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Louisiana teachers' union concerned about educators' future; Supreme Court hears arguments in Trump immunity case; court issues restraining order against fracking waste-storage facility; landmark NE agreement takes a proactive approach to CO2 pipeline risks.

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Speaker Johnson accuses demonstrating students of getting support from Hamas. TikTok says it'll challenge the ban. And the Supreme Court dives into the gray area between abortion and pregnancy healthcare, and into former President Trump's broad immunity claims.

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Art for Maine’s Sake

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Monday, March 17, 2014   

AUGUSTA, Maine - Can art and artists re-invigorate Maine's economy? They can surely help, according to the overseers of a state grant that is being used to revitalize downtowns and help create jobs.

It is called a "seed" grant because of its initials, CCED, which stand for Creative Communities Equal Economic Development. Julie Richard, Maine Arts Commission, said the grant, now in its fifth year, helps creative arts projects and galleries revitalize communities.

There is little skepticism about this in Maine, she said, where the average factory worker knows the role art plays.

"What's really ironic in Maine is that that person who works in that food processing plant is probably a sculptor on the weekends, or a painter on the weekends, or plays in a band," Richard pointed out.

Past grants have helped revitalize downtown areas of Waterville and Belfast and brand them as destinations for art, culture and local food.

Kimberly Callas, Belfast Creative Coalition, said an analysis by the state's Department of Labor showed the arts-related workforce was third-largest, behind only jobs in government and health care.

"The creative industries represented 14.6 percent of the total number of establishments in Belfast. That's 8 percent of the total employment in Belfast and 7.1 percent of the total payroll," Callas said.

One of the newest CCED grant recipients is the Beehive Design Collective, Machias, where they are bringing three downtown buildings back to life with arts and cultural roles. The Maine Community Foundation also contributed. Kehben Grier is a collective member.

"We're really interested in invigorating the arts in a way that is super-relevant to working-class people and isn't just sort of surface-level stimulation," Grier said.

Nine years in the making, the collective recently finished a narrative illustration to be used in classrooms internationally. The members will put funds raised this way back into local community-development work.

Richard said Maine is known across the country as an arts-centered state, adding that art can be an engine of Maine's economy.

"The arts don't take away jobs, the arts build jobs. The CCED grant is a really good example of that in creating new jobs for people, because that has been what it has done."




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