On paper, the Portland Japanese Garden should be a shoo-in to receive money from the cityâs new Office of Arts & Culture to help cover basic expenses.
Opened in 1967, the garden hosts a wide array of Japanese cultural programs across its 12½-acre grove near Washington Park. The nonprofit features three cultural centers: the Japan Institute (which opened in 2022 to strengthen the gardenâs international relationships), an art and performance gallery, and a traditional tea house originally shipped in pieces from Japan. The garden takes part in Arts for All, a program that offers discounted admission for anyone with an Oregon Trail food assistance card.
Given all that, senior donor relations manager Valerie Egan wants to know why the garden was left off of the Arts Officeâs list of GOS, or general operating support, grant recipients released Oct. 30. So does the Japanese Gardenâs board of directors.
âIt was nothing advertised publicly on the calendar that you could compete for,â Egan says. âIâm sure we are not the only organization where board members are like, âWhy werenât we considered for these grants?ââ
As WW has previously reported, Oregon Contemporary director Blake Shell wrote an open letter Nov. 1 signed by 15 of the Arts Officeâs 80 GOS grant recipients, voicing concern about the reduced amounts awarded to 45 smaller arts organizations in 2024 while six of the cityâs largest arts institutions got award increases.
The Portland City Council voted last year to end its long-standing contract with the Regional Arts & Culture Council to manage the cityâs arts dollars. One of the councilâs chief criticisms of RACC stemmed from a lack of transparency in how it made funding decisions. When it formed the Arts Office this past July, the city pledged to be more formula-based in its disbursements than RACC.
But the Arts Officeâs new formula now irks the small orgs, which feel left in the dark by the new process.
Egan, as well as Shell and the others who signed the letter, stressed no one resents larger organizations getting money they need. Rather, they have concerns about the cityâs GOS grant process in its first year since decentralizing the award authority RACC once held.
âSmaller arts organizations are a key part of the overall arts ecosystem,â Shell wrote. âTo be clear, we are not against giving larger groups more funding, but in this case, smaller organizationsâ funding was decreased significantly despite an overall increase in available funds. We are asking you to retain the funding small organizations were counting on based on historical giving from the city.â
The city argues that its new method of funding organizations creates a more equitable process to sustain the cityâs myriad creative centers. But many of Portlandâs smaller arts organizations say the shift in who decides their funding has led to the exact opposite result, leaving them less money for the following year than expected.
According to emails this fall between the Arts Office and the smaller arts organizations, the city applied a formula: Organizations would get the same âbase awardsâ for general operating expenses like rent and payroll that they received the year before. The big difference is this yearâs âinvestment awards,â tacked on to the base awards. The city decided organizations would get investment awards equivalent to 40% of their base awards.
Previously, RACC distributed investment awards through a separate competitive application process, unlike the city whose new black-and-white formula for investment awards ultimately calculated lower amounts this year for many smaller recipients.
In an Oct. 30 email, Josh Hecht, artistic director for Profile Theatre, asked the Arts Office about its process for granting investment awards after his organization was notified it would receive 16% less funding than it did last year.
Grants program manager Jeff Hawthorne of the Arts Office wrote back that investment awards should be treated as a bonus, not a guaranteed amount that organizations could plan for ahead of time, because they are âcontingent on many factors beyond our control, including Arts Tax collections, future budgets, and future priorities adopted by City Council.â
Arts Office director Chariti Montez wrote to Oregon Contemporaryâs Shell in an email Nov. 1 that investment awards âhave always fluctuated from year to year depending on the resources available.â
The smaller arts organizations also complained about the cityâs application process, arguing it was rushed, resulting in a process that lacked the transparency the city promised when it replaced RACC with a funding system fueled by public dollars.
There was no open application process for the 2025 fiscal year, which could have given recipients a chance to tell the city about their funding needs next year. Instead, Montez tells WW, the city sent RACCâs award recipients for 2023â24 a one-page questionnaire on Aug. 29 that was due little more than a month later, on Sept. 30. The organizations were asked to demonstrate how their programming drew in people historically underserved by the arts.
Egan says she is perplexed by what she sees as the Arts Officeâs lack of transparency and failure to communicate with any organizations outside of RACCâs fold of previously funded recipients. âItâs disappointing to feel like [the city] gave out the money to who got it before and left it at that,â she says.
Montez concluded in her email to Shell on Nov. 1 that âthe city remains committed to supporting the arts ecosystemâfrom individual artists and creatives to small, medium, and large arts organizations alike.â The city would âstrive to secure additional funding,â she wrote, but she later clarified to WW that it was not a âpromise or guarantee.â
Hecht and Shell were dissatisfied with the Arts Officeâs responses and say they will take their frustrations into planned meetings with city officials Nov. 20 and 21.
âI do think that the City Office of Arts and Culture [is] run by well-intentioned, experienced and talented arts advocates who believe in the power of art and the necessity of a thriving arts sector in Portland,â Hecht wrote WW via email. âBut having made a series of individual decisions, I think they have not properly grasped the impact of these regressive funding policies on the arts ecosystem as a whole.â
âWeâre asked to do more with less,â Shell tells WW, âand then when we do, weâre given even less.â
As for Portland Japanese Garden, Egan says she will keep an eye out for the cityâs next award cycle. Until then, sheâs still trying to make sense of what to do in the meantime, she says.
âIâm not trying to be picky here, but donât we care about equity in funding and trying to make it accessible to all these organizations, and not just the really obvious ones?â
Clarification: We have updated one of Eganâs quotes to more accurately convey her intent.