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Testifying in Support of Governor’s Budget for Arts & Culture

Bethann Steiner, Senior Director of Public Affairs

photo of 3 Agency representatives speaking to a legislative committee.
Testifying before the Joint Committee on Ways & Means (l-r): Jen Lawless, Bethann Steiner, and Julie Wake.

Today, Mass Cultural Council testified before the Joint Committee on Ways & Means in support of Governor Healey’s FY27 H2 budget recommendation for arts and culture.

Filed in January, the Governor’s budget funds the Agency at $27.35 million. Mass Cultural Council strongly supports this recommendation and urged the Committee to retain this figure in its budgets.

As an independent state agency, Mass Cultural Council’s programs, services, and operations are primarily funded through an annual appropriation approved by the Legislature in the state budget.

Representing the Agency, Bethann Steiner, Senior Director of Public Affairs; Jen Lawless, Senior Director of Program Operations; and Julie Wake, Mass Cultural Council Member highlighted the economic impact of the cultural sector in Massachusetts, the reach of Mass Cultural Council’s programs and initiatives statewide, and the significance of the proposed funding level. If enacted, the $27.35 million appropriation would represent the largest operating budget in the Agency’s history.

The hearing, chaired by Ways & Means members Senator Mike Brady (D–Brockton) and Representative Kip Diggs (D–Barnstable), focused on the Governor’s spending proposals for agencies involved in economic development, housing, labor and workforce development, and technology services.

Mass Cultural Council is also urging the Committee to again provide $25,000 to support the work of the Official Poet Laureate of the Commonwealth.

The FY27 House budget debate is scheduled for late April, followed by the Senate’s budget debate in May. Mass Cultural Council will continue working with partners on Beacon Hill to secure strong state funding for the cultural sector in FY27. Advocacy partners MASSCreative and Mass Humanities are also engaged in this effort.

Fiscal Year 2027 begins on July 1, 2026.


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