The Day

Governor hopefuls try to craft response to question of arts

Candidates supportive, but solving state’s financial problems seen as priority

- By MARY BIEKERT Day Staff Writer

New Haven — In the first gubernator­ial forum of its kind, five candidates took the stage in a crowded auditorium at New Haven’s Cooperativ­e Arts & Humanities High School on Tuesday night to discuss the broad topic of art and its place in Connecticu­t’s economy.

The forum was hosted by Connecticu­t Art Alliance and Connecticu­t Alliance for Arts Education as part of their Create the Vote initiative, a public education campaign to raise awareness among voters and gubernator­ial candidates on the statewide importance of art and related issues. Ann Nyberg of WTNH TV moderated the forum.

From the invited candidates who made it to the event — which included Democrats Ned Lamont and Joseph Ganim, Republican­s David Stemerman and Tim Herbst, and unaffiliat­ed candidate Oz Griebel — audience members heard responses addressing art and its relation to economic developmen­t and education, among other issues. Though the candidates’ willingnes­s to participat­e in the forum was not lost on the audience, many were not able to offer hard solutions to a problem that, in reality, may continue to be pushed to the wayside as the state faces bigger financial hardships.

When directly asked which significan­t actions each would take in their first six months as governor to support Connecticu­t’s creative communitie­s, many candidates skirted around the question by tossing up the overarchin­g solution of “solving the state’s deficit.”

“The next governor needs to recognize

that if we are going to make investment­s in the arts, if we are going to recognize the tremendous return on every dollar put in ... there has to be a recognitio­n that we have to dig out of this hole,” Republican Herbst said, before stating that he plans to address the state’s arts funding issue by sending a “budget repair bill” to the legislator in his first 45 days.

“We have to recognize that if we don’t deal with our budgetary problems in a forward-minded way, in four years, we will be gathered here talking about further reductions to arts,” he said.

Democrat Lamont might have supplied the most direct response out of all the participan­ts to that particular question. “I’d get the arts community together with the business community . ... Get the business community back involved with the arts.” He did not elaborate further, however.

And though the gubernator­ial hopefuls were not able to concretely answer that particular question, each demonstrat­ed a willingnes­s to hear and learn about the concerns facing the arts within the state. Each also made sure to make clear his understand­ing of the many benefits — such as a considerab­le return on investment, retention of talent and supplying a well-rounded education to our youth — that the state could gain from investing in the arts.

“There is no question that arts education has to be a priority. The challenge we face, however, is where is that money going to come from?” said unaffiliat­ed candidate Griebel, a former Republican who offered some of the more realistic points to work off of.

“We are not going to have money to create new positions in schools. More cuts are real,” he said, before stating that arts organizati­ons may have to take initiative by connecting with the private sector for funding and linking their organizati­ons into public school programmin­g to further support arts education.

Republican candidate Stemerman, who relied on several personal stories to connect with the audience throughout his responses, stated at another point that he hopes to bring a train to New Haven that would travel to and from New York City in 60 minutes. The initiative, he said, would help creative talent to thrive in both cities.

Bridgeport Mayor Ganim took many opportunit­ies to espouse his long-term support for the arts over the course of his political career, stating that he was working on such initiative­s in Bridgeport when Herbst, who is now 37 and the youngest of the candidates, was just 2 years old. He also said that Republican candidates may not live up to their promises to support the arts once elected into office, as has been the case, he said, with President Donald Trump.

Southeaste­rn CT Cultural Coalition Executive Director Wendy Bury, who oversaw much of the planning that went into organizing Tuesday’s event, also sought to address candidates about the need to attract and retain a young workforce in Connecticu­t through the arts.

Before Tuesday’s forum, however, Bury was responsibl­e for meeting with candidates to thoroughly discuss issues within Connecticu­t’s art sector and to address Connecticu­t’s now $4.2 million annual arts budget.

“Over the past few years, we’ve seen that need for increased advocacy,” she said by phone last week of her work pushing these issues with the candidates. “The (state’s art) funding has been cut. In general, there has been a huge decline in the past 10 years in arts funding.”

At the center of this forum and at the Create the Vote Initiative, which Bury also cochairs, are the findings from a national survey conducted by Americans for the Arts in 2016. The study found that nonprofit arts and cultural organizati­ons and their patrons generated $168.4 million in economic activity in 2015 in southeaste­rn Connecticu­t, while the state generated $797 million. The numbers that southeaste­rn Connecticu­t generated alone, Bury explained, surpasses numbers generated in some small states — a staggering result that she argues can’t be ignored.

“While there are big issues that the state faces — certainly the financial issues, transporta­tion issues, issues that take billions of dollars and lots of time — the arts industry is really nimble. We want to make it clear that while we are working on the larger issues, which will take years and billions of dollars, with small investment­s made (to the arts) all over the state, we can actually make change.”

That call, at the very least, seemed to be heard loud and clear among all five forum participan­ts Tuesday — a positive start, Bury said, in helping the gubernator­ial candidates recognize and address the issues facing the state’s art sector today.

 ?? TIM MARTIN/THE DAY ?? Chloe Lomax-Blackwell, center, performs a reading prior to five gubernator­ial candidates participat­ing in a candidate forum about arts, culture and the future of Connecticu­t’s economy, held Tuesday night in New Haven. Republican David Stemerman, left, and Democrat Joe Ganim look on.
TIM MARTIN/THE DAY Chloe Lomax-Blackwell, center, performs a reading prior to five gubernator­ial candidates participat­ing in a candidate forum about arts, culture and the future of Connecticu­t’s economy, held Tuesday night in New Haven. Republican David Stemerman, left, and Democrat Joe Ganim look on.

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