I am a busy person. I don’t like to waste
time or effort. I am also a person worried about funding cuts for the arts. So
I gamely signed petitions, wrote emails, and even made the occasional call to
help those trying to save the status quo for the NEA, CAC, SD Commission for Arts
and Culture and the City of Chula Vista City when asked. But I was truly
surprised when I learned that these efforts really helped. What I did not know
is that there is a formula that converts every contact into a ratio. So each
email, for example, represents 10,000 voters in the state. That makes a big
difference to me. I like knowing that my time and effort is not wasted and that
these seemingly small acts are relevant and can result in changes.
The City of San Diego passed the 2018 budget. It reduced the cuts to San
Diego’s arts and culture funding from 31% to 3.5%. While less than ideal, this
much smaller budget cut is great news for keeping most programs intact and
minimizing job loss. This news comes from Rise Up for the Arts.
PLUS: the Chula Vista City
Council voted unanimously to support a budget compromise that keeps the
city's Cultural Arts program, and other important city programs, intact. The
council’s action averts the potential layoff of 10 – 15 city employees, and
other cutbacks, that would have eliminated the positions of the Cultural Arts
Program Manager, the Marketing and Communications Manager, an Economic Development
Specialist, two Code Enforcement officers and more. Thanks to Patricia Aguilar, Chula Vista
Councilperson for this great update.
PLUS, PLUS: Grants totaling
$15,032,837 have been awarded to various nonprofit organizations statewide this
year by the California Arts Council. A total of 1,076 grantees will
receive state grant funding for their work spanning the Arts Council's 15
unique program categories, benefiting California's students, veterans, arts
educators, at-risk youth, formerly incarcerated individuals, underserved
populations, and communities at large.
PLUS, PLUS, PLUS: it appears that
the NEA and Public Broadcasting will not now be cut if the congress holds
strong on these matters.
At the American for the Arts Conference held in San
Francisco this month, there were many wonderful sessions and they are all
available via their YouTube page. I liked the presentation during Art and Politics in the Trump era by Sofia
Klatzker, Executive Director of
Arts for LA in charge of art
advocacy in Los Angeles. I found her to
do list for local action very concrete. She advocates for each community to
declare an arts day, arts week and then arts month. Get out and do candidate surveys
and post them online and then hold candidate forums in association with the
league of women’s voters. Work to make non-profit art sites into polling places
and add a performance or exhibition on the day. Do briefings about what is occurring
and build local coalitions to mobilize when needed. And most importantly
activate the youth. She has an 8 month training session that culminates with an
advocacy project of their choice. And there is a program where volunteers actually
walk young voters to the polls with slogans like “I matter”.
Finally, we are seeing many artist that are being
activist i.e. artivist. Don’t Shut Up curated by Linda Litteral produced by FIG (founder Anna Stump) is at City Gallery AH314, San Diego City College (1508 C Street, SD 92101) with an opening reception on July 8 from 5 to
8 pm and a panel discussion July 13 from 6 to 8 pm, and an artist talk on July
20 on 5 to 8 pm. Female-led art and activism
focused on raising women’s voices on an assortment of issues is
featured. This exhibition includes an activist quilt featuring 40 blocks from
all over the United States including San Diego. The opening reception will also
feature a political postcard writing station by Lori Lipsman and spoken word performance by poet Stacy Dyson. This event runs until July
26.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Thank you for writing. We read every comment and review it.
Unfortunately, if your comment is anonymous it will not be made public.