Arts festival art by Elaina's Blueprint, http://www.flickr.com/photos/elainasblueprint/1340129798/
Is funding for the arts going to decimated by ALL of the budget cut scenarios Mayor Quan is proposing today? With talk about tough cuts and ugly choices, it seems possible. In advance of the budget being released, a group of arts organizers and leaders in Oakland who are part of the Funding Advisory Committee (FAC) to the Oakland Cultural Affairs Commission have prepared an open letter to Mayor Quan and team they are sharing widely (feel free to repost with credit). Here's the letter, hot off the presses:
Dear Mayor Quan,
Did you know there are 207 non-profit arts organizations in Oakland?
Did you know that each year these organizations earn and spend $74 million dollars right here in Oakland?
Did you know that the City’s General Fund investment of $725,126 in FY10-11 cultural funding has attracted more than $5 million in funding from outside Oakland in the last 2 years alone?
Yes, we know you did!
To support this dynamic and diverse arts community, and to sustain the high levels of economic activity that the arts deliver to Oakland, we hope that in your upcoming budget you will include robust support for:
Our job on the Funding Advisory Committee (FAC) to the Oakland Cultural Affairs Commission is to inform the City’s efforts to support Oakland’s artists, arts educators and arts organizations. As we conduct our work we see how resourceful, ingenious and inspired the city’s arts community is.
We know that every dollar invested in the arts sector drives consumers to spend money at restaurants, hotels, and parking garages, and that every dollar is leveraged to raise more funds to pay artists and the salaries of arts workers.
We also know that every hour of compensated work is doubled and tripled by thousands of unpaid hours of community service to enrich Oakland with a vibrant arts scene. We ourselves serve on the FAC as volunteers.
We are private arts funders, representatives of Bay Area local arts agencies, arts educators and arts organization leaders, and artists ourselves. If we know anything, it is that nobody gets into the arts for the money.
And yet, Oakland’s reputation as national arts leader and the contributions, artistic and economic, that the arts community makes have real value. The value is measured in the lives changed by art teachers working with youth in and out of schools and with seniors to give voice to their life stories. It’s measured in thousands of Oakland citizens coming together to sing in choruses and to dance at festivals; in the thousands more who smile for a moment each day when they encounter a painting in a gallery or walk past a mural, a statue, or an arts installation outside.
And of course the arts –unlike any other department in the City– have the power to inspire individuals and to connect communities.
We know there are no easy choices when it comes to managing this year’s budget, but we hope you’ll recognize the vital role the arts play in attracting financial and human capital to Oakland, and include robust support for the City’s Cultural Funding staff and programs.
Sincerely,
Khan Wong, Marc Vogl Co-Chairs
Ebony McKinney, Suki O’Kane, Ted Russell, Nives Wetzel de Cediel, Committee Members
The Funding Advisory Committee to the Oakland Cultural Affairs Commission
cc: Sabrina Landreth, Budget Director, Office of the Mayor
Richard Cowan, Special Assistant to the Mayor for Boards and Commissions.
Lamont Ewell, Interim City Administrator
Samee Roberts, Cultural Arts & Marketing Manager
Steven Huss, Cultural Arts Manager
Nicole Neditch, Acting Cultural Funding Coordinator