as the festival does not employ an
in-house accountant.
I am sure you will issue a prompt apology for your
mischaracterization of my unpaid, uncredited volunteer work with the Milwaukee
International Film Festival.
Thank you,
Matthew Astbury
Operations and Finance Manager
Shepherd Express/ExpressMilwaukee.com
Some additional information:
The Shepherd Express has never taken a donation write-off
based on its contributions—either allocated expenses or direct payments—to
the Milwaukee International Film Festival. Expenses incurred in the process of growing the Film Festival to its
current level of success have always been booked as a loan payable to the
Shepherd Express on the Film Festival books, and as a loan receivable from the
Film Festival on the books of the Shepherd Express. These facts are clear in the federal tax
return filings of both entities.
The “consulting fee” referred to in your story simply
represents combined expenses for box office services and theater rentals for
the first year of the Festival. Subsequent years’ tax returns have these expenses better defined and
broken out into separate line items. At
no point did Mr. Fortis benefit personally from his involvement with the
Festival. Indeed, Mr. Fortis has spent
much time and money to advance the Festival as a cultural institution in Milwaukee.
Related Links:
Milwaukee Magazine Story "Film Festival in Danger?"
Shepherd Express Story "The Future of the Milwaukee International Film Festival"
Milwaukee International Film Festival