||| FROM SAN JUAN COUNTY COMMUNICATIONS |||
During the December 10, 2024 Council meeting, the San Juan County Council passed an ordinance to approve a new 1/10th of 1% sales tax to create a Cultural Access program. During the meeting, the Council held a public hearing, deliberated, and passed as a councilmanic measure the proposed ordinance with councilmembers Minney and Wolf voting in favor and council chair Fuller abstaining. San Juan County’s Cultural Access program will become the first program of its kind in a rural area of Washington State.
“I come from a family of painters, writers, mathematicians and scientists,” said councilmember Cindy Wolf. “But my own connection to the arts is theater – a collaborative art form. And I believe that you can never do something as beautiful alone as you can do together,” Wolf noted, acknowledging the Council Chambers room full of representatives from various arts organizations, schools, and other nonprofits. “It is absolutely my honor to be able to support the adoption of this cultural access tax.”
In the coming months, the County will work to develop the program, managed by the Parks and Fair Department, with the intent of processing grants in 2026. The tax will be enacted on April 1, 2025, in San Juan County.
What is Cultural Access?
The WA State legislature has given counties and cities the ability to support access to history, science, and the arts through a sales tax. Based on San Juan County’s 2023 revenues, approximately $800,000 could be collected annually to support cultural access for schools and cultural organizations such as museums, theaters, art centers, and other nonprofits. Due to the high volume of visitors and tourists to San Juan County, the proposed tax would cost approximately $20 per household per year.
Funds will be focused on a specific purpose – to provide local support and financial stability to schools and cultural organizations for cultural access and initiatives.
How did we get here?
- On May 16 2023, Inspire Washington, a nonprofit organization dedicated to providing support to local communities to establish cultural access programs, gave an educational presentation to the San Juan County Council.
- Throughout the year and into 2024, the Council directed Parks and Fair Director Brandon Andrews to explore the feasibility of setting up and administering a Cultural Access program.
- The County conducted conversations with local school districts, museums, theatres, and county nonprofits to understand if there was interest in and support for this program. After learning of local support for a Cultural Access Program, during the November 12, 2024 Council meeting, the San Juan County Council decided to set a public hearing to move the process forward.
“It isn’t often we are handed this legislative authority to bring something like this to life,” said council member Christine Minney. “And though it is our council authority, the success of this initiative is really due to the individuals and organizations who have carried this forward. I couldn’t be more pleased and proud to support approving this today.”
To learn more about the program proposal, how funds will be spent, and more, visit the County’s website: https://www.sanjuancountywa.
Questions? Contact Parks and Fair Director Brandon Andrews at brandona@sanjuancountywa.
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Tax and Spend by lame duck councilors is apparently the new agenda! Vague “cultural access” goals are clearly insufficient reason for raising our taxes during a time of horrendous inflation and falling real incomes. How TONE DEAF are councilors Cindy Wolf and Christine Minney? What part of NO NEW TAXES do they not understand?
Per capita, there’s already more arts/theater/music/film stuff on these islands than most rural counties. What is the real need being addressed here?
$20 per household isn’t much but if we’re going to pay more taxes, I’d strongly prefer something that has a more tangible concrete benefit to the many people who are struggling to find secure housing and employment during a time of substantial economic disruption and inequality.
I also take issue with the process, which should have incorporated more broad input from the public, because nobody likes paying more taxes.
• Inspire Washington gives a presentation to the San Juan County Council
• Brandon Andrews explores the feasibility of setting up the program
• Local school districts, museums, theaters, and county nonprofits happily support more money
• County Council approves a new tax in a 2-1 vote (with the 1 being an abstention)
If it’s that easy to raise an extra $800,000 per year, I’d like to ask the Council members when I can give a presentation about the daily struggles of our least fortunate residents, who are living in inadequate, poorly insulated, unpermitted dwellings without reliable access to heat and water at a time when county code enforcement is virtually non-existent and landlords are making out like bandits. $800,000/year would go quite a long way towards addressing these problems.