Showing posts with label Georgia Council for the Arts. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Georgia Council for the Arts. Show all posts

Friday, April 23, 2010

Update: Georgia Council for the Arts




The full Georgia Senate voted to approve the Appropriation Committee’s recommendation, which includes restoring $890,735 to the Georgia Council for the Arts. This will save the GCA and allow the agency to match its federal grant and retain its regional funding. Differences between the House and the Senate’s budgets must be reconciled by a Conference Committee made up of equal members of both bodies before the final budget can be sent to the Governor for approval.

Image: ArtsCriticATL.com

Wednesday, April 21, 2010

Georgia Senate may rescue the Georgia Council for the Arts



The Georgia Council for the Arts can breathe a little easier. The Senate Appropriations Committee has decided to restore Governor Sonny Perdue’s budget recommendation of $890, 735 for the GCA. This amount is already down from the current budget of $2.52 million, making the GCA one of the most under-funded councils in the nation. Pending a vote of the full Senate, the budget will allow the Council to remain intact and match its federal funding.

This will come as a relief to many who feared that the elimination of the GCA would jeopardize funds allocated by the National Endowment for the Arts. These fears stemmed from the budget passed by the Georgia House on Wednesday. In it, the House calls for the elimination of the GCA, which would make Georgia the only state in the U.S. without an arts agency. Granting funds of nearly $250,000 would then be transferred to the Georgia Department of Community Affairs for administration.

Concerned members of the NEA worry that if the House’s version of the budget were to pass, the Department of Community Affairs would not be able to uphold the NEA Partnership Agreement. According to the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, this agreement requires, among other things, that the “administrating agency be able to implement an NEA-approved state arts plan, make fair funding decisions that consider artistic excellence and merit ‘primarily through a panel process,’ and make the arts accessible to neglected communities” as well as provide a dollar-for-dollar match in state government funding.


Image: City of Atlanta Online