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Thursday
Jul122012

HP: Haley Arts Cuts Short-Sighted Move

By Robin Bronk/Creative Coalition

I grew up in Clemson, South Carolina. It was a terrific way to grow up -- we shopped at Judge Keller's General Store, we watched movies at the Astro Theatre on Main Street, the sheriff's car wasn't above being used as the town taxi cab. And, while a bagel was as foreign as an alien spaceship, life was good.

When I was twelve, I was lucky enough to find the Oconee Community Theatre. For all of us who were part of that community, it was a link to a broader cultural world. Today, both my brother and I make our living in the arts. And it all started for us with that small community theater, which stays afloat with local support, the herculean efforts of volunteers and periodic small grants from the South Carolina Arts Commission.

Unfortunately, kids growing up in South Carolina today may not have the same opportunities that I had to learn life skills from a small but powerful non-profit theater or arts group.

Last weekend, Nikki Haley, the Governor of South Carolina, took out her veto pen and eliminated every cent of funding for the South Carolina Arts Commission. For 45 years, the South Carolina Arts Commission has provided critical funding to non-profit arts groups across the state, giving grants to support community arts programs, artist development efforts and arts education initiatives. Unless the state legislature overrides Governor Haley's veto next week, that legacy will end, taking with it an essential pillar of art and culture in South Carolina.

Governor Haley's spokesperson claims that the Governor "loves the arts," but that she just doesn't believe that supporting the arts is a "core function of government." Pardon? Consider a few facts:

According to a study by the Moore School of Business at the University of South Carolina, creative industries contribute more than $9.2 billion dollars to the state's economy and support almost 80,000 jobs. That's about 3% of the state's economy.

The evidence is clear that kids who are involved in the arts do better in school, are more likely to graduate and show increased rates of civic participation.

State supported arts initiatives drive tourism and revitalize communities. Whether you look at the Spoleto Festival in Charleston or at the impact that one theater has had in revitalizing the small town of Newbury, South Carolina, the arts add economic vitality to local economies.

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