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Missouri Increases State Funding For The Arts

Brittany Tutt
/
Chillicothe Constitution-Tribune

The Missouri Arts Council, which funnels money to arts organizations around the state, will see an increase of $1.2 million for fiscal year 2017. That will put MAC’s state funding at $6 million, up from $4.8 million. It’s the first increase in several years, says the organization’s executive director, Michael Donovan.

"We're grateful that governor and legislators recognize the value of arts to the state," Donovan says. "There was a lot of strong advocacy from arts organizations," he adds, noting that more than 1,000 letters were sent to the governor's office through a campaign led by Missouri Citizens for the Arts.

This year’s increase doesn't necessarily reflect greater enthusiasm in the legislature for public funding of the arts, however.

The Missouri Arts Council is funded through an income tax on professional artists and entertainers who visit the state to play and perform. (It also receives money from the National Endowment for the Arts.)

What’s known as the Non-resident Athletes and Entertainers Tax generates significant revenue – an estimated $40 million this fiscal year. According to state law, MAC is supposed to receive 60 percent of those dollars – which would be about $24 million this year. But the General Assembly has funneled most of it to pay for other things, leaving MAC with this year’s $6 million. (In 2015, KCUR followed Kansas City arts leaders to Jefferson City, where they unsuccessfully asked lawmakers to fully fund the Cultural Trust.)

“We’re getting about 25 percent of what the statute suggests that we should be getting,” Donovan says.

In recent years, Donovan says, the legislature had asked MAC to spend down the balance in an account known as the Cultural Trust, which holds the revenues from the Athletes and Entertainers Tax.

“We were spending money out of the Cultural Trust and continued to do that until this year, when the balance of the trust money was less than 1 percent,” Donovan says. The additional funding this year, he says, was a result of “recognition that we had done what they’d asked us to do, followed governor’s recommendation.”

And, Donovan says, state funding for the arts hasn’t kept pace with growth in the Athletes and Entertainers Tax revenues.

“Our funding from the state had been level for the last three years, but we had fewer dollars each year due to the fact that we were spending down the Cultural Trust as required by the legislature,” Donovan says. “So our funding was going down, our costs were going up, and the non-resident athletes and entertainers’ tax had gone up dramatically. It doubled in the last ten years.”

Still, he says, this year’s increase will make a difference for arts organizations throughout the state.

“We’re going to be able to make sure that the arts are available throughout the state, both in rural and metropolitan areas. We know there’s a lot of art in Kansas City and St. Louis, but we’re increasingly able to get into the rural areas in outstate Missouri.”

Editor's note: KCUR receives some funding from the Missouri Arts Council.

C.J. Janovy is an arts reporter for KCUR. Follow her on Twitter, @cjjanovy.

A free press is among our country’s founding principles and most precious resources. As director of content-journalism at KCUR, I want everyone in our part of America to know we see them and we’re listening. I work to make sure the stories we tell and the conversations we convene reflect our complex realities, informing and inspiring all of us to meet the profound challenges of our time. Email me at cj@kcur.org.
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