CCA Bulletin 04/07
Ottawa,
Wednesday, February 7, 2007
Mid-Winter
Update from Parliament Hill
CBC
Mandate Review
Changes
within the Standing Committee on Canadian Heritage
Canadian
Television Fund crisis and other issues
The
Canada Council for the Arts launches special 50th anniversary
website
The
House of Commons resumed sitting last Monday, January 29 th, marking the beginning of a session that many expect will
lead to another federal election. As to when the timing of
any future voting might occur that is as good as anyone's
guess and local psychics around Parliament Hill appear to
be doing quite a booming business these days!
Each
week's new edition of The Hill Times arrives
full of all kind of speculative teasers: Will an election
result from the expected March 20 th federal budget? Or, will
the budget be announced later than anticipated, or earlier,
and how would that affect things? Could the budget pass a
potential confidence motion, delaying a trip to the polls
until the fall or perhaps even next year?
One
thing that is certain is the Canadian Conference of the Arts
(CCA) will continue to advance its policy agenda for Canadian
arts and culture at the federal level in advance of (and during!)
any possible federal election. In the meantime, here are a
few recent developments in Ottawa worth noting:
CBC
Mandate Review
As
expected, the Standing Committee on Canadian Heritage announced
last week that it will proceed with “A
Full Investigation of the Role for a Public Broadcaster in
the 21 st Century”. Organizations and individuals
interested in making a presentation to the Committee have
until Monday February 26 th to file their maximum 10-page
brief, in the official language of Canada of their choice.
The CCA will certainly draft a written intervention and we
would be pleased to receive comments from members and supporters
by 5PM Friday February 16th at info@ccarts.ca
about the issues they would like to see dealt with in this
study. Please consult the Parliamentary document in order
to assess what questions are being posed by the Standing Committee
in terms of the mandate for their work.
The
Committee was scheduled to start its review this Thursday,
but has been delayed 2 weeks in order to get through the CTF
crisis that emerged in the last two weeks. MPs expect
to interview as many as 72 witnesses in Ottawa right through
to May, and will be traveling in the break weeks: St. John
' s, Winnipeg, Vancouver, Montréal and Toronto are
confirmed so far, with the possibility of some small-town
meetings and a trip to the far North (Yellowknife is a possibility).
The Committee aims to have the draft report done by mid-June
– unless, of course, there's an election before that!
Changes
within the Standing Committee on Canadian Heritage
And
speaking of the Standing Committee on Canadian Heritage, avid political watchers will want to know there were some
roster changes over the holidays to “the who's who” in terms
of Committee members.
Tina
Keeper, a first-time Liberal MP for Churchill, Manitoba who
served on the Committee in the last Parliamentary session,
has been named Canadian Heritage critic for the Hon. Stephane
Dion's newly-minted “shadow cabinet”. Ms. Keeper, perhaps
best known for her role on CBC TV's “North of 60”, takes over
for the Hon. Mauril Bélanger, who was reassigned as
the Liberal critic for Infrastructure.
The
CCA would like to thank Monsieur Bélanger for the effort
and energy he brought to his role in the previous House session,
and we look forward to working with Ms. Keeper (whom we met
with last week for the first time) as she assumes her new
role. The CCA would also like to congratulate four other new
members on their appointment to the Standing Committee for
the new session of the 39 th Parliament of Canada: Diane Bourgeois
(Bloc Québécois MP, Terrebonne-Blainville);
Gord Brown (Conservative MP, Leeds-Grenville); Andy Scott
(Liberal MP, Fredericton ) and Hedy Fry (Liberal MP, Vancouver
Centre).
Canadian
Television Fund crisis and other issues
Last,
and further to the previous CCA Bulletin
03/07, the Standing Committee on Canadian Heritage has
adopted a motion to conduct a study on February 8 th regarding
the current state of the disputed Canadian Television Fund
(CTF). The Hon. Bev Oda, Minister of Canadian Heritage, released
a statement
following her January 30th meeting with “the principal funders
of the CTF”, and the situation appears far from being resolved.
Between
the CTF and the 21 st Century public broadcasting review,
not to mention various government programs (like its Traveling
Exhibitions policy) up for statutory review and
persistent rumours that new draft copyright legislation might
(perhaps?) be introduced, there are plenty of activities and
issues to keep the Standing Committee on Heritage occupied
for some time to come. The CCA will continue to monitor any
and all developments, which we will share with our members
and supporters via the bulletin.
The
Canada Council for the Arts launches special 50th anniversary
website
2007
is the 50th anniversary of the Canada
Council for the Arts. For five decades, the Council has
given Canadians access to their own stories through the imagination
of artists in every corner of the country. As you will see,
while celebrating past achievements, the Council is deliberately
looking to the future and concentrates on arts, culture and
the younger generation of Canadians.
Want
to know more about Canadian artists? Check out the artists'
stories and historical timeline. Looking for arts events in
your area? The Council has up-to-date information on arts
events, including over 100 events across Canada dedicated
to the Council's 50th anniversary.
Take the 50
for 50 Arts Challenge! Seek out 50 special arts experiences
this year that will put you in closer touch with the artistic
life of your community. Tell Council about your experiences
at 50@canadacouncil.ca
|