Patricia by Patricia

Patricia by Patricia
Patricia by Patricia

Thursday, December 12, 2024

How the Arts in California could be affected by the recent election

Californians for the Arts put on a recent webinar about State of Funding and Legislation for Arts, Culture and Creativity

The most interesting part of this presentation was made by Priscilla Quiroz from Shaw Yoder Antwih Schmelzer & Lange, the advocacy, public affairs and association management firm in Sacramento. Yes, this is a lobbying firm. She was the only one that actually addressed the topic. She pointed out that the democrats still have a super majority in both the CA Senate and Assembly. There are now more women  than ever (58) and coming close to a majority (61 men) in the senate, and there are lots of new members as during this election some of the older members retired or decided to try for higher offices. There is a feeling that a  more moderate approach will be forthcoming and this conclusion is based on the bills that passed and were defeated.

Governor Newson has set aside $25M for the department of justice to fight a variety of national law suits against CA.  He has worked to get that done before the new president is inaugurated. This includes protecting civil right, reproductive freedom, climate action and immigrant families, We in the arts realize this is more than the whole budget of the CA Arts Council but these are important concerns.  

Please note: Even though our state only spends  54 cents per person to support the arts, California made it into the top ten most vibrant art states in the country, but only just at #10. This is ranked by per capita supply, demand and public support for the arts by SMU DataArts. San Diego county ranking in Arts Vibrancy is just above 90%.That means it is higher than 90% of other counties in the USA. Not too bad, but we are brought down by public/government support and the lower numbers employed by the arts indexes.

There was concern that there would be a $60 billion deficit in CA this year, but it turned out to be only $2 billion, so even though there are projections for a $20-$30 deficit next year, that has yet to be determined.

Julie Baker of CA for the Arts then gave us a run down of the state of the arts projects which are numerous. We know there was  lots of federal and state money for recovery and relief from the pandemic with that often being a one -time payment. Now lots of federal funding are stopping. And there are many cuts for example the Cultural District funding went from $30 million down to $10M.(More info: North County Networking Event: Affordable Housing for Artists through Cultural Districts.) The Arts in the Park program went from $25 M to $14m. There is a big need for sustained funding so that the fight for funding does not have to be won over and over again.  (more info: State Funding Proposed Cut for the Arts)

In San Diego County, in particular, the Creative project is called Far South/Border North where artists, cultural practitioners, and organizations implemented 71 campaigns across 20 sectors, from education and healthcare to environment and transportation and various artistic and creative forms, from performing arts, visual arts, and literature to music, film, and media. Their work involved 700 artists, created 940 jobs, and engaged people across 37 zip codes in the region’s most disproportionately impacted communities. It brought awareness to urgent issues shaping our region today – including public health, civic engagement, climate, and social justice. 

The other programs that were discussed included:  Prop 28 arts education, AB812 for artist housing connected to Cultural districts,  individual arts fellowships, SB127 a new workgroup to make a strategic plan for the creative economy, two part of prop 4 #91000 ($20m) and #94000 ($25m) from the Natural Resources Agency.

She ended with the announcement that for the first time the creative arts are being identified as an official strategic sector. This has never happened before.


And finally, Julie Baker talked about  the Californians for the Arts Policy Priorities for 2025/26: i.e. protect, invest, build. 


The two other presenters were concerned with the film industry:

Kerri Wood Einertson, SAG-AFTRA Film Industry  announced that they are asking the CA government to double their tax credit incentive program from $330 to $750M per annum to keep film project in CA.  This needs to happen to stay competitive with the enormous rise in film making throughout the world.

Alex Torres, NIVA CA is a lobbyist for the film industry who discussed the crisis in live entertainment industry's ticketing practices. The secondary sales market has nothing to do with the production of the product, but they making a profit off the industry and not giving anything back to it. There are lots of bills that have been proposed about this issue, some good, most bad, and none have passed. This is a real problem with no known solution yet.

You can watch the entire  video of the presentation.

To read about how the election affect the arts at the national level: And the Pendulum Swings: How the election results of 2024 will affect the arts A+ Art Blog by Patricia Frischer

Friday, November 22, 2024

And the Pendulum Swings: How the election results of 2024 will affect the arts

 By Patricia Frischer


In a zoom webinar in November,  American from the Arts (AFTA) arranged a panel of speakers to try to give us a clearer picture of what the future might mean for the arts post-election. These last days before the end of the year are always called the Lame Duck session, and very little is expected to happen until the handover. The word often used to describe our future is uncertainty.

We know that there was a lower turn out for this election, but Trump did manage a bigger majority. The Republican only have a very slight majority in the House and but now also hold the Senate. This is known as the trifecta and is very powerful. Although cabinet appointments from the house and senate could affect these balances, only time will tell. 

Bill Harperpartner Harper Downing, helped us understand that Trumps may well shift arts funding priorities with major cuts expected:

·       Diversity, Equity and Inclusion policies will be discontinued

·       America’s 250th birthday celebration plans in 2026 will be ramped up. (Maybe a big opportunity for the arts)

·       An emphasis on art programs that reach more rural areas and veterans

·       Even more support of small businesses

·       More individuals will be helped by the arts, especially those loyal to Trump.

David Reed, Policy Director Brownstein,  tacked the subject of the Reconciliation process: this is a special way to fast track certain budget legislation in the Senate by enabling just majority (instead of a 60-vote supermajority) for budget issues only with no filibuster from the Senate allowed.  Reconciliation cannot affect the NEA which is discretionary funding. But caps could be put on spending and tax reduction in general could ultimately affect the arts. Then there is Schedule F, which is a way to fire civil servants and gov appointed positions, and that could undermine the arts. Good news is that tax deductions for charity donation might come back for non-itemizers.

Americans for the Arts sees the Republican strategy as one to raise disruption where ever possible. But we all know the government could strive for more efficiency.  There will probably be work force reduction and re-locations, and a mandate to come back to in person office work but with a smaller government.  Some describe this a death by a thousand cuts. Time will tell as the civil service is a well organized body that goes through political and appointed leadership changes over and over.

There was then a presentation of the new members and the old guard that are supporters of the arts in the House and Senate by Tooshar Swain, Public Policy Director AFTA, and Olivia Tarpley., Public Policy Manager AFTA,  There was a lose of some key champions for the arts and lots of unknowns. But the bipartisan Senate Cultural Caucus leadership is still very strong with Susan Collins (R Maine) and David Reed (D Rhode Island) and House Art Caucus  with Mike Turner (R Ohio)  and Chellie Pingree (D Maine) with good track records.

When it comes to Governors and Mayors, although there were changes, the balance stayed about the same and almost equal. There are just a few more split legislatures. Split legislatures made for good government in general so that may be a good sign.

You have to remember that the local not federal agencies are the largest funders for the arts. But there was speculation that if the NEA was somehow eliminated, then those states that gave matching funds to the NEA might also stop their funding. Good news is that the few ballot initiatives for funding the arts around the county did pass, although AFTA did say it was hard to track this information. If you know of any others, please contact jay@artsusa.org.

Finally there was a strong please for extra support through advocacy and engagement.

Here is the link to see the Webinar slide show yourself:  https://www.americansforthearts.org/advocate/2024-post-election-webinar-impact-on-the-arts

The webinar  can be viewed here:  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_pWLz8e73eg&t=8s

Here is the link to add your support: https://www.artsactionfund.org/arts-action-center?vvsrc=/campaigns/119049/respond

The is the link to the June AFTA conference in Ohio: https://afta2025convention.org/

If you want to know more specifics about California then The State of Funding and Legislation for Arts, Culture & Creativity in California is on Dec 11 at noon PT presented by Californian for the Arts. With the 2024 election, more than 25% of the CA legislature is new, Federal Funding resources are increasingly uncertain and the California state budget remains unstable.

There is a further Americans for the Arts Webinar on Jan 22 at noon PT: Advocacy 101: Introduction to the new 119th Congress


Monday, October 21, 2024

Carol Rogers: How the Arts helped me find community



This month I am dedicating the A+ Art Blog to
Carol Rogers who gave a TedX talk in Escondido about her volunteer efforts in October this year. 


Her very impressive list of volunteer associations include:
Museums and Arts Growing Escondido Culture (MAGEC) Co-founder and Facilitator since 2016 
Escondido Downtown Business Association, Board Member  from 2019 
Esco Alley Art – Founding committee member in 2021
Escondido Public Art Commission newly elected Chair but committee member since 2023
Escondido Community Foundation Board Member 2024


Carol Rogers is a also a new board member of the North County Arts Network  where she is on the Government support committee which advocates for paid arts administrations in all cities.

She is dedicated to bringing more attention to the arts in her community.  Enjoy the talk below. 

 

Friday, August 30, 2024

The First City of San Diego Cultural Plan

 


The City of San Diego draft  Cultural Arts Master Plan has been released.  This is the first ever cultural plan for the city of SD and was led by Jonathon Glus over the last 18 months. The plan outlines four main goals, each with specific strategies and actions:

1. 
Centering Artists: Support artists and cultural organizations through affordable spaces, expanded funding, and capacity building.
2. Arts in Community: Increase access to arts and culture throughout the city, with a focus on historically under-resourced areas.
3. Creative Entrepreneurship: Foster growth of the creative economy through business support, workforce development, and industry partnerships.
4. Global Creative City: Elevate San Diego’s profile as an international hub for arts, culture and creativity. 

Some of the strategies we appreciate include:

Expand San Diego’s branding image to incorporate the arts, culture and creativity.

Create a formal designation and support program for arts and cultural districts and creative enterprise zones.

Expand funding available for individual artists and Create artists fellowships or residencies

Facilitate targeted convenings,

Streamline procurement and contracting processes

Expand existing “culture pass” programs leading to free access

Julie Dixon Evans from KPBS adds to that list with the following strategies for funding: “The "Penny for the Arts" policy, which allocates 9.52% of Tourism Occupancy Tax revenue to art and culture; research and development of an "admissions fee" for public/private entertainment and sporting events; a foundation to lead funding efforts; …partnerships with the specific goal of affordable housing for artists and affordable creative spaces…”.

All of this calls for more staffing positions besides coordination with Park and Rec and Libraries. There were lots of convening with the Commission , staff and with the public to complete this document and recommendations are still be accepted.  It is hoped that the plan called Creative City will be approved by the City Council early in 2025. 

Both Carlsbad and Oceanside  have an approved up to date arts master plans and Encinitas has had one percolating for years. We would like to see all cities set these goals and have strategies to achieve them. 

Don't miss the Creative City Open House on Sept. 7, 2024, at the Comic-Con Museum from 9 a.m. to noon to learn about the cultural planning process. Mayor Todd Gloria will kick things off with opening remarks and an overview of the draft cultural plan. The remainder of the morning will be organized around informal conversations about the draft recommendations where you can share input on the draft plan. Event details are available at sdcreativecity.com under Get Involved

A little reminder, the  City of SD Arts and Culture and Community Festivals Funding Program is now open until Sept 13. 



Thursday, August 8, 2024

Arts Prescriptions

 


The four-part series of Arts and Health Webinar is presented by California for the Arts. The first one I am reporting on is Health Benefits of Arts Engagement and the Importance of Involving Community Organizations in Research.

Please note: It was important for me to understand the difference between Arts Prescribing and Social Prescribing. Jill Sonke answered my question as she explained in her text to me that there are five areas of social prescribing:  Arts & Culture, Heritage, Nature, and Physical Activity. Much of the webinar includes all these areas, but I tried to concentrate on Arts and Culture, naturally.

The poet Ivory Rose set the stage for this discussion on Social Prescribing with a specially commission work. Bringing a little art into this talking head event was appreciated.

Alan Seigal  runs  the website Social Prescribing USA  which has a mission to make social prescribing available to every American by 2035. He divided the needs into crisis areas, Mental Health, Aging, Health Care,  and Civic Capitol.  


Art Prescribing can improve all these areas by reducing anxiety, depression, PTSD, blood pressure, diabetes. By bolstering immune system, improving brain cognition, managing pain, improving fine motor skills and coordination, developing empathy, boasting confidence and identity, improving memory, increasing civic engagement and social tolerance, lessen loneliness while increasing inclusion.

There are no side-affects with an art prescription. It is cheaper than meds and has the extra benefit of dealing with many inequality issues.

The plan is you still to go to your GP who refers you to a social prescribing service and they then assess and direct you to the best possible prescribing services by asking questions like: What matters to you?  What brings you joy and meaning?

Seigal pointed out that in the beginning using the existing health system  is prudent as that is where the money is now. But in the future, any trained person might advise am art prescription.



Jill Sonke  area is research. You need evidence-based policies if you are going to drive investment. She thinks we are on the cusp of that happening in the next five years. Thirty countries already use social prescription, lead mainly by the British. But there are 40 pilot projects in the USA and out of 23 studies, 17 are for art prescribing. The next steps are public awareness. Art Prescription Field Guild can help with that.



Although we don’t know what form this will take in the USA, system outcomes show that we gain in health equity, return on investment, health system cost savings to name just some of the areas being explored. The studies already show that older adults have 20% less chance of being depressed if they engage in one art activity a month. This art for health push will impact all the arts ultimately to increase participation.

Christina Eskridge gave the last presentation. She started the Elevate Theater Company to combine her interest in the art with training in health. They aim to create space for audiences and artists to explore health and well-being through the art of storytelling. She is also on the board of  Arts for EveryBody a  national  data gathering project. Take the survey to help them fulfill their mission.




During the presentation there were a number of organizations mentioned that have been working in this field. NOAP National Organization in Arts in Health is the grandfather of these but all the links above plus the recent  CA Art and Health Summit 2024 will be a real education for those wanting to know more.

P.S Don’t forget our own SD based Prebys Foundation Local Healing through the Arts and Nature Initiatives giving grants in this field.


Part 2: Strategies for Innovative Funding & Partnerships in Arts & Health Initiatives  was August 21 and billed as a chance to learn about diverse strategies to secure creative funding and form impactful partnerships that are driving meaningful change. 

I was only able to hear Elizabeth Markle, PhD, Co-Founder/Executive Director from  OpenSource Wellness. Her group set up a program with only experiential workshops. Each one is geared to the people present as there is no set program, But the concept is that the way forward is 1. Movement i.e. exercise, 2. Nourish i.e. diet,  3. Connect i.e. community, 4. Be i.e Stress reduction. The arts can fit into all these categories. They already have proof of concept which has helps with funding. Their clients has experienced a drop in emergency visit, lower blood pressure, and a better rate of consuming fruits and vegetables.  They have been so successful that they had to decide whether to spread the program nationwide, or become  trainers to the trainers. Knowing how important local contacts are in the process the chose the education route of Health and Wellness trainers.  They have been using the YMCA for this project development. I loved her description of how to raise money to support all these efforts: Braided funding i.e. interwoven at all levels. 



 

In the third seminar on September 4th: Exploring Workforce Development for Arts & Health Initiatives  we learned more about efforts in Scotland and Chicago but the info presented by Ping Ho for the Arts and Healing Initiative was the most stimulating and most local as it is out of LA.    There program SEA (Social and Emotional Arts) was clear and repeatable with lots of information on their website. There are one day workshops and certificate programs. They not only train the trainers but have expanded to train some of the youth to become leaders. None of the pilot and developed programs have yet cracked the insurance payment hurdle, but the data now being gathered some certainly help to push that forward. 



In the fourth and last seminar on Advocacy and Public Policy for Arts and Health Initiatives

Julie Baker from California for the Arts gave the steps to take for an advocacy for Art Prescriptions using the messaging Artist are the Second Responder. Legislature created to make April Arts and Culture month using that message to re-enforce that artists are essential. CAC has made health one of the 7 priorities of the organization. In 2024, introducing AB2250 to get insurance to pay for screening of art as a social determinant of health.  

Steps for advocacy:
Plan your campaign
Create Awareness
Generate Engagement
Encourage Action
Sustain Momentum


So one last suggestion for everyone reading this: Start to talk up Art Prescriptions so we create a buzz on this subject. 

Of course, it is best for you to watch the sessions for yourself. Here are the videos below:

Session One


Session 2
 
Session 3
 

Session 4

Saturday, July 27, 2024

What is your vision? What is your passion?

 


In the last few years, I have seen proof that if you have a vision and group together with like minded people, there is a distinct possibility that vision will come to be.  I have a list of those dreams like; the San Diego Visual Arts Network, the San Diego Art Prize, the  SD County Commission for Arts and Culture, and the Pacific View Art Center. They are all realities now.

Recently I realized that I have some new visions:

The county wide Arts and Culture Tourism Agency.

A cultural district designation for all the cities in our county.

Paid full time art administrators in our all cities.

A push to have Art Prescriptions issued by doctors and paid for by insurance companies

A line items for all the school district budgets adding transportation for arts and culture field trips.

Affordable housing for artists.

I am not saying I will personally be working on all of these ideas, but I do love to plant seeds in fertile ground. So maybe not in my life time, but maybe for the good of the arts community, some of these visions will come true.

Do you have a vision for arts and culture in San Diego?  Advocacy is all about putting our voices together.  I would love to hear your voice.

Wednesday, June 19, 2024

Patricia Frischer State of the Arts Advocacy, LIFE Lecture

 



In this hour lecture, you can learn about all the Advocacy issues that are currently affecting the arts in the county of San Diego. There is also a presentation of some of the visual arts exhibitions on view in SD for the summer and fall of 2024. This is presented by Patricia Frischer coordinator/founder of the San Diego Visual ArtsNetwork and Interim Chairman of North County Arts Network. The lecture was video tapped at MiraCosta College in Oceanside by the LIFE Organization.

Advocacy issues covered are: 

  • Civic Arts
  • Public Arts
  • Affordable Housing for Arts through Cultural District
  • Government Funding
Exhibitions areas covered are: 
  • In North County Now
  • In Central San Diego Now
  • In the whole county for the summer
  • Future exhibitions to watch for in the fall
There is a particularly interesting question and answer period at the end of the lecture not to be missed. 


Friday, May 24, 2024

State Funding Proposed Cut for the Arts

Our own Rosemary KimBal working to save the cuts
during her visit to Sacramento, CA.


Breaking new: Arts Advocates released the following statements after the legislature agreed to restore 75 percent of the recent cuts announced by Gov. Gavin Newsom. Yesterday, Speaker Rivas and Pro Tem McGuire announced an agreement on a legislative budget that restores $12.5 million in funding for the Equitable Payroll Fund and $5 million to the CAC.

Newsom
 had announced fully cutting the state’s innovative Performing Arts Equitable Payroll Fund ($12.5 million), plus a reduction of 38% in state grant funding for small arts nonprofits through the California Arts Council (CAC) on May 10 when he released his May Revised budget proposal.


The California Arts Council (CAC) has been in the news recently because of possible 58% cuts in the budget of the organization. This was fully discussed at a public meeting on Friday, May 24 from noon to 4…yes four hours. Here are some of the highlights.

The CAC seems to be against the recently proposed possibility of being relocated within the Governor’s Office of Business and Economic Development. (GoBiz) They want more information and want to remain independent.

There has been no great explanation of why the move is proposed except to consolidate expenses and a slight possible suggestion that this office would give a higher profile to the CAC. This umbrella organization has other commissions, but the only other arts one is the Film Commission. It was stated that the CAC vision and mission would not be changed.

If this move does happen, then having the budget cut at the same time seems counter intuitive. Being acknowledged as part of economic development, then why would the arts not get more funding instead of less?

Right now, CAC is an independent council and it is much more than just an economic driver. There are health, education, and health benefits. Becoming part of the Office of Business and Economic Development adds another layer of administration that might slow down all the effectiveness of the organization. So, the majority of the council stated that the move has to be researched more and should not a quick decision especially without the input of the Council itself.  

Please note that the new San Diego County Commission for Arts and Culture  is also under a business and economic development department here in our own county.   

The cuts to the budget that are proposed are $10M reduction in Local Assistance (grant programs) plus a state wide cut of 7.9% for all administration cost.

The past budget was $27m with $10m taken away and a commitment is already made for $6M for General operating grants, that leaves only $4m for new grants.

There was a committee formed on the request of the state staff to make suggestion of how to deal with this $10M loss. These kind of policy decisions are made with rigorous regard to equity.

The suggestion was that general operating funds (GEN) grants will be closed for Tier 2 and 3 (i.e. organization with budgets $250K to $1.5M). Only tier one grants will be considered.

Instead, application for other types of grants will have the deadline extended from June 6 to June 20. This is the give time for those who had submitted GEN grant in tier 2 and 3 be able to rewrite them (with aid and guidance from CAC) to other needs and programs.

There was large public input from many arts organizations in person in LA (where this meeting of the CAC) was held and online. Many just cried loudly for the cuts not to be made. But the best one recommended not to make it easy for the cuts to happen by accommodating those cuts!

So, when the CAC had to vote on the proposal to stop funding tier 2 and 3, they voted 4 for and 4 against which means there was not a majority so the proposal did not pass. Because it did not pass, they could not vote on the extension of timing on the grants.

I believe the issue is now in the hands of those who will urge for no cuts to the arts directly to the Governor. We will now have to be turning to CA for the Arts for more information on advocating.  Hopefully, our own SD Art Matters  will be a leader for our county as they our regional arts advocacy organization. 

Our own Rosemary KimBal working to save the cuts during her visit to Sacramento, CA.


Thursday, April 18, 2024

Public Art: A cry from the heart.

 

Luminescent Flora by Deanne Sabeck.

The Encinitas City Council approved two of Deanne Sabeck's glass and metal sculptures in a meeting at the beginning of April. One will go at the entrance to Oakcrest Park at 1219 Encinitas Blvd and the other at the southeast corner of Newcastle Avenue and Liverpool Drive in Cardiff by the Sea, across the street from the Cardiff Library. Both of these works, that were presented anonymously to the public, got very high ratings. Another sculpture by Peter Mitten was accepted for placement at the new Pacific View Arts Center that will open later this year as well as Bunny Serenade by Adrian Litman for the pad at Little Oaks Equestrian Park in Olivenhain on Lone Jack Road. 

But two other sites will remain empty. The Encinitas Commission for Arts and Culture chose other art works for these sites taking into consideration the public comments and ratings, but the council deemed to decide for what might be personal reasons, that these artists were not suitable, ignoring the recommendation of their professional body of experts.

This is not an isolated problem. Cities with no art master plans and cities with no coherent public art plan often run into divided opinions about how art in the public realm should be chosen and funded. We have seen examples of how major works of art by renowned creators are turned away by  cautious politicians who are out of their league when judging art. The latest fiasco was in Del Mar when the Isamu Noguchi’s sculpture worth half a million dollars was rejected.

Buying, renting and accepting donated art works is a complicated puzzle. This entails making sure that the artists are qualified, that the proposed work is appropriate, and that the budget is acceptable.  Outreach to the public for preference and advice of experts has to be considered. Contracts have to be drawn up and having the ability to work with artists and architects for completing the creation, siting the work, and then lighting it and maintaining it are all considerations. Remembering that art can be vandalized plays a part in the decision.  The County and City of San Diego both have mandates for including a percentage of new construction and larger renovation budgets for art. But working with non-profits to purchase works is also an option.

There are solid public art policies already created by other major cities so there is no real need to re-invent the wheel in for public art. Luckily, we now have a new San Diego County Arts and Culture Commission which has already started to make recommendations on revising the public art policy county wide.  Hopefully those new policies will trickle down and be seen to be best practices by all the cities in our county.

Those of us in the arts spend all of our lives looking at art and have a finely honed sense of authenticity. That expertise is power and can be used for the good of the community. We listen to health authorities and so please, in the arts, acknowledge that expertise in the same way. 

We are also respectful of the efforts of artists who are an extremely important resource for our communities. They not only bring aesthetic beauty and challenging concepts, but economic growth and prosperity into our lives.  

Finally, we are not opposed to the public having input on public art for their community. But this needs to be at the beginning of the process so that it can be incorporated in the call for artists proposals. Let the art professional make the final selections and set policy.

Friday, March 15, 2024

Affordable Housing for Artists in your Cultural Districts Plus Women of Impact

Assemblymember Tasha Boerner, 77th District AB 812 PRO-ARTIST AFFORDABLE HOUSING

The new AB 812 bill approved Oct 11 by the governor and authored by Tasha Boerner allows cities and/or counties to give up to 10% of its very low, low, or moderate-income housing to eligible artists as long as they are within one-half mile from a state-designated cultural district or within a locally designated cultural district if certain income and occupation conditions are met.

We asked Edwin Borbon, Legislative Director for the office of Assemblymember Tasha Boerner to clarify a number of questions we had.  He gave me a very complete explanation which helped me understand so much more clearly about AB 812. We think this is valuable information especially as it clarifies that any city can designate a cultural district. This does not have to be a state designation. And that any city that wants to avail themselves of having artists present in their low income housing projects, a known way to elevate the value of the area, can avail themselves of this 10% advantage.

From Mr. Borbon, “The way it works in practice, is if a city or county has a state or locally designated cultural district, under AB 812, the local government would first have to pass a local tenant preference ordinance for artists within the boundaries of a locally designated cultural district, or within one half-mile from a state designated cultural district. Any deed restricted housing that is within those boundaries and is under the purview of the local govt, either existing affordable developments or future developments, would qualify for the 10% set-aside for artists.”

Yes, the city has to pass a local tenant preference ordinance for artist.  

“The local govt and housing development property management would work together to create an Artist Selection Committee that would create a process for artists preference criteria such as demonstrating consistent participation in a creative art through contributions to their field, a resume describing their art experience and/or education, and samples of recent work. The Artist Selection Committee will be made up of artists of diverse disciplines and backgrounds.”

The property management company will receive applications for the artist preference, as well as the traditional housing application. The property manager will then redact private information from the arts preference application and set it aside for the Artist Selection Committee. These artistic works will not be judged on content, but rather simply in support of qualifying the applicant as an artist. Artists who meet income limits will be offered an opportunity to live in the affordable housing development.”

Yes, the city has to create not only an artist application, but also an artists Selection Committee.  This is not based on the content of the art.

The income qualifications must match the income levels for the affordable housing development so they still have to meet the same income thresholds as all the other residents. When it comes to the eligibility criteria, the income levels for affordable housing are outlined in state statute (as defined in Sections 50079.5, 50093, 50105, and 50106 of the Health and Safety Code), the occupational conditions would be determined by the local city and property management company of the affordable housing development.”

No, the artist do not have different income requirement. But up to 10% of the housing can be given to qualifying artists.

We in the art world who have been pushing for more affordable housing for artists should be thrilled with this bill and grateful to Tasha Boerner. Now it is up to the cities in our county to move forward.  



Patricia Frischer was chosen as a Woman of Impact for Arts and Culture by Tasha Boerner. Below is the utube of the speeches for that presentation. Skip ahead to minute 18 for my arts and culture presentation.  And don't miss the tear inducing one by Dr. Ayana Boyd King at minute 29. It was a super inspiring afternoon.  





All the award recipients! Left to right: Staff Sergeant Debora Rodriguez Caryn Blanton, Dr. Ayana Boyd King, Andrea Schlageter, Dt. Danielle Haulsee, Assemblymember Distict #77 Tasha Boerner, Denise Friedman,  Dana Bristol-Smith, Patricia Frischer, Gaby B. Love,  Bella Villarin.


Text of Speech by Patricia Frischer, founder, San Diego Visual Arts Network

I was born in Kansas City but arrived here from London 27 years ago. I could find no directory for the arts.  That is why created the San Diego Visual Arts Network now listing 2500 visual arts resources from Fallbrook in the north to and including Baja Norte. We have a full events calendar, a gossip column (cause who doesn’t want the inside scoop), reports on Art exhibitions and advocacy issues.    

We have curated many large visual arts projects like the Movers and Shaker… 90 Art VIPs…. not one turned down the chance to have their portrait created and the DNA of Creativity with 5 teams of artists, scientists, teachers and documenters …a magnificent exhibition at OMA.

We are most proud of the SD Art Prize, our ongoing award for excellence in its 17th year. Watch for it at the SD History Center in Balboa Park in the fall. 

We are delighted to have played a part in the reforming of the SD County Wide Commission for arts and culture which we stumped for…it took 15 years and is announcing its brand-new strategic plan in April which is arts and culture month in the state of CA.  

Thank you so much for this honor which recognizes the $1.4 billion dollar arts and culture industry.  This is our huge economic impact on employment and tourism. Kudos to Tasher Boerner for creating the AB812 which mandates affordable housing for artists near cultural districts.  Every city should have a designated cultural district.   

How do we do this with no bricks and mortar, and no paid staff? No, I am not the little women behind the curtain AKA the wizard of OZ. It is done with a ton of volunteers and community involvement, friends and family, county and private foundations. 

We believe that the San Diego Visual Arts Network is a powerful force to connect Art to People and People to Art

We believe that artists serve as interpreters, explorers, and creators of the great unknown 

We believe your life is an artwork, a mess, a makeover and magnificent 

We believe most of all that Art Builds Community.

Congratulation to all the ladies receiving this impact award. I am honored to be one amongst many.