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$10M awarded to 930 Washington state arts and culture groups

Published 1:30 am Wednesday, August 27, 2025

Driftwood Players
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Driftwood Players

Driftwood Players
International Mermaid Museum

ArtsFund and Allen Family Philanthropies (formerly known as the Paul G. Allen Family Foundation) announced on Tuesday $10 million in funding to 930 grantees in the third year of the Community Accelerator Grant program. This is the largest slate of awardees in the program’s history, with 19% being first-time grantees. Building on the successful $10 million pilot investment in 2023, and a second $10 million investment in 2024, the program has now infused a total of $30 million of unrestricted funding into Washington State arts and culture organizations.

Administered by ArtsFund and funded by Allen Family Philanthropies, the latest round of grants range from $2,500 to $25,000 in response to ongoing needs of arts and culture organizations. The unrestricted $10 million in funding will boost organizations’ abilities to invest in their missions and essential roles serving communities across the state.

“Across the three years of this successful partnership with Allen Family Philanthropies, we have seen the breadth and depth of the arts across Washington,” said ArtsFund president and CEO, Michael Greer. “Having access to well-resourced arts organizations in every community impacts livability for all Washingtonians — from economic opportunities to social cohesion and connection. We are proud to support Washington arts and culture organizations and the multi-faceted impacts they make in their region.”

Grants were awarded to every eligible organization that applied. The average award size was $10,753. Approximately 74% of grantees reported annual budgets of less than $500,000 — this is a 5% increase from 2024, demonstrating the need for low-barrier, unrestricted grant programs for smaller arts and culture nonprofit organizations. For the first time in the program’s history, this year’s distribution includes organizations in all 39 counties throughout Washington.

“The incredible reach of this program into every corner of our state shows just how much this type of flexible funding is needed to bolster Washington’s rich and diverse arts and culture sector,” said Lara Littlefield, executive director of Allen Family Philanthropies. “This community-driven model now supports nearly a thousand organizations and the impact of their creative work, helping to make our local communities more vibrant and healthy.”

The application was designed to be low barrier, so that no organization would find it too cumbersome to apply. The ease and efficiency during the application and distribution process are major reasons that 91% of grantees from 2024 reapplied for this funding.

Participation also increased from every corner of the state with 612 grantees in Northwest Washington, 160 in Southwest, 87 in Eastern, and 51 in Central, including funding for 12 out of 29 (41%) of Washington’s federally recognized tribes. In addition, 18.5% of grantees this year are organizations located in rural counties (as defined by Washington state) and the program continues to focus on communities that have historically lacked access to funding.

The leading uses grantees cite for unrestricted funding, in order of priority, are programming; salaries and labor; and rent, mortgage and facility upgrades, with 85% of organizations citing programming or salaries and labor as their top needs. While the program does not require grant reporting, case studies are available that share more about past years’ recipients and how the awards impacted organizations.

Grays Harbor County recipients:

7th Street Kids — $5,000

7th Street Theatre Association — $5,000

Driftwood Players — $5,000

International Mermaid Museum — $5,000

McCleary Historical Society — $2,500

Quinault Indian Nation Language Department — $25,000

South Beach Arts Association — $25,000