Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

The maestro makes a sound arts suggestion

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The Philadelph­ia Orchestra’s music director is urging the creation of a cabinet-level arts and culture post.

Bravo to Philadelph­ia Orchestra music director Yannick Nézet-Séguin for urging the Biden administra­tion to create a cabinet-level arts and culture post. In an open letter last week, Nézet-Séguin — who is also music director of New York’s Metropolit­an Opera — said the pandemic’s crippling impact on the creative economy makes “a voice at the table” in Washington, D.C., even more critical.

The fact is, the pandemic has only served as the latest threat to arts and culture. Government support for the arts has never been robust, but it has grown anemic in recent times.

For example, the $162 million budget for the National Endowment for the Arts remains at the same level it was in 1984. And every year of his administra­tion, President Donald Trump proposed eliminatin­g it altogether, along with the National Endowment for the Humanities.

The maestro’s call is perfectly timed. The role that the arts can play in helping the country heal and overcome the massive challenges it has grappled with in the past year needs no more evidence than the rhapsodic reception to former Youth Poet Laureate Amanda Gorman’s performanc­e at the inaugurati­on.

Arts and culture’s importance to the health of the economy is also critical. A survey conducted last fall by the Greater Philadelph­ia Cultural Alliance found that 266 local arts organizati­ons large and small expect to lose a combined $214.4 million in the 12 months that will end this March. Philly’s creative economy lost 1,277 jobs as of October.

The Philly region’s arts and culture economy helps propel the tourism and hospitalit­y industries and adds vitality not only to Center City but throughout the region.

Venues of all sizes have been shuttered for months, and some, like South Philly’s beloved Boot & Saddle, have closed for good.

While $15 billion in “Save Our Stages” funding was approved as part of the December

stimulus package, the Small Business Administra­tion has yet to begin the applicatio­n process and no date for doing so has been announced.

President Joe Biden should see to it that this money is put to work soon.

Other help has come in payroll protection funds through the first stimulus last year, which some museums, performanc­e venues, and other arts organizati­ons received. Pennsylvan­ia provided $20 million in COVID-19 relief assistance to museums and cultural organizati­ons across the state.

The William Penn and Mellon Foundation­s have provided $8 million, and Philly’s Office of Arts, Culture and the Creative Economy worked with the alliance and others to set up the $4 million COVID-19 Arts Aid PHL Fund. But all this is not enough.

Given that a Brookings study found the creative economy lost 2.7 million jobs and more than $150 billion in revenue between April and July of 2020 alone, a cabinet position or “arts czar” would have a substantia­l portfolio. New York Times arts critic Jason Farago recently suggested that Biden establish a national program to put arts and culture profession­als to work, a la Franklin Roosevelt’s New Deal.

That approach is worth supporting.

President Biden can take a step in the right direction by taking the advice of maestro Nézet-Séguin — and enabling the arts to play a larger role in America’s recovery from the pandemic.

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