arts alert: Governor’s Cuts Mean We Need You At Arts Advocacy Day
MCA
Minnesota Citizens for the Arts
2233 University Ave. W. #355
St. Paul, MN 55155
651-251-0868 fax 651-917-3561
staff at mncitizensforthearts.org
www.mncitizensforthearts.org
Arts Action Center
Feb. 19, 2010
1. Arts Advocacy Day is a Little Over One Week Away – Register Now!
2. Governor’s Proposed Arts Cuts are Too Deep – And Contrary to the Will of Minnesota Voters
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1. Arts Advocacy Day is a Little Over One Week Away – Register Now!
THE GOVERNOR’S PROPOSAL TO DELETE THE ARTS MAKES ARTS ADVOCACY DAY VERY IMPORTANT. Please Join Us!
You are invited to the best arts networking opportunity of the year, MCA’s Arts Advocacy Day on March 2, 2010 in St. Paul. Join your fellow arts advocates at the MN History Center and State Capitol on March 2, 2010 to talk about the arts, make new friends, and educate our legislators about the importance of the arts to Minnesota. The state is facing yet another big deficit and arts funding will be threatened again. This year artists and arts supporters from across the state will be joining together to stop possible cuts to the state arts budget. We will also be thanking legislators for their appropriations from the new Amendment funds to the arts community. Together we will speak about the importance of the arts in our lives and communities. In past deficits, state arts funding has been cut by a third. Participation of arts advocates is the one thing that makes sure we have power at the legislature.
Arts Advocacy Day Schedule March 2, 2010
7:30 a.m. Meet at the Minnesota History Center, St. Paul
8:00 a.m. Advocacy Class for new attendees
8:00 a.m. Registration & Coffee
8:30 a.m. Advocacy Seminar & Join your team
9:30 a.m. Walk/ride to Capitol
9:30-1:00 p.m. Legislator appointments
You and your team will be led by an experienced advocate who has participated in past Advocacy Days and knows what to do. Your team will visit a series of legislators during the course of the day, giving you plenty of time to get to know your teammates and the issues you are discussing. Register Online By: Visiting www.mncitizensforthearts.org by February 26th, 2010. Questions? Contact Mark at MCA: 651-251-0868 / staff at mncitizensforthearts.org
Show the strength of Minnesota’s arts community.
And check out two great VIDEOS from Arts Advocacy Day Held February 24, 2009:
3 Minute Egg by Matt Peiken: http://3minuteegg.wordpress.com/2009/02/25/arts-advocacy-day
…and MN Stories by Chuck Olsen (Go to YouTube and search for 2009 Minnesota Arts Advocacy Day if this link refuses to work): http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lM3J85v23Ig
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2. Governor’s Proposed Arts Cuts are Too Deep – And Contrary to the Will of Minnesota Voters
The Following Op-Ed Appeared First on Minnpost.com:
We are in difficult times. The arts, like every other part of society, are participating in those difficult times, with rising unemployment and shrinking budgets, during which arts organizations are trying to provide the same services with fewer resources.
This week Gov. Pawlenty revealed his plan to solve the state’s budget deficit. While he proposed that other state agencies take 3-6% cuts, he would cut the Minnesota State Arts Board (MSAB) and Regional Arts Council (RAC) system by 33% in 2011 and 66% in 2012. Even more troubling, he would eliminate all general fund support by 2013, and then convert the State Arts Board to a private corporation.
Unfortunately his plan is out of proportion to the state deficit as well as to cuts to other areas. We recognize that the arts need to do our part to help solve the state’s deficit, but this means taking the same level of cuts as the rest of the budget, and not ten times more. Even more important, if the small funding for the arts is eliminated it would do almost nothing to solve the state’s deficit. So there really isn’t any point.
In 2008, when we Minnesotans passed the outdoors and arts amendment, we approved dedicated funding for the arts.
As someone who worked on the Vote Yes! campaign with many conservation and arts advocates, I was inspired by the overwhelming number of voters who affirmed that the arts are a defining feature of Minnesota. It showed that we value the arts and our great outdoors that we will take direct action to protect our quality of life.
The proposed cut does not affect the separate Legacy funding from the constitutional amendment, which reinforces the wisdom of the citizens of Minnesota in creating a dedicated source of funding that can’t just disappear.
But the Governor’s proposed budget has proven exactly why we needed to pass the amendment. The proposal is the opposite of the will of Minnesota’s voters to secure funding for the arts. And wisely, in order to guard against just this kind of budget “bait and switch” the constitutional language wisely says that amendment resources can’t be used as a substitute for current state funding from other sources.
Just think how our hunting and angling friends would react if the governor proposed deleting all conservation resources except for the Clean Water, Land and Legacy amendment. There would be blaze orange riots in the streets.
In addition, as the MSAB deals almost exclusively with public funds, making it a private corporation would remove much of the state’s oversight and checks and balances on these dollars (such as the Open Meeting Law) which we think is very unwise.
Just this month the Minnesota State Arts Board and Regional Arts Councils are launching the new grant programs made available by the amendment. Through extensive public input, from meetings across the state to on-line surveys, they collected the dreams and wishes of Minnesotans on what the Legacy money could do to create a more vibrant and accessible arts environment in our state. The result is a two-layer vision: local grants provided by the eleven Regional Arts Councils, and grants of statewide and regional significance to be provided by the Minnesota State Arts Board. Applications for the most part are due this month, and grants will be made in every county. (For more info, go to www.arts.state.mn.us/grants/machf.htm and www.arts.state.mn.us/racs/index.htm).
So what does this mean to you, the average Minnesotan? You will see, over the next several years, a flowering of opportunities to experience and participate in the arts. There is no doubt that the result of the amendment will be increased access to the arts in every corner of the state.
However, like everything else in the state budget, the arts will lose some ground this year. We hope that in fairness it will be more proportionate to cuts to other agencies.
In the meantime, we must convince the Governor and Legislature to just follow the people’s will and let the Amendment work.
Sheila Smith is Executive Director of Minnesota Citizens for the Arts and was a member of the leadership team on the VoteYes! campaign.
Sign up NOW for Arts Advocacy Day at: www.mncitizensforthearts.org and make your voice heard.
Help us protect the arts!
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