CCA Bulletin 14/06
FROM THE
DESK OF ALAIN PINEAU
National Director
Canadian Conference of the Arts
March 10, 2006
The Canadian Conference
of the Arts has concluded an intensive five days of consultation
and deliberation designed to help formulate the CCA’s
agenda for presentation to the new government. The Chalmers
Conference, the National Policy Conference and a two-day meeting
of the Board of Governors which followed immediately after
yielded a rich harvest of ideas and strategies, from our keynote
speakers, conference delegates and the Board and Secretariat
of the CCA.
The experience was
an affirmation of the important role that the cultural sector
attributes to the CCA in the wide range of cultural policy
issues before us. It was also an occasion for all of us to
start working on a new way of delivering our message to Parliamentarians
about the place that artists and cultural institutions and
industries occupy in the fabric of Canadian society. There
are many things to say about the event, and I will get back
to them in another bulletin soon.
For now, I would
first like to thank the delegates, our young conference bloggers,
our keynote speakers and our sponsors for making this extraordinary
event possible and enriching. I will also invite you all to
go the website and check the material coming out of the conferences
(www.ccarts.ca).
The real challenge
begins right now, as the Secretariat articulates and implements
an action plan based on what we drew from the five days of
deliberation.
One of the first
things that we all seem to agree upon is the inevitability
of another federal election within the next 18-24 months.
Accordingly, the Board of Governors of the CCA has directed
the Secretariat to begin planning for this eventuality immediately.
Our election readiness campaign will begin in the coming weeks,
both with the publication of our advocacy agenda and with
an appeal for a special levy from our members and supporters
to finance the preparation of a broad-based election strategy.
You will be hearing more about this soon.
For the immediate
future , the Board of the CCA has identified the forthcoming
federal budget as our first and most important target. The
CCA will be seeking meetings with the Minister of Finance,
Minister of National Revenue, the President of the Treasury
Board, the Minister of Canadian Heritage, the Minister of
Foreign Affairs and the official opposition critics for each
of these portfolios. Our agenda for these meetings is clear:
- ask the government to honour the commitments outlined
in the November 23, 2005 announcement; this includes the
progressive increase to the budget of the Canada Council
for the Arts by $150 million over the next three fiscal
years, as well as increases to the cultural funding programs
in Foreign Affairs, the National Art Centre and national
training institutions;
- we will also seek some movement on tax policy issues,
including expanding the proposed tax credit for extracurricular
physical activities to include arts activities, and a more
equitable treatment of self-employed artists and arts professionals;
- we will encourage the new government to proceed immediately
with a new federal museums policy, which must provide a
minimum of $75 million a year in new funds over three years
to make it an effective tool.
The letters to
these officials will be posted on our website with replies
that the CCA receives, as they come in.
The next five weeks
are critical for having any influence over the federal budgetary
process, as the Speech from the Throne will be read on 4 April
with rumours of a federal budget to coming the following Monday
or Tuesday, just prior to the House’s Easter break recess.
As our keynote speaker, former Deputy Minister Alain Gourd,
noted at the Saturday session of the national policy conference,
the cultural sector has no time to waste and we must ensure
our message has resonance with the new government’s
expressed priorities and their touchstones of accountability
and efficiency (to see Alain Gourd’s presentation, please
refer to our Website. Alain made a very strong impression
on delegates and his advice is most timely as we launch our
advocacy efforts with this new government).
I undertake to
keep you posted about any progress or challenges we encounter
along the way. We are in the process of crafting a longer
term action plan that will include many of the ideas and priorities
we heard at both the Chalmers and National Policy conferences.
This will be included in the first issue of our new electronic
magazine @gora, dedicated to the March conferences and their
outcomes.
If you have any
thoughts that you want to share regarding the conferences
or priorities that the CCA should pursue, please do not hesitate
to share them with us by email, telephone or letter. We will
be grateful to receive them.
|