A Rundown of Arts & Culture in Pennsylvania's Initial FY2010 Budget

Pennsylvania’s FY2010 budget had some good news and some bad news for the Commonwealth’s cultural community.
   


 
The Arts Tax
  A plan first announced on Friday, September 18, 2009 to extend the state’s sales tax (7% in Allegheny county, 8% in Philadelphia county, and 6% elsewhere across the state) to include arts, culture, and entertainment was met with vigorous opposition by cultural advocates statewide. This proposal, an effort by lawmakers to generate an additional $100-120 million in revenue, was defeated with the PA House’s passage of revenue bill 1531 on Wednesday, October 7, subsequently passed by the Senate and currently awaiting the Governor’s final approval. House Bill 1531 does not contain the “arts tax,” a major victory for the state’s cultural community.
   
Executive Offices
 

The Pennsylvania Council on the Arts (PCA), will see its administrative funding fall from $1.3 million to $992,000 (-24%) and its Grants to the Arts funding drop from $15.2 million to $11 million (-28%). PCA’s Grants to the Arts appropriation, which reached a height of $15.4 million in FY2002, will be at its lowest level in a decade.

A new line item, “Cultural Preservation Grants,” appears in the Executive Offices in FY2010. It contains funding for nine museums previously supported via line items under the Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission (see “Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission” section below for further explanation). The Cultural Preservation Grants appropriation of $3.1 million in FY2010 will support those museums, the Heinz History Center, and other cultural organizations to be determined.

Support for Public Television will also drop, from $8 million to $1 million (-88%). This funding supports a network of eight public broadcasting companies across Pennsylvania, including WHYY and MiND Media (WYBE).

   
Department of Community and Economic Development (DCED)
 

There are at least six lines in DCED that impact arts and culture. All have been cut in FY2010. Cultural Expositions and Exhibitions, Marketing to Attract Film Business, Film Grant Program, and Cultural Activities have all been zeroed out. These lines were previously funded at $6.3 million (FY2009), $576,000 (FY2009), $5 million (FY2008), and $3.8 million (FY2009), respectively.

Support for Zoos, through a DCED line entitled “Tourism – Accredited Zoos,” drops from $2.2 million to $1.2 million (-45%). Community Revitalization, a line previously funded at $40.2 million, some of which supported cultural organizations, has also been zeroed out in FY2010.

   
Education
  Professional Development for the Arts will be maintained at level funding of $346,000 for FY2010. Public Library Subsidy funding has dropped from $75.9 million in FY2009 to $60 million in FY2010 (-21%). Appropriations for the Governor’s Schools of Excellence, including an arts program, have been eliminated for FY2010, a loss of $3.2 million. State support for the University of the Arts will also drop, from $1.2 million in FY2009 to $271,000 in FY2010 (-77%).
   
Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission (PHMC)
  Museum Assistance Grants, a competitive grant programs for museums across the state, will see its appropriations drop from $3.8 million in FY2009 to $1.8 million in FY2010 (-53%). PHMC’s General Government Operations funding, which enables it to maintain a network of state-owned museums and historical sites, will see a reduction in funding from $25.8 million in FY2009 to $19.5 million in FY2010
(-24%).

Funding for a group of nine individual museums, commonly known as “nonpreferreds” because of the nature of their line items’ structure, will be transferred to the Executive Offices under a new line entitled Cultural Preservation Assistance. In FY2009, funding for the nonpreferreds totaled $2.7 million. Cultural Preservation Assistance will receive an appropriation of $3.1 million in FY2010, which will support these museums as well as the Heinz History Center and other cultural organizations to be determined. How much support for individual museums funded under this new line will drop in FY2010 is not yet known.
   
Educational Improvement Tax Credits (EITC)
  Cultural organizations often access EITC funds to support programs in Pennsylvania schools. In FY2010, the total amount of funds available via EITC will drop to $60 million (-20%), and to $50 million in FY2011. In FY2009, approximately $75 million in funds was available through the EITC program.
   
Film Production Tax Credits
  Instead of being capped at $75 million (FY2009), the film tax credit will now be set at $42 million, with the cap to be increased to $60 million next year(FY2011).

   

For more information about the state budget, or if you or your organization would like to assist the Greater Pittsburgh Arts Council with advocacy on this or other issues, please contact Ryan Freytag, Manager of Cultural Policy and Research or call 412.391.2060 x232.

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