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Home » Arts are vibrant in Tri-Cities, but not the payroll

Arts are vibrant in Tri-Cities, but not the payroll

D. Patrick Jones is the executive director for Eastern Washington University’s Institute for Public Policy & Economic Analysis.
May 15, 2019
Guest Contributor

By D. Patrick Jones

The area’s arts

calendar is full, as a glance at any Tri-City events calendar makes instantly

clear.

Consider music. The

area is home to classical organizations such as the Mid-Columbia Symphony,

Camerata Musica, Mid-Columbia Mastersingers. Festivals pop up in venues in the

area, especially in spring and summer, such as the Mariachi & More

Festival, Tumbleweed Music Festival, Sacajawea Bluegrass Festival.

Consider

the visual arts. Artists and patrons can look forward to the annual Art in the

Park, to the ongoing overview of showings provided by Gallery at the Park,

DrewBoy Creative, Cyber Art 509, and support from city art commissions. 

Theater enjoys a long

tradition in the Tri-Cities, starting with the Richland Players. Then there’s

the Academy of Children’s Theatre, the Mid-Columbia Musical Theatre and Rude

Mechanicals.

Columbia Basin

College and Washington State University Tri-Cities, as well as area high

schools, contribute to filling the calendar with concerts, plays and showings

by local visual artists. Richland hosts an annual writers’ workshop. Why, the

metro area even enjoys an international film festival.

Beyond homegrown

talent, Tri-Citians enjoy access to shows that come to the Toyota Center,

including the Broadway series. And there are many more organizations and

cultural events that space doesn’t allow to list.

Yet while the

calendar may be full, the roster of arts businesses with a payroll is not.

Benton-Franklin Trend data indicates that there’s a relatively low and declining number of arts-related businesses. What’s considered an art-related business? In the database, the following are counted: art galleries, camera and photographic supply stores; book stores; performing arts companies; performing arts promoters; independent artists, writers and performers; musical instrument stores; compact disc and record stores; and museums. The definition comes from County Business Patterns, an annual series providing economic data conducted by the U.S. Census Bureau.

As the Tri-Cities

data makes clear, the most recent number of businesses in this category in the

two counties stood at 26, a decline from a decade ago. The graph shows that

compared to the U.S. and Washington, the Tri-Cities has consistently lagged in

these benchmarks.

In

2016, for example, the number of arts-related businesses per 1,000 businesses

registered at 4.5, or about a half of an arts business per 100 businesses. This

ratio stood 50 percent lower than the U.S. and the state. The sub-category of

book stores was the largest, by the way, with seven businesses for that year.

This measure is an

imperfect gauge of the pulse of the arts in the Tri-Cities. But as a proxy, it

has some legitimacy because if the arts pulse is strong, it should translate

into a private sector with some pulse. Ideally, we would supplement this

measure with others. But tracking the growth and development of the arts is

notoriously difficult. Securing even basic data on the performance arts, such

as attendance, is time-consuming and beyond the scope of the Trends project.

And of course, many aspects of the arts, such as the visual arts, don’t use

turnstiles in their venues.

Given our society’s

penchant for measuring, these activities should still show up in government

data. Indeed some do, via the U.S. Census Non-employer Statistics, or NES. This

is an annual report, largely based on data from the IRS. By definition, these

are firms with no employees, other than the owner or operator. A general

finding, here and in other metro areas, is the large number of art “non-employers,”

compared to those firms with employees.

What

does the Census specifically show for 2016 for Benton and Franklin counties?

(2017 data will be released in a couple of months.) Let’s look at three

categories.

According to the NES,

there were 45 performing arts companies in the greater Tri-Cities that were run

by only one paid person. Contrast this to four local performing arts companies

with a payroll. By far, the largest category in the NES series consisted of

independent artists, writers and performers. The count in 2016 was 306. Compare

this to those artists who are large enough to have payroll: three.

Finally, the number

of museums without a payroll amounted to six, compared to three with a payroll.

The information

reveals a Tri-City arts sector that largely runs on the energy of solo

practitioners and volunteers. This shouldn’t come as a surprise. After all,

most visual artists always have worked on their own. And in a smaller market,

the population simply isn’t present to support for-profit galleries and

performing arts organizations. The Trends data reflects this reality. In other

words, it’ll take a while for the Tri-Cities to catch up to the Santa Fe arts

scene.

But Census data does

reveal that many creative types call the Tri-Cities home. While their efforts

haven’t led to a “creative economy,” a la Santa Fe, they undeniably enrich life

here.

D. Patrick Jones is the executive director for Eastern Washington University’s Institute for Public Policy & Economic Analysis. Benton-Franklin Trends, the institute’s project, uses local, state and federal data to measure the local economic, educational and civic life of Benton and Franklin counties.

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