New online tool available to help arts organizations with emergency planning

Thursday, September 22, 2022

D Plan Arts Ready logo
Category: 

By taking preparedness actions and creating a disaster plan, cultural heritage and arts organizations can reduce the risk of disaster and minimize their losses. dPlan|ArtsReady is an online emergency preparedness and response tool for arts and cultural organizations—regardless of size, scope, or discipline—to prevent or mitigate disasters, prepare for the most likely emergencies, respond quickly to minimize damage, and recover effectively while continuing to provide services to your community.


Mr. John W. Haworth

CERF+ — The Artist’s Safety Net: Providing Emergency Relief for the Cultural Sector

Posted by Mr. John W. Haworth, Feb 24, 2022


Mr. John W. Haworth

The work of CERF+ is vital within the larger context of the complex challenges cultural organizations and individual artists have managing—and surviving—disasters and emergencies. As emergency planning has become an ever-higher priority for cultural facilities throughout the country, CERF+ puts key strategic questions on the table: How do local cultural communities prepare for the enormous challenges of floods, fires, earthquakes, and storms? How do we meet the economic and human costs of such life-changing circumstances? With major support from foundations and other funders, local arts agencies across the country have developed programs to provide grants to individual artists. Though much of this support is earmarked for creative work, there is a growing recognition of what is required to sustain creative careers over many years or a lifetime. CERF+ is committed to helping artists sustain their careers and develop the tools and support to protect and preserve their livelihoods, studios, and creative output.

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Dr. Jonathan Katz

Leadership Success in a Crisis Environment: A Leader’s Crisis Management Checklist

Posted by Dr. Jonathan Katz, Jul 01, 2020


Dr. Jonathan Katz

The spotlight of a crisis environment illuminates the character, values, and worth of a leader. As you prioritize functions, maintain order, and move the enterprise’s decision-making horizon further ahead, be reminded of the following principles for effective crisis management: Take stock of your assets. Maximize the good will and revenue potential of those programs and services whose value is increased by the new and changing environment. Manage time. Manage key external decisions. Manage perception of the crisis by key audiences. Review delegation in light of the tasks at hand. And think “collective impact.” This concludes a series of blogs intended to stimulate dialog about characteristics desirable in leaders during crises, the ways effective crisis managers think, the special needs and opportunities for leadership during crises, and the management principles that prove most valuable during crises.

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Dr. Jonathan Katz

Leadership Success in a Crisis Environment: Leaders Demonstrate Value during Crises

Posted by Dr. Jonathan Katz, Jun 29, 2020


Dr. Jonathan Katz

This blog considers leadership action during the kind of crisis caused by a ubiquitous challenge that imperils the value in many kinds of transactions and organizations. Its examples are current actions being taken by the arts and cultural community in the following ways: Demonstrating concern for the challenges others face; making a special effort in a crisis environment to learn the current values and priorities of your stakeholders; taking advantage of opportunities to demonstrate the ways in which you can be of value and service consistent with your mission; motivating your stakeholder groups such as board and donors with opportunities to play meaningful roles to advance recovery and reposition the enterprise; and considering the lasting benefits of leading collective coping and organizing strategies. Treating others with empathy, generosity, and family feeling when everyone shares adversity will strengthen their support for you now and in the future.

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Dr. Jonathan Katz

Leadership Success in a Crisis Environment: A Perspective on Decision Making

Posted by Dr. Jonathan Katz, Jun 24, 2020


Dr. Jonathan Katz

During the kind of crisis caused by a ubiquitous challenge that disrupts the general operational environment, how can we stimulate, organize, and retrieve our best thinking when we need it? Where your daily actions and thoughts take you is going to provide you with questions and observations and insights, but not necessarily when you want them or when you can use them. But, if you organize your thoughts as they happen, you’ll position yourself to use and communicate them clearly, when the occasion is right, and in a way that both shows the reasoning and how your ideas will apply in the future. In mid-crisis, it’s difficult to make decisions about the future because so many variables are unclear, but it’s very useful to recognize and prepare for the kinds of decisions that will need to made in the very near future.

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Dr. Jonathan Katz

Leadership Success in a Crisis Environment: Leadership Roles and Goals

Posted by Dr. Jonathan Katz, Jun 22, 2020


Dr. Jonathan Katz

What should artistic and cultural leaders aspire to exemplify and accomplish in a time of crisis? Some crises are caused by an operational problem that approaches or passes a point where the survival of the enterprise is at risk. Other crises may impact before their cause is readily understood, with such impact or with such complexity that a leader must act before optimal information can be gathered. Let us focus on a third kind of crisis: one caused by a ubiquitous challenge that imperils the value in many kinds of transactions and organizations, threatening or disrupting the general operational environment. The COVID-19 pandemic fits this description. So does racism (about which there are many lessons to be learned by considering for whom this issue has been a crisis their entire lives and for whom this issue is perceived as a crisis more recently—and why). This blog is intended to stimulate dialog about characteristics desirable in leaders during crises, the ways effective crisis managers think, the special needs and opportunities for leadership during crises, and the management principles that prove most valuable during crises. 

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Introducing the Arts Agency Action Kit: Research, Talking Points, and Messaging Tips to Make Your Case

Monday, June 8, 2020

Americans for the Arts logo

The Arts Agency Action Kit is an additional infrastructure of support for arts organizations, providing a comprehensive resource including up-to-date research, key talking points, and advocacy strategies that can be used to make the case for one’s organization and mitigate a situation of financial distress stemming from the COVID-19 crisis.

Share Your Story with the CARES Act Arts Funding Tracker

Monday, May 18, 2020

If you have applied for CARES Act funding, please help us collect data on the process and whether you were successful. This will help Americans for the Arts quickly inform Congress and other decision-makers how the CARES Act impacted the arts sector—and what the needs are for the future. 


J. Gibran G. Villalobos

Supervision.

Posted by J. Gibran G. Villalobos, May 01, 2020


J. Gibran G. Villalobos

Times have changed. The alarm has been struck, and it is declared that for the next few months we are living in a state of emergency. The alarm will persist in the background for months as we try to make sense of our world. For many, our lives have become paralyzed as we wait for announcements and instruction on how we are to continue working. Others continue their commutes to their jobs, as the essential laborers and custodians of our world. For now, many of us are remotely reporting via digital platforms, supervising the structures of a disordered world through virtual windows. As a curator of public programs, I am tasked with the delicate observation of people—understanding their needs, anticipating their questions, and often regulating their movement. It is in the nature (and definition) of this work that I care for all individuals through their experience in artistic environments. In the midst of this emergency, I have observed how institutions have immediately taken action to facilitate programs. I admire the resilience of the arts sector—its agility and improvisation are often pulled off with success, disproportional to anemic budgets with robust audiences. Yet, I am also dismayed that the arts, once again, confronts a different crisis, an unprecedented crisis.

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Up-to-date news and resources for the arts and culture field

Americans for the Arts continues to closely monitor recommendations from the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) and the Federal and D.C. governments as developments evolve concerning the coronavirus. Our organization cares about the health and safety of our members, stakeholders, staff, and board in communities across the country, and we understand that health, work, and travel require personal decisions that individuals must make for themselves.

We have updated our Resource Center to help you navigate to information more quickly.

FOR ORGANIZATIONS: Are you an arts and culture organization? Arts Agency? You'll find Federal Relief information, Relief funds, helpful webinars and other resources geared to organizations.

FOR INDIVIDUALS: Are you an artist and/or creative worker? You'll find Federal Relief information, Relief funds, helpful webinars and other resources geared to individuals.

FIELD TOOLS AND RESEARCH: Your one-stop shop for all things data, research and context - Arts Agency Action Kit (Is your agency budget under threat?), Impact surveys, Data dashboards, Articles and News to put the crisis into context and National/Regional/State Resource pages. 

EQUITY/MENTAL HEALTH: News, tools and resources to support your equity efforts.

REOPENING AND RESOURCES: You'll find National, State, County, and Local resource lists and access State Guidances and Phased Reopening plans.

AMERICANS FOR THE ARTS NEWS: Event updates, news and updates about our operation.

Have a resource to share? Contact us!

Americans for the Arts COVID-19 Survey Documents Devastating Losses to the Arts

Thursday, April 9, 2020

Nationally, financial losses to the nonprofit arts sector are estimated to be $4.5 billion as of April 6 (up from $3.2 billion on March 20). Americans for the Arts estimates that nonprofit arts organizations already have experienced an estimated 197 million lost event admissions due to cancelled or postponed events. 

Weekly Web Roundup: March 23-27, 2020

Friday, March 27, 2020

This week, all eyes have been on Capitol Hill as Congress proposed, debated, revised, and voted on the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security (CARES) Act, which would provide two trillion dollars in relief funds to the nation. As we all work to adjust to this new reality, we’re pleased to share perspectives and ideas to stay connected and creative while social distancing, practical measures to keep your work moving forward, and our annual “top ten” list of reasons to support the arts.

Federal Economic Stimulus Relief Funds Provide Encouraging Support to the Nation’s Community-Based Arts and Culture Organizations Experiencing $3.6 Billion in Devastating Losses

Friday, March 27, 2020

Americans for the Arts
Category: 

The $2 trillion emergency stimulus package that Congress passed this week includes $300 million in economic relief to support nonprofit cultural organizations, museums, libraries, public broadcasting, and state and local arts and humanities agencies, as well as substantial additional economic relief opportunities for independent contractors like "gig economy" workers such as actors, musicians, and artists and nonprofit organizations and small businesses, including those working in the creative economy.


Ms. Patricia Walsh

Community Engagement in the Time of COVID-19

Posted by Ms. Patricia Walsh, Mar 25, 2020


Ms. Patricia Walsh

With social distancing practices supported by many medical professionals and government agencies to help slow the COVID-19 pandemic, limitations on public gatherings are good for public health but can provide a challenge for public art administrators to keep projects on schedule. Generally, public art community engagement practices aim to build connections and strengthen communication with stakeholder groups related to a project’s location or themes, or as part of oversight for public art programs. Communities engaged through public art include residential groups, local stakeholders, arts commissions, and others; and canceling or postponing events may hinder the development of public art projects. This blog post aims to provide insight, resources, and recommendations to maintain community engagement for public art projects and programs as we all work to promote health and safety in our communities. 

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Weekly Web Roundup: March 16-20, 2020

Friday, March 20, 2020

How do you sum up a week like the one the country has just been through? We at Americans for the Arts hope you and yours are keeping safe and healthy during the coronavirus outbreak. We are working hard to ensure that the arts and culture sector can weather this storm, together, and with appropriate and necessary financial relief from the federal government. Read on for tools you can use in this critical time for the arts.

Funder? Here are 7 Things You Can Do To Support Your Arts Community

Wednesday, March 18, 2020

During this unprecedented time of crisis in our nation’s cultural, educational, economic and healthy well-being, Americans for the Arts calls on our nation’s public and private sector grantmakers and individual philanthropists in the arts to help respond to the impact of COVID-19 on the infrastructure of our nonprofit cultural organizations and artists.

Weekly Web Roundup: March 2-6, 2020

Friday, March 6, 2020

This week: Like much of the country, we're keeping an eye on Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19), monitoring responses and preparations, and have gathered information to assist the field. We also announced applications for this year's Arts & Culture Leaders of Color Fellowship, and released a new resource examining cultural equity in the public art field.


Ms. Ruby Lopez Harper

Arts and Culture Sector Can Prepare for the Coronavirus in the United States

Posted by Ms. Ruby Lopez Harper, Mar 05, 2020


Ms. Ruby Lopez Harper

Like most of you, Americans for the Arts has been watching the breaking news about Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) and we are seeing inquiries coming in from the field and through our national service organization colleagues. While gathering and sharing pertinent information, we are also working to understand the long-term effect on arts and culture activities from performance to festivals, touring artists, and school field trips. We are monitoring responses and preparations and will share more information as it becomes available. You can help us and the nonprofit arts field by sharing with us how you are responding in the immediate and in the long-term. There is still much to learn about the outbreak, and we hope the following information assists you in preparation for both you and your loved ones, your organization, and your community. 

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