UPDATE from Norma P. Munn, Chairperson
PROPOSED ADDITIONAL CUTS TO STATE COUNCIL ON THE ARTS
Governor Paterson will include a proposed $7.2 million cut to the State
Council on the Arts in the list of possible cuts that he is announcing at
his 11:30 press conference.
Governor Paterson is providing the proposed list to the State Legislature as
it starts its special session November 18. That special session is to deal
with the additional $1.5 billion deficit in the current fiscal year. The 6%
cut ($2.6 million) from a few weeks ago was designed to deal with the
earlier projected state deficit, which has now grown considerably.
NYSCA had on hand roughly $8 million in uncontracted funds after the 6% cut
a few weeks ago. Obviously an additional $7 million cut leaves almost
nothing for the applicants who had grants under consideration for the
October and December Council meetings. (FYI, October Council meeting was
postponed for those who might not be aware of it)
This is a list of possible cuts. The legislature can (1) do nothing and
leave the problem to the GovernorŐs hands, or (2) change the list by coming
up with other cuts and taking some things off the list, or (3) pass the
proposed list as presented.
If the legislature does nothing, it is usually within the power of a
Governor to simply not spend money and thereby make the cuts happen.
My understanding is that the list from Governor Paterson contains some
fairly severe cuts to social service programs, as well as other areas, such
as education, that will make it very hard for the arts to make a case that
NYSCA should not be cut. Bluntly put, we will not avoid some kind of cut,
but this cut would pretty much out NYSCA Ôs funds, which I am pretty sure is
a more severe impact than on other agencies. The two cuts together also
equal about 20% of NYSCAŐs entire appropriation for grants.
ACTION TO TAKE:
Everyone should do the following quickly:
(1) Contact the GovernorŐs office and object to the size of the proposed
cut, and pointing out that it pretty much eliminated the last half of the
yearŐs funding for applicants at NYSCA, and that NYSCA is now taking a 20%
cut. (Faxed letters are best, but email is better than doing nothing. Phone
calls are least effective, but if you can organize a lot of them and feel
like doing it, go ahead. In short, protest politely, but firmly. (Phone:
518-474-8390; Fax 518-474-1513. No direct email. Go to
http://161.11.121.121/govemail where you can sign on to send an email.)
(2) Contact your State Assembly and State Senator and let them know how this
impacts on you. Again, you should also point out the size of this potential
cut and impact on the agency. Letters are best, but if you know the person
or can talk directly to their Chief of Staff or budget person, a phone call
is OK. Email is not a good idea. There will not be enough of it in most
offices to make an impact. (And get your Board to do something, please.)
Ask the Assembly and Senate members to decrease the proposed cut
significantly. DonŐt get dragged into a conversation about how much, if you
can avoid it. There is no right number, so trying to come up with one is
pointless. You might consider suggesting that waste in government be
eliminated before they go after funds for organizations that squeeze every
penny.
Norma P. Munn
Chairperson
New York City Arts Coalition