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ARTS FUNDING INTACT ACTION ALERT: CONTACT SENATORS

 

 

 

 

 

 

HOUSE PASSES ECONOMIC STIMULUS PACKAGE; ARTS FUNDING INTACT

ACTION ALERT: CONTACT SENATORS

 

The House of Representatives on Wednesday, January 28, passed the

economic stimulus legislation – H.R.1, the American Recovery and

Reinvestment Act – with provisions intact allocating $50 million for the

National Endowment for the Arts. All Republican House members, joined by

11 Democrats, voted against the measure.

 

TAKE ACTION: The Senate expects to vote on its version of the stimulus

legislation the week of February 2. If you have not yet done so, please

contact your senators urging their support to retain the $50 million

allocation for the National Endowment for the Arts when the economic

stimulus legislation takes final shape by including the provision passed

by the House, with 40% of the NEA funds going to state arts agencies and

the remainder distributed in direct grants to fund arts projects that

preserve jobs in the nonprofit arts sector.

 

Reach your senators by phone through the Capitol Switchboard at

202-224-3121, or by email at http://www3.capwiz.com/mygov/dbq/officials/ < http://www3.capwiz.com/mygov/dbq/officials/>  

 

* Public funding for the arts is a sound investment in states and

communities facing tough economic conditions.

* The arts generate jobs, tax revenues and consumer spending.

* NEA funds to state arts agencies will enable state support for

the arts to continue where a depressed economy has resulted in revenue

shortfalls.

In the days leading up to the House floor debate on the bill, the arts

funding had been singled out by critics of the legislation as an example

of needless spending. When the measure came to the House floor on

Wednesday, Rep. David Obey (D-WI), chair of the Appropriations Committee

and floor manager for the bill, asserted that such claims caused the

debate to become “incredibly trivialized.” In defense of the spending

decisions made in the bill, he pointed out that the “arts funding in

this bill is a tiny fraction of this entire bill . . . about 6 cents out

of every $1,000 contained in this legislation.”

 

He then aimed his remarks at the economic purposes of the legislation

and the economic significance of the arts sector: “People ask, What does

funding for the arts have to do with jobs? It is very simple. People in

the arts field are losing their jobs just like anybody else. . . . You

have local arts agencies, you have local orchestras, local symphonies

and local arts groups of all kinds who are shutting down, laying people

off, and in a number of instances going bankrupt. This is a small, tiny

effort to keep some of those people employed over the next two years. I

make no apology for it. We have an obligation to salvage as many jobs as

we can regardless of the fields in which people work.”

 

Rep. Norm Dicks (D-WA), chair of the Interior Appropriations

Subcommittee and sponsor of the arts funding in the stimulus package,

joined Obey in defending the NEA funds. He cited the arts community as a

tremendous cultural resource that “also serves to create jobs in local

communities all across our nation.”

 

Dicks went on to say that the arts sector of the economy “has been

inordinately impacted by the severe economic downturn we have been

experiencing in this past year . . . and the result has been disastrous

for many of our nation’s arts agencies and programs. . . . The amount in

this bill is intended to provide small grants to try to restore some of

the jobs which have been lost in the arts communities over the past

year. In addition to retaining jobs, these funds will support programs

which provide entertainment and richness in the lives of our communities

at a time when they are badly needed. In the context of this large

economic stimulus legislation, I believe this is a prudent investment,

and that it will contribute measurably to restoring the fiscal health of

our nation.”

 

Speaking in opposition to the bill, Rep. Gary Miller (R-CA) included the

arts funding in a list of “special interest groups’ pet projects” that

“represent an increase in government spending, not job creation.” Rep.

Ginny Brown-Waite (R-FL), also speaking against the legislation, cited

the NEA funding with others as “some of the most egregious examples of

programs within the massive spending bill.”

 

Democrats voting against the stimulus package were Reps. Allen Boyd

(D-FL), Bobby Bright (D-AL), Jim Cooper (D-TN), Brad Ellsworth (D-IN),

Parker Griffith (D-AL), Paul Kanjorski (D-PA), Frank Kratovil (D-MD),

Walt Minnick (D-ID), Collin Peterson (D-MN), Heath Shuler (D-NC), and

Gene Taylor (D-MS), including four freshman members of the House, three

of whom replaced Republican officeholders.

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