I have been a member of The Recording Academy (Grammys) for 20 years plus. Sometimes I get asked what’s in it for me, especially since the Grammy winners often aren’t my bag. Here’s several good things I got the other day via email from the Academy’s Advocacy Committee. Go team!
Dear Tom:
Thanks to your support and involvement, 2016 was a year of tremendous success for The Recording Academy’s Advocacy efforts. Here are some of the things we accomplished together:
• Congress passed and the President signed into law the Academy-backed BOTS Act. This new law will protect artists and music fans by cracking down on online ticket scalpers.
• Over 2,000 Academy members participated in GRAMMYs in My District in October, a new milestone for the largest music advocacy day in history.
• The Recording Academy launched the GRAMMY Fund for Music Creators, a political action committee that provides a new opportunity for Academy members to advance their interests on important policy matters.
• Academy President/CEO Neil Portnow spoke to millions on the GRAMMY Awards telecast to address fair compensation for music creators.
• Two federal agencies, U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service and U.S. Department of Agriculture, announced a new partnership that will make it easier for musicians to travel internationally with musical instruments that contain both rare plant and animal material.
• The Obama Administration protected older musical instruments in its final regulations to ban ivory and fight the poaching of African elephants.
• By the end of the 114th Congress, over 70 different Members of Congress had signed on to co-sponsor pro-music legislation such as the Fair Play Fair Pay Act, the AMP Act, and the Songwriter Equity Act.
Thank you for being an integral part of our advocacy efforts this year. We look forward to partnering with you to achieve more great things for the music community in 2017. Have a great holiday season and a happy New Year.
Sincerely,
Your GRAMMY Advocacy Team
Washington, D.C.
Why I belong to The Recording Academy
