Atlanta committee approves $2 million municipal arts support program; staff says individuals funded separately
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The Finance Executive Committee approved a resolution authorizing the Mayor’s Office of Cultural Affairs to distribute up to $2 million to eligible tax‑exempt arts organizations — with individual organization awards capped at $75,000 — and clarified that artist project support for individuals is handled outside this fund.
The Finance Executive Committee voted to authorize the Mayor’s Office of Cultural Affairs to administer the Municipal Support for the Arts program, allowing donations to eligible tax‑exempt organizations of up to $75,000 each and up to $2,000,000 in the aggregate for fiscal year 2026.
Monica Prothro, deputy director of the Mayor’s Office of Cultural Affairs, told the committee the funding package recognized 107 organizations chosen through a panel review. “We are excited to have the opportunity to award these donations to Atlanta’s arts and cultural organizations,” Prothro said, adding that the slate shows “a wealth of opportunity and arts and culture presentations” for residents and visitors.
An unidentified council member pressed staff about an apparent discrepancy between the resolution text and a spreadsheet that included individual artists. “I did notice that while the resolution authorizes $75,000 for individuals, the spreadsheet tab also actually adds up to close to a $100,000,” the council member said. Prothro and staff clarified that the resolution’s $75,000 cap applies to organizations, not individuals, and that individual artist project support is handled separately through the Office of Cultural Affairs’ general fund. Prothro said donations cannot be given to individuals under state law and that artist project proposals are reviewed under a separate process.
The committee moved to approve the resolution and the clerk closed the vote; the clerk’s announcement recorded seven yeas and zero nays in the transcript.
Why it matters: the program directs $2 million of municipal support to Atlanta arts groups and aims to sustain cultural programming across the city; staff emphasized that individuals seeking artist project grants should pursue the separate general‑fund program.
What’s next: the resolution authorizes the mayor or the mayor’s designee to execute donation agreements and directs the chief financial officer to make payments from the listed account numbers. Members asked staff to confirm the spreadsheet labels and ensure public materials clearly separate organizational donations from individual artist project support.
