USA Today: “#SaveOurStages: How the new COVID-19 relief package will help entertainment venues”

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#SaveOurStages: How the new COVID-19 relief package will help entertainment venues
USA TODAY
By Hannah Yasharoff
December 21, 2020

After nine months of coronavirus-induced shutdowns that have impacted nearly every trade, many in the entertainment industry can hope for better days thanks to the Save Our Stages Act, which lawmakers announced Sunday would be included within the COVID-19 relief package

An estimated $15 billion would go toward grant programs for live venues, independent movie theaters and other cultural institutions, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., and Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., said Sunday in a statement. 

Congressional leaders said Sunday they had reached a deal to pass a nearly $900 billion package that would include individual checks, small business loans and unemployment benefits for those struggling financially due to the pandemic. The relief bill must still be passed by the House and Senate and then signed by President Donald Trump before it can go into effect. 

"We secured the #SaveOurStages Act for indie music venues, Broadway, comedy clubs, indie movie theaters, and more," tweeted Schumer. "These are people’s jobs and livelihoods, and they need this help now. I won’t stop fighting for them."

'The precipice of a mass collapse':Independent music venues fear they'll be forced to close forever

Introduced in July by Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas; Sen. Amy Klobuchar, D-Minn.; Rep. Peter Welch, D-Vt.; and Rep. Roger Williams R-Texas, the act aimed to secure grants for small venue employees out of their jobs while COVID-19 prevented shows from going on. 

“Texas’ historic and world-class entertainment venues were some of the first businesses to close, and many remain shuttered nine months later,” Cornyn said Monday in a statement. “I’m proud to have led the charge in the Senate to ensure they have the resources to overcome lost revenue and mounting bills, and I urge the president to quickly sign this into law so Texans can enjoy their favorite artists at dance halls and live music venues for years to come.”

Recording Academy Interim President and CEO Harvey Mason Jr. expressed his thanks Monday to Congress for ensuring that performers and those behind the scenes "are given the support they need during this difficult time.” 

The larger bill also includes a program for Pandemic Unemployment Assistance, which National Independent Venue Association (NIVA) president Dayna Frank said will "help the millions of people who lost their jobs through no fault of their own during this economic crisis."

NIVA, which was born amid the pandemic, represents more than 3,000 independent music venues, comedy clubs, performing arts centers, concert promoters and festivals from every state in the U.S.

"We're thrilled that Congress has heard the call of shuttered independent venues across the country and provided us a crucial lifeline," Frank added. 

In a senate floor speech Tuesday, Klobuchar celebrated the act's bipartisan support.

"We worked so hard to make this about America and American music and American theater and American culture," she said. "We all know that you can't go stand in a mosh pit in the middle of a pandemic. ... And while we see the light at the end of the tunnel with the vaccines, we know that it will be quite a while before these businesses, which operate on such thin margins as it is, can keep going. And I think we also know the importance of the arts and music, not only as a cultural icon in America, but also as an economic driver." 

Billie Eilish, Willie Nelson, Jimmy Buffett, Billy Joel, Lady Gaga and Gary Clark Jr. were among the dozens of artists who signed a joint letter in June to Congress on behalf of NIVA to ask for financial relief. 

"Independent venues give artists their start, often as the first stage most of us have played on," the letter read. "We urge you to remember we are the nation that gave the world jazz, country, rock & roll, bluegrass, hip hop, metal, blues, and R&B. Entertainment is America's largest economic export, with songs written and produced by American artists sung in every place on the globe."

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