MAIA MCDONALD

MAIA MCDONALD ✿

Parents Frustrated As Chicago Public Libraries Phase Out Museum Passes: ‘This Is Reducing Access’

By Maia McDonald Jun. 21, 2023 | Block Club Chicago

The popular program is being replaced by the statewide Explore More Illinois offering free and discounted passes to cultural attractions. Some feel the new program is poorly advertised and more restrictive.


CHICAGO — The Chicago Public Library has phased out its popular Museum Pass Program just as many families are looking for fun summer activities such as visiting local institutions and attractions.
With Museum Pass, adults could check out a physical Kids Museum Passport for two adults and two children to gain free entry to a local institution like the Art Institute of Chicago, Field Museum, Shedd Aquarium, Adler Planetarium, Museum of Science and Industry and others.
Those physical passes will no longer be offered. Instead, Chicago Public Library is joining the statewide Explore More Illinois program, a service through which Illinois public libraries provide free and discounted tickets to museums, science centers, sporting events, zoos, park districts, theaters and other cultural venues, according to the Explore More Illinois website. 
The change was made earlier this month, according to a statement from the Reaching Across Illinois Libraries System, the group behind Explore More Illinois.
Chicago Public Library cardholders can sign up online using their card’s barcode and PIN. Once logged in, the page displays discounted admission offers for the upcoming three months, and a user can reserve a digital pass for a specific date, according to the website.
Representatives from Explore More Illinois said the program will provide Chicagoans with additional offers as attractions previously offered through Museum Pass move over to the Explore More Illinois online portal.
“This will transform Explore More Illinois into a true statewide cultural and recreational pass program, as the program will be available to all Illinois public libraries,” according to the statement from the state libraries system.
Patrick Molloy, the director of government and public affairs for the Chicago Public Library, said the library began exploring other options when the museum passes expired last year.
He said some museums that participated began offering free and reduced days on their own, so no longer wanted to be a part of the program.
Increasing accessibility was a big consideration, Molloy said.
“The way it was before was that everyone had to go to their physical branch and to check out a [physical] pass and you weren’t able to put a hold on it. So if your branch was out of the museum pass — like, there were people who were driving around trying to find a location where they could get it, and really, this digital process is a lot easier on the patrons, they can still go into the branch, and can seek assistance and kind of reserving that through the computer,” Molloy said.
Explore More Illinois was the best solution, he said.
But some parents disagree. They said the switch may disadvantage Chicago families, and they think the changes haven’t been advertised effectively.
Kelly Connolly of Albany Park heard about the new program through a local parents’ Facebook group. Connolly said she hadn’t seen any notices about the digital passes at her local branch despite visiting frequently with her family. 
Connolly and other parents recently noticed the signs that advertised the passport program and listed the availability for physical museum passes at their local branches were removed. They found out through librarians or flyers that the program had transitioned to digital-only through Explore More Illinois, Connolly said.
Finding information online was also difficult, she said.
“If you log on to the Chicago Public Library page, there’s nothing pinned, there’s no information about it. If you search in the Chicago Library website for digital passes, you’ll find a very nondescript page, no image, and you can click on it. That takes you to another external site for Explore More Illinois,” Connolly said.
Jesse Thomas, a father of three in Lincoln Square, saw flyers about the digital passes at his local library. He said members of his book club were disappointed about the changes.
“They saw it as like when you live in a city with a family, you usually have a smaller private space, so it’s more important to go out and do things with your family, to take advantage of the cultural resources we have in the city. And this is just a way that this change will make it like harder to do so for them,” Thomas said.
Local institutions with passes still available though the new program include the Art Institute, Field Museum, Museum of Science and Industry, Peggy Notebaert Nature Museum, DuSable Black History Museum and Education Center, Chicago Children’s Museum, Chicago History Museum, Lincoln Park Zoo, Museum of Contemporary Art and National Museum of Mexican Art , according to the Explore More Illinois website.
A full list of participating attractions, some of which are in Iowa and Wisconsin, can be found online.

MAIA MCDONALD

MAIA MCDONALD ✿