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- Subject Index: Since 1995
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1999 SESSION
WHEREAS, the Humanities enrich the lives of all Virginians by providing opportunities for learning, creativity, and self-expression; and
WHEREAS, the Humanities are active and public, not remote and academic, and are therefore an integral, valuable, and dynamic part of our everyday lives; and
WHEREAS, the Humanities contribute to the interpretation and understanding of historical and cultural traditions as well as to the understanding of current policy debates; and
WHEREAS, federal support for the Humanities from the National Endowment for the Humanities has been adversely affected by increasing demands for other services and programs; and
WHEREAS, public investment in the Humanities sends a strong message to the private sector and creates leverage for humanities organizations to obtain additional private support; and
WHEREAS, continuing economic challenges have prompted the Humanities to develop new strategies for funding, such as increasing private fund-raising and earned income; and
WHEREAS, Humanities organizations in Virginia must compete not only with state institutions for appropriations, but also with the pressing demands that education, social services, public safety, transportation, and other programs place on the Commonwealth’s budget; and
WHEREAS, the Virginia Foundation for the Humanities and Public Policy (VFH) has taken a leading role in anticipating, developing, and supporting new public programs on contemporary issues and has boldly explored topics on the meaning of community, in both rural and urban areas; the untold stories of Virginia’s history and people; the quest for individual rights and personal responsibilities; the issue of violence; and the increasingly important roles of science and technology in our society, among many others; and
WHEREAS, the VFH supports public education for children by sponsoring 125 summer seminars and related programs for K through 12 teachers over the last 15 years; providing educational films, videos, audiotapes, and traveling exhibits to over 500 schools, libraries, museums, and community groups; and promoting lifelong reading through the Motheread/Fatheread family literacy program and the Virginia Festival of the Book, which annually attracts over 15,000 participants from 20 states; and
WHEREAS, the VFH has sponsored 40,000 adult educational programs during the last 20 years, all of which have been free and open to the public and offered in virtually every city and county in Virginia; and
WHEREAS, VFH’s adult educational programs currently reach a statewide audience of over 750,000 annually and a national media audience in the millions and bring in prominent scholars, writers and filmmakers to enrich the Commonwealth’s culture with such international programs as the Irish Film Festival and VABook!; and
WHEREAS, the VFH fosters economic development through its support of museums, historical sites, and Humanities programs which generate more than $7.6 billion annually from tourists and return more than $400 million to the state and localities in tax revenues; and
WHEREAS, the VFH multiplies the Commonwealth’s investment in the Humanities, having raised more than $22 million in out-of-state support for Virginia public education programs and works collaboratively with other not-for-profit organizations such as the Virginia Tourism Corporation, the Virginia Association of Museums, and the Jamestown-Yorktown 2007 Celebration; and
WHEREAS, the VFH promotes civic participation and responsibility by providing opportunities for citizens to become more informed and to explore and debate important current issues through major programs on the foundations of democracy such as the Constitution, the Bill of Rights, and the Virginia Statute for Religious Freedom, and sponsoring public forums on issues such as school violence, America in the 21st Century, the role of government, and the importance of community; and
WHEREAS, the VFH has been a pillar of support to rural and urban communities by assisting them in exploring their history and future; creating a network of regional councils in Appalachian, Piedmont, Chesapeake, and Northern Virginia regions to strengthen Humanities programming in underserved areas; and establishing a grant program to study “The Future of Rural Virginia”; and
WHEREAS, the VFH connects the traditions of the past with issues of today by documenting and preserving Virginia’s rich traditions and heritage in preparation for 2007, the 400th anniversary of Virginia; incorporating a statewide folklife program to document, interpret, and present programs on communities; developing a Media Center to explore the meaning of film in culture; and offering state-of-the-art equipment to assist Virginia’s filmmakers to produce documentary and other Humanities-related films; and
WHEREAS, public investment by the Commonwealth in the Virginia Foundation for the Humanities and Public Policy currently stands at only 10 cents per capita; now, therefore, be it
RESOLVED by the House of Delegates, the Senate concurring, That a goal to appropriate one dollar per capita for the support of the Virginia Foundation for the Humanities and Public Policy by the year 2003 be established; and, be it
RESOLVED FURTHER, That the Clerk of the House of Delegates transmit a copy of this resolution to the chairman of the board of directors of the Virginia Foundation for the Humanities and Public Policy in order that she may be apprised of the sense of the General Assembly in this matter.