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But limitations remain in administering federal funds with tight eligibility requirements


The Music Hall in Portsmouth. (Courtesy photo)

As federal aid trickles out, there is a push to get more help from the state for formerly shuttered venues.

As of July 26, 52 venues have received $23.6 million from the Shuttered Venue Operators Grant (SVOG), ranging from $2.7 million to the entity that runs the Hampton Beach Casino Ballroom to just $7,000 to the KAPOW theater in Manchester.

But some venues like Tupelo Music Hall in Derry have yet to make the list, much to the frustration of Scott Hayward, who called the Small Business Administration rollout of the program, which was passed as a stimulus bill shortly after Christmas and didn’t start accepting applications until April 23, “a complete and utter disaster. We haven’t received a message back.”

Ginnie Lupi, director of the NH State Council of the Arts, was a little more charitable.

“It’s been a long haul,” she said. “But they are trying to get their act together. It’s always hard, the first time you set up a new program.”

Nationally, the agency has awarded more than 10,000 grants, two-thirds of the 15,000 that applied, and $7.5 billion has been disbursed.

So far, the SBA has been granting awards to about 95% of those that applied, but some venues are ineligible for the funding, and that’s where the state has stepped in, in several ways. First, it set up its own shuttered venue program the Live Venue Relief Program.

That gave out $12 million to 43 venues in the fall.

On June 11, the state added the Live Venue Assistance Program, which will provide up to 75% of their operating expenses, or $750,000, whichever is lower.

But that program is only available to those that have been excluded from SVOG and already got money from the state’s previous program. Very few venders — mostly large ones — fit that criteria, and on Thursday, Governor Sununu said that $2.5 million were awarded to six major vendors. At deadline, the Governor’s Office for Relief and Recovery (GOFERR) had not responded to who would receive the funds, but observers suggested that there would be venues that are too large to qualify for SVOG, such as the Bank of New Hampshire Pavilion, the Fisher Cats Stadium and New Hampshire Motor Speedway.

But Lupi said that leaves out smaller venues that may have not received state funding the first time around.

Last session however, the Legislature set up yet another program, Save Our Granite Stages Fund. Originally, it was proposed as a separate bill sponsored by State Sen. Becky Whitley, D- Concord, but it got incorporated in HB 2, the trailer bill to the budget, which passed on June 23. The budget writers however did not attach any money to it, instead banking on getting some of the nearly $1 billion in funds coming to the state through the American Rescue Plan Act.

That legislation would also exclude venues that got help from SVOG, but the venues didn’t necessarily have to be funded by the state already. Some may have not gotten it together to apply for either program. Or some may not be administratively eligible — for instance, the Stockbridge Theatre is part of Pinkerton Academy or the Audi is owned by the City of Concord.

Since the State Council of the Arts would be administering this program, Lupi is trying to assess the need, but already she said she expects that there will be enough groups that they could use at least a total $1 million. The decision, however, rests with the governor and the legislative fiscal committee. Already there have been several letters written to both nudging them to fund it.

“We have been fortunate to receive aid. We remain in desperate need of additional funds,” wrote Ethan Paulini, who is the producing artistic director of the Weathervane Theater in Whitefield.

“There are a number of performing arts venues in New Hampshire that did not qualify for the SVOG program, many being smaller venues or those with unique organizational structures,” wrote Trip Anderson, the board chair of arts4nh, an arts advocacy group. “The combination of extreme loses during the Covid-19 pandemic and extensive re-opening costs are putting these venues at risk.”

To further complicate things, Lupi will also be administrating a separate stream of American Rescue Plan funds: nearly $760,000 through the National Endowment for the Arts. This money would just go to nonprofits.

Any help is needed, Lupi said. While the public is starting to be willing to go back to the theater again, “you just can’t flip a switch.” Venues have supply chain issues, too. Touring groups need to be touring. Local groups have to organize and rehearse. And like all other businesses these days, there are staffing issues, both with paid employees and volunteers.

“People are coming back. They are hungry for live performances, and we really want to give it to them,” she said. “We can use all the help we can get.”


Fifty-two NH venues have received $23.6 million in SVOG funding. Nationally, more than 10,000 grants have been awarded, receiving $7.5 billion. Another 5,000 have applied and not received funding as of yet.

See also