Bening, who served as an unpaid appointee to the arts council from 2004 through 2007, will be featured in advertising and other promotional efforts to get taxpayers on board.
The arts council is trying to recruit donors who’ll pay for those ads, which aim to put Bening’s face before the public alongside slogans such as “Join Annette Bening in bringing creativity back to the classroom! Make a difference through your state tax return.”
A previous tax form checkoff for state arts funding proved unpopular. Failing to raise the $250,000 per year required to keep its place on the returns, it was deleted from the forms Californians submitted last year to pay taxes on their 2012 earnings.
Now the checkoff is back, but with a big difference in how it's labeled. Arts advocates believe that “Keep Arts in Schools Fund” will be far more appealing to philanthropic instincts than the previous designation, "Arts Council Fund” -- a moniker far more likely to elicit a “What’s that?” than a "Count me in!"
Bening's four-year hitch on the arts council -- she was appointed by the state Senate’s then-leader, John Burton -- came as it got used to being at the bottom in national rankings of states’ per capita funding of their government arts-grant agencies. Two consecutive years of cutting by Gov. Gray Davis and the Legislature reduced the arts council's budget to $3.1 million starting in mid-2003, down from $32 million in mid-2001.
Subsequent governors and Legislatures have left the state's fiscal commitment unchanged -- about $1 million a year in state tax revenues, supplemented by an approximately matching amount from federal taxpayers via the National Endowment for the Arts.
The arts council is trying to recruit donors who’ll pay for those ads, which aim to put Bening’s face before the public alongside slogans such as “Join Annette Bening in bringing creativity back to the classroom! Make a difference through your state tax return.”
A previous tax form checkoff for state arts funding proved unpopular. Failing to raise the $250,000 per year required to keep its place on the returns, it was deleted from the forms Californians submitted last year to pay taxes on their 2012 earnings.
Now the checkoff is back, but with a big difference in how it's labeled. Arts advocates believe that “Keep Arts in Schools Fund” will be far more appealing to philanthropic instincts than the previous designation, "Arts Council Fund” -- a moniker far more likely to elicit a “What’s that?” than a "Count me in!"
Bening's four-year hitch on the arts council -- she was appointed by the state Senate’s then-leader, John Burton -- came as it got used to being at the bottom in national rankings of states’ per capita funding of their government arts-grant agencies. Two consecutive years of cutting by Gov. Gray Davis and the Legislature reduced the arts council's budget to $3.1 million starting in mid-2003, down from $32 million in mid-2001.
Subsequent governors and Legislatures have left the state's fiscal commitment unchanged -- about $1 million a year in state tax revenues, supplemented by an approximately matching amount from federal taxpayers via the National Endowment for the Arts.