top of page
The NEA and NEH are at risk of funding cuts in the next year (FY26). Speak up for arts & culture today.
mt state seal.png

Montana Cultural Advocacy

Senate Committee Approves FY 2026 Interior and Environment Appropriations Bill

Senate Bill approves $207M for NEA and NEH (almost level funding to previous FY).

​

Read on...

House Appropriations Committee Proposes Deep Cut to NEA Funding

From NASAA (7/14/2025): the House Interior Appropriations Committee has released its fiscal year 2026 budget proposal for the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA). The legislation recommends funding the NEA at $135 million—a 35% cut from its current appropriation and a reduction of $75 million.

​

Read on...

7/15/25 update: the House Sub-Committee voted 8-5 to have the bill favorably reported to the full committee.
Rep. Zinke was one of the YES votes.

What's at stake

​Through the federal-state partnership, 40% of NEA grant funding flows directly to state and jurisdictional arts agencies and regional arts organizations, so the consequences of this cut will be significant and deeply felt.

What does this mean for Montana?

This funding, public funding, dictates who gets access.

NEA funds reach all of Montana’s 56 counties.

​

Nationwide, 19% of state agency grants reach into rural areas. In Montana, 30% of MAC awards reach outside the 7 bigger communities, and an additional 14% go to statewide organizations that serve almost every town from Yaak to Alzada.

2025 MAC stats.png

What you can do

Your legislators need to hear form you and your community leaders.

Our leaders in government need to hear from everyday Montanans who can describe how the arts and humanities are key to driving economic development, making all towns and cities good places to live and work, and make us all stronger and healthier.

​

Congress needs to hear from you and your community leaders:

  • Business and banking professionals

  • Chamber of commerce leaders

  • Business associations (realtors, healthcare providers, etc.)

  • School board leaders

  • Local government

The message: thank you for proposing $207 million for the NEA

Time for letters, calls, thank-yous and encouragement to all Montana’s congress members! Ask your community and Board members to tell congress members the impact of the arts in your community, and how important the NEA is to us all, especially in more rural areas.

Resources (Stats and Numbers you can use)

How to contact your legislator

At this time it is imperative to contact Representative Ryan Zinke, as he sits on the House Appropriations Committee.

Representative Ryan K. Zinke Contact Information

Washington DC Office

512 Cannon House Office Building

Washington, DC  20515

Phone: (202) 225-5628

Missoula District Office

2901 W. Broadway Street

Suite 200

Missoula, MT  59808

Phone: (406) 317-0277

Kalispell District Office

923 South Main

Kalispell, MT  59901

Phone: (406) 317-0277

Find your representatives and senators using your address.

Stay informed, stay connected.

Montana Cultural Advocacy

Paul Stahl, MT Cultural Advocacy

John Zirkle, Warren Miller Performing Arts Center

Benji Cosgrove, The Myrna Loy

Emily Wolfram, Montana Performing Arts Consortium

Krys Holmes, Montana Arts Council (Advisory)

We are supported in part by grants from Creative West, the Montana Arts Council (an agency of the state government), and the National Endowment for the Arts. Additional support from coal tax placed into Montana's Cultural and Aesthetic Projects Trust Fund.

MAC-Montana-Logo-2024-Teal.png
Montana-Cultural-Trust-Logo-Vector-Color.png

CONTACT US 

info@mtperformingarts.org

406.284.5524

PO Box 1254, Great Falls, MT 59403​

QUICK LINKS

  • Instagram
  • Facebook
  • LinkedIn
  • Threads

© Montana Performing Arts Consortium Inc 2026

Website by W DESIGN MT
bottom of page