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Friday, March 26, 2010

 

Healthcare Reform Bill: What to Expect



On Sunday, the House passed the Health Care reform bill and the bill is headed in direction of becoming a law. So, what changes are likely to happen and when? Here’s a good breakdown and Q&A about the new law:
from Kaiser Health News
from reuters.com:
It is important to note that the healthcare reform bill is NOT a law yet. Also, we are NOT health insurers, doctors, politicians or lawyers. We are artists. (my theater degree came with surprisingly little coursework on healthcare policy.) So, with all of those caveats firmly in place, here are some things that, we think, are of particular interest for artists and other self-employed people:
Soon:
  • Young people will be able to stay on their parents' health plans until the age of 26. So, artists who are finishing high school and/or college, will be able to continue on their parents insurance while they get their career up and running (we know this will make a lot of parents sleep easier at night!)
  • Health insurers will not be able to exclude children for coverage because of pre-existing conditions
  • There will be a tax credit for some small businesses and nonprofits to help provide health insurance for their employees. The basic guidelines for nonprofits are that you have under 25 employees and have an average salary of under $50,000.
In 4 years:
  • State health insurance exchanges for small businesses and individuals will open.
  • Most people will be required to obtain health insurance coverage or pay a fine if they don't. Healthcare tax credits become available to help people with low incomes. Health plans no longer can exclude people from coverage due to pre-existing conditions.
  • Employers with 50 or more workers who do not offer coverage face a fine of $2,000 for each employee if any worker receives subsidized insurance on the exchange.
If you want to see how the reform will affect your particular situation, try this tool:
As you can see, much of the far-reaching measures, such as a clause that insurance companies can no longer deny adults with pre-existing conditions (although there are some stopgap measures for adults with pre-existing conditions), will not take effect for another four years.
While we can’t fix health insurance, Springboard for the Arts healthcare programs can help get you to the doctor today. The Artists’ Access to Healthcare (AAH) program gives uninsured or underinsured artists vouchers that can be used, like a gift certificate, to cover the costs of medical visits. The program currently exists at the N.I.P. Community Clinic in Minneapolis, but will soon include Doctor Sam’s clinic in Northeast Minneapolis. Our Guide to Healthcare for Minnesota Artists helps connect you to state healthcare programs, insurance providers and low-cost clinics and programs. This year, we will present a free Health Fair, free flu shots clinics and a free screening day for artists. And, if you have an unexpected medical bill, we may be able to help pay for some of it via Springboard’s Emergency Relief Fund.
For the most current info about our healthcare programs, please stay tuned to our e-newsletter, or subscribe by clicking here. If you can’t find what you are looking for, please let us know how we can help!
-laura

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Tuesday, March 16, 2010

 

Minnesota’s Native Artists: Raising their visibility and earnings



by Ann Markusen and Marcie Rendon

Ever wonder why Minnesota doesn’t celebrate our Ojibwe and Dakota artists the way the southwest does its Pueblo, Apache and Navajo artists? That's one of the questions Marcie Rendon asked in our three-year study of how the state’s Ojibwe artists do their work and make a living. You can download it free from our website: http://www.hhh.umn.edu/projects/prie


We found Native artists all over
the state making beautiful work, sharing it with their communities and beyond. Yet they struggle to build careers. They are more apt to be self-employed than artists in general and less likely to have found formal employment. A few teach in tribal or state colleges or work in staff jobs in cultural centers or as graphic artists for their tribes. Some run their own enterprises, such as Marcie McIntire’s beautiful gallery in Grand Portage, Louise Erdrich’s Birchbark Books in Minneapolis, or Richard Schulman’s North Star Coffee Bar in Cass Lake that provides space for young musicians to rehearse, perform and get feedback.

But most make and market their own creations. Like many artists, they face stiff materials and equipment costs, lack space to work and think, and are baffled by how art markets work. Some find outlets in their own communities, like the gift shop at Shooting Star Casino in Mahnomen that displays and sells one-of-a-kind work by White Earth artists. Or opportunities to perform at tribal casinos. Commissions and sales of visual art for tribal community and social services complexes. Some score with non-Native organizations: a public art project, such as Steve Premo’s outdoor
mural for Hinckley and Robert DesJarlait’s mosaic for the Minneapolis Franklin Library. Or land a book contract with a commercial or non-profit press.

We discovered many ways that Springboard and other artist-friendly organizations, including funders and educators, can nurture Native artists’ careers. A prerequisite involves understanding how Native artists work and how they bridge traditional culture with contemporary urban or reservation life. Recognizing, too, issues surrounding sacred practices and access to materials from nature, and the Native ethic of sharing and giving away work. Rather than teaching, funding and providing services structured by Euro-American notions of the artist as an autonomous creative individual, those with resources and space to share could begin by listening to Native artists.


Some gatekeepers, as we call the folks with
resources, have pioneered in creating space for Native artists to present their work, share it with their communities, and get paid for it. Juanita Espinosa has done this for years at Two Rivers Gallery in the Minneapolis, while encouraging generations of young Native artists through her Native Arts Circle network. Phil Norrgard, the Director of Fond du Lac’s Min No Aya Win Clinic, invests tribal funds in contemporary Ojibwe artist work that hangs on health care center walls, generates income for artists while emphasizing the role of art as healing. Fargo’s The Plains Museum, UMD’s Tweed Museum and the U’s Weisman exhibit and sometimes purchase Native work. Minnesota funders have helped the American Composer’s Forum, based in St. Paul, run its First Nation’s Composers Initiative.









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Monday, March 1, 2010

 

You're an Artist, Damnit


In the arts community, our top 3 subjects for handwringing and debate are:
  1. declining audience participation numbers
  2. lack of public recognition of the intrinsic value of the arts
  3. lack of pay and respect for artists
I believe we’ve done some things in service of issue #3 that are contributing to the other two. Specifically, I think that in our effort to command greater respect for the profession of being an artist, we’ve excluded people from identifying as artists and prevented them from seeing the art in their everyday lives. We want artists to get paid, obviously, this is something I feel strongly about. But in order to do that, we’ve created all these ways of defining who is a “professional artist” and that’s usually linked to those who make their living as an artist. But what about the hobbyist? The avocational artist? Aren’t they real artists? Those who used to practice but don’t anymore? At what point do you lose the privilege of calling yourself an artist?
I’m not sure excluding people and having fewer people who identify themselves as artists is a good route towards public support of the arts.
I’ve been thinking about this a lot lately in relation to people who work for arts organizations. When I go to conferences and convenings of other service organizations, there is invariably discussion of how we find out what “the artists think” about this or that topic. While I admire my peers dedication to making sure their programs align with their clients needs, I’m always struck by how many of these administrators don’t include themselves in the category of artist. In fact, I think a lot of administrators are afraid to call themselves artists – fearful of being called out or challenged, fear of being a poser or a faker, I guess? I find myself having this conversation a lot:
Me: “So, what’s your background? Are you an artist?”
ArtsManager: “Oh, NO! Goodness, no, I’m not an artist, I’m just an arts supporter. An arts appreciator. Well, I do have a degree in piano performance, and I still play a little bit, in fact, I just played for a friend’s wedding last weekend.”
Me: “That sounds like you’re an artist.”
ArtsManager: “Oh, no, no, no. I’m not an artist.”
What?! Why are we doing this? My post a few months ago stirred up a lot of debate on this question of artist vs. administrator – but can’t we be both? Too many times, I see administrators who stop identifying as artists and artists who resist the idea that you can be both. There are some great exceptions to this – my friend and colleague Karen Atkinson refers to her work creating GYST – a training and software business for individual artists – as a large, ongoing art practice.
Being an artist is an important part of my identity and it’s important to my work at Springboard. I acted in three commercials last year and gathered props from thrift stores for my husband’s Fringe show – hardly a banner year if that’s all I think of as my artistic practice. But I refuse to give up this part of my identity, both because I do still practice (even if it’s occasional) and because I use my artistic brain and the creative process in my job every single day. I think that if, as a community, we led the way in saying, “Hell, yeah, I’m an artist!” then perhaps others would feel comfortable saying it, too.
“I’m a doctor and I’m an artist.”
“I’m a teacher and I’m an artist.”
“I’m a senator and I’m an artist.”
“I’m a lawyer and I’m an artist.”
And I really believe that allowing, and even pushing, more people to call themselves artists leads to better support for art and artists.
What do you think?

-laura

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