Power of Culture Blog
Reflections on the Bicentennial, Boy Scouts, and America’s 250th
Acting Executive Director David Slatery's essay for Mass Humanities' “People’s Guide to the Revolution”
Bethann Steiner, Senior Director of Public Affairs

Updated – April 29, 2026: This week the state House of Representatives held its FY27 budget debate. Mass Cultural Council worked with Rep. Mindy Domb to draft and file a budget amendment that sought to add the text of this legislation to the House budget as an outside section. We are very thankful that 38 House Members added their names as co-sponsors to this amendment, #543, however, it was not adopted during the debate. We will continue to work with Rep. Domb to identify ways to advance our effort to rebrand STEM to STEAM through the legislative process this session.
Updated – March 19, 2026: Yesterday the Massachusetts House of Representatives debated a FY26 supplemental budget, and the text of H. 561 was filed an as amendment to the bill by Rep. Mindy Domb. In total, 13 state Representatives listed their names in support of this proposal as cosponsors of the amendment. While the amendment was not adopted during the debate, Mass Cultural Council wishes to thank Rep. Domb for her continued leadership on this matter and will continue to work to identify potential avenues to advance the STEM to STEAM proposal through the legislative process this session.
Updated – November 18, 2025: Great news! H. 561 received a favorable report from the Joint Committee on Education and advanced to a secondary committee, the House Committee on Ways & Means, for additional consideration. Mass Cultural Council will continue its advocacy on this matter and provide updates as they are available.
Updated – March 12, 2025: Today it was announced that HD2132 has been assigned a bill number by the House Clerk. This proposal is now referred to as H. 561, and it has been referred to the Joint Committee on Education for review and consideration. A public hearing will be scheduled for a date at some point this year for the panel to receive testimony on H. 561.
During the 2025-2026 legislative session Mass Cultural Council is excited to partner with state Representative Mindy Domb (D- Amherst) on a new legislative proposal, HD2132, An Act advancing Massachusetts from STEM to STEAM. Rep. Domb is a passionate advocate for both the cultural sector and public education issues in Massachusetts, and last session served as the House chair of the Joint Committee on Tourism, Arts and Cultural Development.
Rep. Domb eagerly partnered with Mass Cultural Council on this proposal because she said she is excited about the conversations it will spur, and further, she noted, “Employers and educators value integrating skills associated with the arts into their curricula and workplaces. Skills like creativity, collaboration, risk-taking, critical analysis, problem-solving, and innovation are needed in our changing world and workforce. Recognizing the contribution these arts-related skills bring inspires us to bring these skills and resources into our education and economic development settings.”
HD2132 proposes a small technical change to the Mass General Laws in the three sections where “science, technology, engineering, and math or STEM” is currently cited, by changing the wording to read “science, technology, engineering, art, and math” and/or “STEM” to “STEAM”.
The three existing references to “science, technology, engineering, and math or STEM” in the Massachusetts General Laws are:
While HD2132 is making changes in name only, Mass Cultural Council believes this step is key to a larger and more important policy conversation. We believe the arts, humanities, and sciences – the cultural sector – are key to harnessing creativity to problem solve and demonstrate skills that often bring economic success.
As Mass Cultural Council continues to refine and focus its efforts on the advancement of the cultural sector, we hope to increase other sectors’ understanding and appreciation of creative individuals and cultural organizations. This will help to combat the troubling reality of our stakeholders being underutilized as partners in solving challenges. We know embracing and incorporating arts and creativity as other sectors develop policy, platforms, programs and initiatives is key to harnessing the power of culture. Advancing Massachusetts from STEM to STEAM by enacting HD2132 is a way to further this conversation. We believe this legislation will show that the Commonwealth embraces the arts as a valued core field, necessary to train our students in so that they can succeed and participate meaningfully in tomorrow’s workforce.
Consider this:
Mass Cultural Council is also working with state Senator Paul Mark (D- Becket) on a second new bill, SD2045, An Act clarifying eligibility to the Massachusetts Cultural Facilities Fund.
Learn More About Our Advancement Work
[1] National Endowment for the Arts’ The Arts and Achievement in At-Risk Youth: Findings from Four Longitudinal Studies, p. 14.
[2] Collegeboard’s 2016 College-Bound Seniors Total Group Profile Report p. 9.
[3] National Endowment for the Arts’ The Arts and Achievement in At-Risk Youth: Findings from Four Longitudinal Studies, p. 11.
[4] Rice University’s Kinder Institute for Urban Research’s Brief, Investigating Causal Effects of Arts Education Experiences.pdf, p. 1.
[5] Arts Education Partnership’s ArtScan at a Glance (2018)