
An article published in the Denver Westword on July 15, 2025, Kristen Fiore highlighted the implications of losing the National Endowment for the Humanities funding to Colorado humanities.
Colorado Humanities Organizations Scramble in Wake of Lost National Endowment of Humanities Funding
By Kristen Fiore | Denver Westword July 14, 2025
The National Endowment for the Humanities, which was established with the National Endowment for the Arts and passed by Congress in 1965, has been providing federal grants for humanities projects in Colorado for nearly sixty years and operating grants for Colorado Humanities since its founding in 1974, two years after Congress amended the statute to create state humanities councils.
Instead of receiving promised funds this year, though, many NEA and NEH grant winners received a vague email announcing that their funding would be rescinded as the federal agencies switch gears under the Trump administration. Unlike NEA grants, most NEH funding is paid out through multi-year grants, and the directive rescinded funds for projects in fiscal years 2021-2025. As a result, large chunks of the more than $11 million that would have been awarded to Colorado Humanities and other state organizations, such as universities and museums, suddenly disappeared.
Though some Colorado organizations had received part of their promised NEH funding before the April announcement, many are now scrambling for new financing and other ways to stay afloat.
To read about funding implications for other organizations such as Colorado Humanities, Denver Art Museum, and History Colorado Center, and to understand the broader impact on the arts and humanities in Colorado, read the full story here.
By Rylyn Todd | Cache la Poudre River National Heritage Area
Local Impact of Funding Cuts
The Cache la Poudre River National Heritage Area (Cache NHA), managed by the Poudre Heritage Alliance nonprofit, is a vital part of Northern Colorado, weaving tales of water development, management, and law over its 45-mile stretch. The PHA was slated to receive a $25,000 NEH grant for the project, “Interpretation Guru: Building Capacity for Effective Interpretation Across Cache NHA,” which was cut abruptly, leaving $6,000 in remaining project costs unfunded.
Sabrina Stoker, the Executive Director of the Poudre Heritage Alliance, notes the NEH funding cuts significantly affected organizations across the state, but the larger ramification for the PHA is the loss of federal appropriations from Congress.
“For us as a National Heritage Area, the devastating blow is that of the withholding of FY25 funding that has been appropriated by Congress with CR3 but is being withheld by the Office of Management and Budget and being zeroed out in the upcoming FY26 budget,” Stoker said. “There are three NHAs in Colorado who work to tell the Colorado experience and America’s stories: Cache la Poudre River, Sangre de Cristo, and South Park. Each year, Congress appropriates $500,000 to each of these NHAs, so that’s $1.5M in humanities funding cut in Colorado in areas that drive tourism and generate significant economic activity.”
Good News
In good news, just one week after the publication of that article, Congress has awarded the remaining FY25 funds to the Poudre Heritage Alliance and other National Heritage Areas across the country. National Heritage Areas were also included in the first draft of the FY26 budget in the Department of Interior, Environment, and Related Agencies Appropriations Bill, 2026 (U.S. House of Represenatitives, 2025). There is still a long fight ahead as the federal funding landscape is constantly changing.
Save Your Heritage
The Alliance of National Heritage Areas, which represents all 62 National Heritage Areas in the United States designated by Congress, is actively advocating for the continuation of funds in Fiscal Year 2026.
We urge those in support of the Cache la Poudre River National Heritage Area’s mission to let their U.S. legislators know the importance of your National Heritage Area! Not sure how to contact your legislators? Use this tool to find your House and Senate representatives.
Save your heritage! You can help to close the funding gap by donating today. Your donation of any amount supports the Cache NHA’s efforts to provide free educational events to the public, community art shows, field trips for students, and historic preservation all while connecting people with their water heritage.