
White House Proposes Closing the National Endowment for the Humanities in Fall 2017
For months, there have been murmurings that the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) might be in trouble. The NEH is a US federal agency that was created in 1965. Since then, it has given grants to archives, libraries, museums, and scholars in order to support research and provide access to educational resources. Among other things, it has helped fund over 7,000 books, the Ken Burns documentary The Civil War, and the United States Newspaper Project, which resulted in the creation of a digital newspaper archive. Millions of people have been benefited from programs funded by the NEH.
And the Trump administration wants to shut it down along with 65 other programs, beginning this fall.
On May 23, 2017, the administration released its proposed budget for fiscal year 2018. As part of it, the White House is seeking $42 million in order to “undertake an orderly shutdown of the [NEH]’s core operations” to begin on October 1, 2017. As part of the closure:
- “NEH will not invite or accept any new grant applications, nor make any new grants, in FY 2018.”
- “NEH will initiate action to terminate the employment of approximately 95 of its current staff of 145 employees.”