This
past week it looked like a window for more Pinellas County funding for the Arts
may be opening.
Creative Pinellas, the county-funded arts agency, is seeking $300,000 a
year to promote the arts and to fund local artists and programs for the next
three years.
You can read more in
Steven Girardi article in the St. Pete
Tribune Pinellas
leaders see value of arts, seek more information.
County funding for the arts dried
up when the County Office of Cultural Affairs was shuttered five years ago in
the midst of the financial downturn.
This is the moment when the arts
community should be fully prepared with a program and details. County
Commissioners want to know where and how any funding increase will be spent.
Publically funded arts programs
have a tendency to become cliquish. A broadly based program and accountability
for how public art funds are actually spent is a necessity.
The $300,000 is a reasonable sum
if Creative Pinellas can produce a plan with sufficient detail to make
Commissioners feel comfortable. Beginning with a modest working budget line item
in the new budget, the arts community should be encouraged to return in the
next budget cycle to report on their success and the County Commission should
be open to additional funding.
The County Commission should avoid
throwing a ton of money at the Arts only to be disappointed when the outcomes don't
meet expectations or controversy arises over the program.
In St.Pete they have begun to
realize throwing money at arts programs and using public funds to support
individual artist or groups of artists does not produce a sustainable arts
community.
The St. Petersburg approach to the
arts community is one the County should consider. St. Petersburg is moving
toward a sustainability model which brings customers to buy local art to
support its growing arts community.
You can read about the Saint
Petersburg approach in my six Post series A
Casual Conversation with Wayne Atherholt St. Petersburg's Director of Cultural
Affairs .
For now it looks like the County
Commission is poised to renew its commitment to the arts and they should.
The Arts community should also realize that
what comes from the public trough can just as easily disappear as it did 5
years ago. Moving from subsidy to sustainability is a model the arts community
should embrace.
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