These are just some of the problems the city says the Hanford Carnegie Museum needs to address if they want to stay in the downtown building they've called home for decades.
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"We can't figure out why they're so rough with us, and why they're constantly on us when before they didn't care about the museum," said Hanford Carnegie Museum board president Silvia Gonzalez Scherer. "They didn't care. Nobody cared about the museum. And now they care so much."
The letter, written by Hanford's community development director and delivered to Scherer on Friday, states that the museum is not maintaining the building and grounds in accordance with the city's lease of the building to the non-profit.
If they don't correct the 'deficiencies' within 10 days, the museum will default on the lease, and the city can then cancel it.
Though she says they've already taken care of ten of the issues, including fixing a broken bathroom sink, Gonzalez Scherer believes several will simply take more than ten days.
She thinks the letter is an attempt to shut the museum down.
"You would think that people in the community would work together and we're just not seeing that," she said. "We're seeing more of a Salem witch hunt."
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"The responsibility for the city is to maintain that agreement and to follow the guidelines and do it legally correct," said Hanford Mayor Sue Sorensen. "And it's a historic building and so the responsibility of the city is to maintain the integrity of that historic building."
Sorensen says community members have called her with complaints about the museum's upkeep, so she recently visited the property.
"I was disappointed in what I saw and realized that we do need to make sure that there's a clear understanding of what is a quality level of care," she said.
Museum officials say they need financial support for all of the improvements, and have set up a GoFundMe page for people to help.
But they say they'll do everything they can to keep the museum, and its history, alive.
"It holds a dress that Amelia Earhart herself designed-she would come to Hanford," said museum manager Patricia Dickerson. "It has our military display. There's a dollhouse that was handcrafted. This is our history. It has to stay. And we're fighting. We're not going to let it go down."