is a modern-day story of kapa-making (barkcloth) in Hawaii. Seen through the eyes of a mother and daughter, the documentary traces the kapa-making process once used by ancient Hawaiians. The story comes full circle when the kapa is used to dress a hula halau (dance troop) for a performance at the 2011 Merrie Monarch Festival in Hilo, Hawaii.
Ka Hana Kapa and similar projects on hula and slack key guitar help protect and perpetuate traditions unique to Hawaii. Their ties to federal support from the (NEA) are deep and multi-faceted.
With Ka Hana Kapa in particular, the project received federal funding via Hawaii鈥檚 state arts agency, the . It was also managed by SFCA鈥檚 Folk Arts Coordinator, whose position is funded entirely by the NEA. 聽On a side note, the film was presented by the Public Broadcasting Service, another agency on the cusp of elimination.
Simply put, projects like Ka Hana Kapa and the knowledge they bear are what we risk losing should the NEA dissolve.
A Report From Our Nation鈥檚 Capital
鈥淲e are at war,鈥 proclaimed author and political commentator Jonathan Allen when asked about the state of the arts under the Trump administration.
Needless to say, we all sat up and piped down.
Allen was one of numerous guests invited to speak to roughly 60聽arts leaders, administrators and practitioners as part of the 聽Leadership and Advocacy Seminar in Washington, D.C. 聽This annual convening brings together representatives from 13聽western states with the goal of educating leaders in the field about the structure and dynamics of federal arts funding.
For the second year in a row, I was invited to attend on behalf of Hawaii along with Karen Tiller Polivka, SFCA Commissioner and former executive director of the Hawaii Opera Theatre.
In the weeks leading up to the meeting, conversations flared due to an article published in , which resurrected a proposal by the Heritage Foundation to eliminate the NEA. 聽The article singles out the arts and humanities as a 鈥渨aste鈥 and a formidable step toward budget reform.
Days after the story broke, our group arrived in D.C. to gather, listen, console and more importantly, to fight.
The Ebb And Flow Of Funding
Cuts to federal arts funding are not new. 聽Since the NEA鈥檚 inception in 1965, funding has oscillated from a to a little more than half that in the late 1990s. 聽Since then, the NEA has been recovering modest gains year after year.
Today the NEA budget stands just shy of $148 million, representing 0.004 percent of the national budget. 聽Although just a drop in the bucket, $148 million stretches across the nation, reaching all 435 congressional districts in the country.
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Funding supports the NEA鈥檚 strategic initiatives through direct grants to individuals, nonprofit and government agencies. The NEA administers programs such as Challenge America designed to provide art access to underserved populations, Creativity Connects an interdisciplinary effort to bridge non-art sectors and Creative Forces which offers art therapy for military populations.
Moreover, 40聽percent of the NEA鈥檚 overall budget goes to state and regional art organizations such as the Hawaii State Foundation on Culture and the Arts, a partnership which allows agencies to administer and prioritize programs at the local level.
In each instance, artists and organizations have leveraged NEA funding on the community level through dollar-for-dollar matches. As a result, the economic ripple effect on local industries such as tourism, retail, food and transportation has proven to be ten-fold, according to the National Assembly of State Arts Agencies.
Hawaii鈥檚 Piece Of The Pie
According to the , the agency received $669,400 from the NEA to fund positions and programs across the state (an additional $85,000 was awarded as direct grants to individual organizations).
SFCA鈥檚 Executive Director Jonathan Johnson noted that defunding the NEA would have immediate and crippling effects. The agency would lose three full-time federally funded jobs, all of which coordinate and fund statewide programming, and the budgets for community arts grants and the Artists in Schools Program would decrease by $50,000 and $20,000 respectively. In short, education and traditional arts would take the hardest hit.
With some semblance of optimism, Johnson also mentioned, 鈥淲e would take it on the head pretty hard, but yes, we would survive.鈥
While the loss of federal funding would trigger an organizational and programmatic restructure, Johnson鈥檚 strategy would be to refocus on 鈥渕aximizing existing resources,鈥 referring to Hawaii鈥檚 Arts Special Fund, which generates revenue from a percentage of construction costs. 聽In addition, the SFCA may lean more on state appropriations to help fill the funding void.
Johnson noted that the potential short-term and long-term impacts are simply a reality that 鈥渨e cannot ignore.鈥
Survival Tactics
The time spent in D.C. was eye-opening. In anticipation of a sea change, I observed arts leaders going into defense mode. 聽Rather than asking for an increase of the NEA budget as in past years, we were encouraged to protect what little we have. 聽But I also saw a group come together in purpose and solidarity and was reminded of the many conversations happening in D.C. and throughout the country.
Alas, we were reminded repeatedly that no one can confirm what exactly will be included in the Congressional budget, which is slated to come out in late spring.
So until then, what can we do?
We can show our support by contacting our member of Congress, who have traditionally been supportive of the arts. Just last week Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand sent a letter to President Trump expressing support for the NEA and NEH, signed by 24 U.S. senators, including Hawaii Sen. Mazie Hirono.
Tell them about Ka Hana Kapa and that a great nation needs the arts.
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About the Author
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Mariko Chang is Civil Beat’s membership and events manager. You can reach her at mchang@civilbeat.org