Federal funding has helped a host of Minnesota arts organizations during a devastating time. Many organizations argue that more is needed.
Dozens of the state's performing and visual art nonprofits popped up on a recent list of employers that received loans from the Paycheck Protection Program. The Minnesota Opera, Children's Theatre Company and the St. Paul Chamber Orchestra, among others, obtained between $1 million and $2 million each via PPP, the federal government's program meant to preserve jobs during the pandemic.
Twenty-five Minnesota organizations were also awarded $50,000 grants from the National Endowment for the Arts, another source of CARES Act funds. That $1.25 million in NEA funding, announced July 1, is going to mostly midsize arts groups across the state, from the Watermark Art Center in Bemidji to the Northern Clay Center in Minneapolis.
Some arts advocates are calling for federal funding to be continued — and expanded — as most venues remain dark and projects remain on hold. About 10% of arts and culture organizations said they're "not confident" that they will survive the pandemic, according to a national survey by Americans for the Arts. The devastation has outlasted the aid.
"The crisis is deepening and lengthening," said Sheila Smith, executive director of Minnesota Citizens for the Arts. "It's been pretty terrible for the arts and culture sector for the first three months.
"But it's going to get worse."
In recent weeks, Minneapolis' two biggest art museums have reopened — but not before announcing salary cuts and layoffs that their leaders tied to the running out of PPP funds. Museums across the country have made similar trims.
The Minneapolis Institute of Art received $3.56 million in PPP loans while Walker Art Center got $1.7 million. The Walker had committed to paying all staff through May 30 but PPP money allowed it to do so through June 30.