In a move that has shaken arts organizations, the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) said on its website that it is eliminating a funding program that supports diversity, equity and inclusion and underserved communities. Instead, the federal agency will prioritize programs that celebrate the 250th anniversary of the United States.
The NEA is cutting the grant program Challenge America, which primarily supported small organizations that reached “historically underserved communities that have limited access to the arts relative to geography, ethnicity, economics, and/or disability.”
Challenge America’s $10,000 grants funded a wide range of programs by arts groups across the country, from free or reduced prices for theater tickets in Florida to an arts program for Native American residents at a nursing facility in North Carolina.
The NEA is encouraging arts groups to instead apply for Grants for Arts Projects (GAP), which support projects that “celebrate the nation’s rich artistic heritage and creativity by honoring the semiquincentennial of the United States of America (America250).”


