Posted on 01/28/2004 8:29:35 PM PST by yonif
WASHINGTON, Jan. 28 President Bush will seek a big increase in the budget of the National Endowment for the Arts, the largest single source of support for the arts in the United States, administration officials said on Wednesday.
The proposal is part of a turnaround for the agency, which was once fighting for its life, attacked by some Republicans as a threat to the nation's moral standards.
Laura Bush plans to announce the request on Thursday, in remarks intended to show the administration's commitment to the arts, aides said.
Administration officials, including White House budget experts, said that Mr. Bush would propose an increase of $15 million to $20 million for the coming fiscal year, which begins Oct. 1. That would be the largest rise in two decades and far more than the most recent increases, about $500,000 for 2003 and $5 million for this year.
The agency has a budget of $121 million this year, 31 percent lower than its peak of $176 million in 1992. After Republicans gained control of Congress in 1995, they cut the agency's budget to slightly less than $100 million, and the budget was essentially flat for five years.
In an e-mail message inviting arts advocates to a news briefing with Mrs. Bush, Dana Gioia, the poet who is chairman of the endowment, says, "You will be present for an important day in N.E.A. history."
Mr. Gioia (pronounced JOY-uh) has tried to move beyond the culture wars that swirled around the agency for years. He has nurtured support among influential members of Congress, including conservative Republicans like Representatives Charles H. Taylor and Sue Myrick of North Carolina. He has held workshops around the country to explain how local arts organizations can apply for assistance.
Public support for the arts was hotly debated in the 1990's. Conservatives complained that the agency was financing obscene or sacrilegious works by artists like Robert Mapplethorpe and Andres Serrano. Former Senator Jesse Helms, Republican of North Carolina, repeatedly tried to eliminate the agency.
Some new money sought by Mr. Bush would expand initiatives with broad bipartisan support, like performances of Shakespeare's plays and "Jazz Masters" concert tours.
Mrs. Bush also plans to introduce a new initiative, "American Masterpieces: Three Centuries of Artistic Genius." This would combine art presentations from painting and literature to music and dance with education programs. The program would give large numbers of students around the country a chance to see exhibitions and performances.
New York receives a large share of the endowment's grants. But under federal law, the agency also gives priority to projects that cater to "underserved populations," including members of minority groups in urban neighborhoods with high poverty rates.
The president's proposal faces an uncertain future at a time of large budget deficits.
Melissa Schwartz, a spokeswoman for the Association of Performing Arts Presenters, an advocacy group, said, "We'll be fighting tooth and nail for the increase."
Some conservatives, like Representative Tom Tancredo, Republican of Colorado, vowed to oppose the increase. Even without support from the government, he said, "art would thrive in America."
Representative Louise M. Slaughter, a New York Democrat who is co-chairwoman of the Congressional Arts Caucus, said she was delighted to learn of Mr. Bush's proposal.
"There's nothing in the world that helps economic development more than arts programs," Ms. Slaughter said. "It was foolish for Congress to choke them and starve them. We should cherish the people who can tell us who we are, where we came from and where we hope to go."
Mr. Tancredo expressed dismay. "We are looking at record deficit and potential cuts in all kinds of programs," he said. "How can I tell constituents that I'll take money away from them to pay for somebody else's idea of good art? I have no more right to do that than to finance somebody else's ideas about religion."
The agency has long had support from some Republicans, like Representatives Christopher Shays of Connecticut and Jim Leach of Iowa.
"Government involvement is designed to take the arts from the grand citadel of the privileged and bring them to the public at large," Mr. Leach said. "This democratization of the arts ennobles the American experience."
All he is doing is alienating his base and making the same mistakes as his daddy.
LOL, speak for yourself tooth :-), Ask any Freeper what the first word that comes to mind when they hear the screen name "Sabertooth" and you and I both know what the answer would be. To describe my post as a fixation would be like John Kerry telling John McCain to stop bringing up Vietnam :-)
LOL, speak for yourself tooth :-), Ask any Freeper what the first word that comes to mind when they hear the screen name "Sabertooth" and you and I both know what the answer would be.
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"Masterpiece Theatre"? Oh, you mean the programming my tax dollars go to buy from the BBC? And the "arts programming" on PBS---that's suspiciously broad brush---you approve all of it? Why, what am I saying---of course you do! In contrast to people who disagree with you on this issue, you're a real maven of the arts, aren't you?
Should it really be tax subsidized for my pleasure, because it is elevating to those that would not otherwise be exposed, and thus an uplift in the aesthetic pleasure of those that don't go to the theatre?
Be still, my beating redmeat heart! Don't you know I love it when you talk arty to me? I don't see how any of us can disagree with you now, now that you've made it clear that the spending is all for our uplift.
I don't know, but don't worry much about it, because the absolute dollars spent are so low.
Oh, absolutely. It's only when you have a few billion here and a few billion there that it adds up to real money, just like that great RINO Everett Dirksen once said.
What I worry more about, is government spending which involves big bucks, that in some way must be paid for by more than just those that are RINO country clubbers, who live off trust funds, or maybe even made their money honorably.
Doggone it if you and I don't agree on something. Maybe you can establish a "threshold Federal expenditure amount of concern" for the mass of us unwashed conservatives here at FR, below which we have no right to be exercised over its expense.
By the way, I don't belong to a country club. I don't play golf - at least not yet.
Oh, I believe you.
It's no wonder he keeps selling out the base when mindless groupies will vote for him no matter what he does.
ROFLMAO, Now I have to clean my monitor, the last sip of my adult beverage is now sliding down the screen.
I have to admit, you're a witty SOB
Republicans in charge has now lead to the greatest expansion of government since Lyndon B. Johnson. How can anyone say in regard to the size of government and expansion of socialism that there is any difference between the two parties?
Was it the part where I said I don't agree with this spending? or was it the part where I exposed the hypocrisy of some of the pouting pitchforkers around here?
If you're gonna launch a personal attack, at least do so with some facts to back up your ad homonym post
You'd get a democrat alright. But either you think that damage will be limited to the White House (extremely naive), or you're perfectly willing to accept the results of, say, Dennis Kusinich having to deal with al-Qaeda and a Supreme Court that is leaning to the far left.
And all for what? Just so you can say "It's all Bush's fault! He drove me to it."? Feh.
FUNDING THE ARTS
March 10, 1997
TRANSCRIPT
CLEO PARKER ROBINSON, Dance Company Founder: If I had not had dollars from the NEA, I dont know, I might not even have an organization, because they helped us understand the value of what they were doing. We are a product of the National Endowment for the Arts, and were a million dollar organization. And we came from nothing, and we got support from the National Endowment, and that was a ripple effect.
ELIZABETH FARNSWORTH: But other projects, funded partly by the Endowment, have brought controversy and funding cutbacks. This 1995 performance in Minneapolis, for example, which involved bodily injury and blood, and there were the homoerotic photographs of the late Robert Mapplethorpe, which drew criticism from Sen. Jesse Helms.
SEN. JESSE HELMS: I dont even acknowledge that its art. I dont even acknowledge that the fellow who did was an artist. I think he was a jerk.
ELIZABETH FARNSWORTH: Congressional critics have also pointed out that in an era of federal belt-tightening, the arts should be supported privately, not with tax money. These critics support the approach of the Fund for the Arts, a private venture in Louisville, Kentucky, that was established in 1949 as one of the nations first community-wide art campaigns, and now raises about 5.3 million a year from 30,000 Louisville residents. Last year, the Republican-led Congress cut funding for the National Endowment for the Arts by one third and this year some members are arguing for eliminating it altogether. President Clinton affirmed his support for art funding in his State of the Union speech.
PRESIDENT CLINTON: Our economy is measured in numbers and statistics, and its very important. But the enduring worth of our nation lies in our shared values and our soaring spirit. So instead of cutting back on our modest effort to support the arts and humanity, I believe we should stand by them and challenge our artists, musicians--challenge our museums, libraries, and theaters. (Wonder if Laura is gonna be taking crib notes from Clintigula?)
ELIZABETH FARNSWORTH: And last month a blue ribbon committee appointed by the President to look into the state of the arts and humanities in America called for an increase in federal funding for both. Supporters of the National Endowment began their lobbying campaign today in Washington. In two days of activity here and throughout the country actors and painters, poets and playwrights will argue that federal funding is essential in building and preserving a vital national culture. Actor Alec Baldwin is a spokesman for the effort.
ALEC BALDWIN: And as more men and women, mothers and fathers, work harder and longer to maintain their standard of living, we must ask ourselves one question on Arts Advocacy Day: How can we turn our back on an endeavor that increases our childrens cultural intelligence, heightens sensitivity, and deepens our collective sense of humanity? I suggest to you that we cannot.
ELIZABETH FARNSWORTH: Later this week the head of the National Endowment for the Arts, Jane Alexander, will go to Capitol Hill to argue for continued funding.
ELIZABETH FARNSWORTH: Now, for more on all this we turn to Alec Baldwin, whose most recent films are "Ghost of Mississippi," and "Bookworm," and who has also appeared on Broadway in numerous plays, and to Marc Morial, mayor of New Orleans and chairman of the Arts Committee of the U.S. Conference of Mayors; to Alice Goldfarb Marquis, a cultural historian and author of "Art Lessons, Learning from the Rise and Fall of the NEA," and to William Craig Rice, who teaches writing at Harvard University and who has written on the arts for the Heritage Foundation. Thank you all for being with us.
Mr. Baldwin, youre putting a lot of time and effort into lobbying to preserve federal funding for the arts. Why? Why is it important to you?
ALEC BALDWIN, Actor: Well, because I think that federal funding has always accomplished one thing dramatically well, and that is disseminating culture, programs, and dance music, theater in the arts, museums, throughout the country. Prior to the NEA, that situation was a pretty poor one. I mean, if you had 50 dance companies in this country, 45 of them were in Manhattan before 1968, presumably. And one of the many things--I could go on and one--but one of the many things that has been accomplished by the NEA is dissemination of this cultural heritage throughout the country and outside of the major urban cultural centers.
ELIZABETH FARNSWORTH: So even if its centered in Washington, and it is a centralized organization, it has really worked hard, in your view, at getting grants to all kinds of organizations all over the country?
ALEC BALDWIN: Yeah. I dont think it only works toward that. I think its achieved that. I mean, even recently, you have a unique mix and match of programs in the heartland of this country. You have a thing such as the cowboy poetry gathering in Elcko, Nevada, which is--the NEA provided seed money for this--it generates millions of dollars in income annually, a place in White Burg, Kentucky, called the Apple Shop, which is the largest employer in the community, its a local arts agency for programming local film, theater, and the arts. You have the Plains Art Museum of Fargo, North Dakota, which is a museum thats hitched to the back of a semi truck that drives to rural parts of North Dakota conveying art, and then you have sponsorship of the Chamber Music Rural Residencies, which is a music ensemble that goes to rural school and alternative rural settings, such as hospitals, juvenile detection centers, and hospices, and performs chamber music for people there.
ELIZABETH FARNSWORTH: Okay. Ms. Marquis, what about that argument, whats wrong with federal funding for that kind of project?
ALICE GOLDFARB MARQUIS: Im very concerned about any government agency trying to select people, artists, and organizations who will get funded, and others who are turned down for various reasons. I think the history of any government choices for the arts is a very sorry one.
ELIZABETH FARNSWORTH: Excuse me. Why--why--if private organizations, foundations can choose, why not government?
ALICE GOLDFARB MARQUIS: Because it becomes a very bureaucratic process, is the NEA claims that it provides an imprimatur for as a guide for private funding. I dont think its up to a government agency to do that. Private funders can make those decisions themselves. The--it has a group of people in Washington deciding what is art. Those--the history of making those choices has been a very sorry one. The Nazis, for example, decided what was art and what was not. The Academy in 1973, France, decided what was art and what was not. They overlooked the Impressionists Gauguin, Van Gogh. In Eastern Europe under the Communists there was also an effort to decide what is art. That kind of procedure has a very bad history. Its not a good one.
ELIZABETH FARNSWORTH: Mayor, whats your experience in New Orleans? How does it look from there?
MAYOR MARC MORIAL, New Orleans: I think the important thing is that the NEA and its contribution are only but a small portion of all of the money thats invested in the arts throughout this country. Six hundred and fifty million is invested by local arts--local government into local arts organizations every year. One great example in New Orleans is the New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival, which is a multi-many hundreds of millions of dollars in economic impact which supports music, which supports art, which supports culture, not necessarily that it is funded by the NEA, but you take a counterpart effort in New Orleans, the New Orleans Center for Creative Arts, which is a school for the arts, its very foundation 20 years ago was because of an anti-NEA grant. The important thing is, is that this about jobs, its about economic development, and its about building our mind and building our culture because we are a great nation.
ELIZABETH FARNSWORTH: And even though the cities are putting a lot of money into arts, you still think theres a need for federal funding?
MAYOR MARC MORIAL: Certainly, because those things that work well work well because we have a partnership. We have the federal government. We have state government. We have local government. We have private corporations and foundations working together to make art and culture significant in this country. And I think where there is this partnership it will work well, and I think the federal government has a responsibility to return our tax money to this kind of activity. (yeah you guys need another avenue to pay off your cronies. Those guys who "distribute" who gets what and how much)
ELIZABETH FARNSWORTH: Mr. Rice, what about that? Whats wrong with that kind of partnership?
WILLIAM CRAIG RICE, Writer: I think that the arts could be helped. An artist could certainly be helped if the federal government were to aid artists and arts organizations blindly; that is, what we need is less of this kind of picking of winners and more of a general amnesty, as it were. Artists are killed by things like the self-employment tax. Theyre in difficulty for self-insurance. There are all kinds of things that the federal government does that make it very hard for artists to thrive. (Hello? Dubya? Bueller?)
ELIZABETH FARNSWORTH: But youre opposed to federal funding that goes directly in the form of grants to artistic organizations?
WILLIAM CRAIG RICE: Yes.
ELIZABETH FARNSWORTH: Why?
WILLIAM CRAIG RICE: Because the history, if you look at it, is that it is the rich and the well-connected organizations and in some cases artists who wind up with the majority of the NEA money, and for instance, the Boston Symphony gets about 1 percent of its budget from the NEA. Thats 40 cents per ticket sold. The Boston Symphony is fairly well endowed, as is the Philadelphia Orchestra. If you look across the board, the NEA has not typically been all that helpful to these small organizations that Mr. Baldwin gave us as examples. What we need is, as I say, is a blind system of support that doesnt pick winners because its the networked people, its the certain kinds of personalities and organizations that triumph under the current dispensation.
ELIZABETH FARNSWORTH: Mr. Baldwin, how do you respond to that, that the NEA helps the really big, already successful organizations more than the small ones?
ALEC BALDWIN: Well, Im not qualified to make an examination of the decisions and the internal decision-making process at the NEA. Im sure that many of the large urban centers receive more money than ex-urban areas because more people are interested in the arts potentially and theres more of a market for the arts in those areas. I dont know. But I know that the argument that Im constantly hearing from people who are opposed to arts funding is two things: one is that they think that people in this country dont want arts funding; that they think that most of the people in this country share Mr. Rices opinion, when, in truth, a recent Harris Poll said that 79 percent of the people in this country want the arts to be funded by the government and 57 percent of the people surveyed said they want that to come from the federal government.(They also would vote themselves free pills for heir relatives....oh wait they did. That and this type of poll demonstrates this country has having forgotten what Constitutional govt is all about.) The fact remains when that whenever people say that the government shouldnt be in the arts business, the government should be in the business of anything that the people want the government to be in the business of that is good and decent and meaningful for the people in this country. The Constitution as such doesnt say that the government should be building highways, but we determined that that was important and that was necessary. And according to the survey, the overwhelming majority of people in this country feel that its essential and necessary for us to be in the business of funding the arts as well.
ELIZABETH FARNSWORTH: Mr. Rice.
WILLIAM CRAIG RICE: That Harris Poll was very selectively worded. It asks questions such: Have you attended an arts event recently? And you could answer yes if youd gone to a movie. Now, I happen to think that American cinema is a great art form, but the whole way that was set up was very, very skewed. Lou Harris, himself, has a strong record of support for federal funding of the arts. So its not a particularly good source to cite.
ELIZABETH FARNSWORTH: But, Mr. Rice, what about the argument that we fund science, we fund roads, we--the federal government funds all these things, why not the arts?
WILLIAM CRAIG RICE: It seems to me that our history in the arts in America is profoundly decentralized. Amateurs have had a big role. It hasnt been ever until the NEA, except for a short period under Roosevelt--with the Works Project Administration--a matter of federal concern because it--our own examples or our great artists almost all came out of unpromising quarters and out of oppressed groups. Our heritage was not that of a centralized authority making our decisions for us.
ELIZABETH FARNSWORTH: Ms. Marquis, you had something you wanted to say too.
ALICE GOLDFARB MARQUIS: Yes. What I would like to see if the government wants to get involved with the arts at all is I would like to see a census taken in each locality of venues where there can be art exhibitions, where there can be performances, school auditoriums, parks, recreation centers, and so on, and perhaps the local arts agency would be able to facilitate artists of all kinds performing and exhibiting all sorts of things locally and allow audiences, which in the past have always been the best judges of art, have not been critics, its not been the experts; its been audiences who go to a performance. So I think that would be a much wiser way of spending our money without putting the finger on the scale for certain arts organizations, especially the very wealthy ones, the biggest recipient of NEA funding--during all time has been the Metropolitan Opera in New York.
MAYOR MARC MORIAL: Lets not distort the case. The argument shes making, in fact, is an argument for what the NEA does. 40 percent of NEA dollars go to the states in block grants that the states, in turn, distribute many times through local arts organizations. And I think that is a suggestion on how our overall effort as a nation could be improved in terms of how we support arts and culture, not an argument to reduce the size of the NEA. I think the NEA has been in the forefront, promoting access--
ALICE GOLDFARB MARQUIS: No.
MAYOR MARC MORIAL: --by people to the arts. And I think thats in the record--certainly it needs to be strengthened, and it needs to be expanded, and it needs to be improved.
ELIZABETH FARNSWORTH: Have you--excuse me one second, Ms. Marquis, I just want to ask the Mayor--have you seen and of the results in New Orleans of the cuts--in federal funding for the arts--
MAYOR MARC MORIAL: We certainly have seen a result.
ELIZABETH FARNSWORTH: What have you seen?
MAYOR MARC MORIAL: Weve seen programs that are literally in their embryonic stages which depend on that to perhaps leverage up additional dollars, who now have to reduce the number of people that they serve. You see local arts organizations that may not be able to pay their rent; that may not be able to afford part-time salaries for teachers and tutors. It has an impact. I think what the NEA does is seed many local activities and they, in turn, can go out and match that with corporate, with foundations, or with local dollars. It works, and I think the partnership is whats important in this regard. (here's a quarter. Call someone who cares. Most of us see this funding as it is;simple theft)
ELIZABETH FARNSWORTH: Mr. Baldwin, what about the argument in a time when welfare recipients are being cut off and immigrants cant get their benefits that theres just not the money to pay for the arts?
ALEC BALDWIN: Well, there are people who have contended over and over again that we dont have the money for this and that some of the money is being wasted on objectionable and even pornographic material, which is a very rare instance, by the way--120,000 grants administered by this administration and--by this Endowment since 1968, and a very small handful of really controversial and objectionable things. But the fact remains that when you say we dont have the money for this, the truth is there are other places in government. (you mean more dollars to be stolen) I would think the argument of the people who say that we dont have the money for this more seriously, if they were willing to go out and conduct a similar witch hunt and to use similar kind of witch hunt tactics that they use, year in and year out during this time of reappropriation for the NEA to find where there was fraud and waste and money that could be saved, the amount of money that were talking about here is so insignificant if the NEA were returned to the funding they had prior to these cuts, whether it was 130 or 150--I dont even remember now--but I know its $99.5 million now the arts community is helping to balance the budget in this country. Federal income tax revenues from arts related incomes is $3.4 billion last year, people earning money in arts-related fields pay into the federal treasury $3.4 billion, and the government turned around and kicked back into seed money $99.5 million dollars.
ELIZABETH FARNSWORTH: Ms. Marquis,. We have about five seconds. Just make a quick point. Thats all we have time for. Im sorry.
ALICE GOLDFARB MARQUIS: Actually, the--the donors through private donors give the arts more than $10 billion a year, and the government forgives at least $2 billion in taxes because they get a tax deduction, so that is a $2 billion subsidy for the arts. And I think thats fine.
WILLIAM CRAIG RICE: We could do a lot more to support the arts through reforming the tax codes. (not according to Laura. She demands taxpayer dollars)
http://www.pbs.org/newshour/bb/entertainment/jan-june97/arts_3-10.html
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Dude, here's an "ad homonym": "add."
Sorry I had to get personal, but you drove me to it!
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