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CCA Bulletin 21/06
FROM
THE DESK OF ALAIN PINEAU
National Director
Canadian Conference of the Arts
April 20, 2006
Pre-budget
Consultation: Finance Minister Flaherty expresses interest
in at least two of the CCA's priorities!
The CCA participated
Wednesday in a meeting with Federal Finance Minister James
Flaherty, Parliamentary Secretary Diane Ablonczy and Finance
Department Officers, in the context of the
pre-budget consultations launched by the Minister on April
6.
The meeting regrouped
representatives from 18 national organizations, from
the education, child and health care sectors and the public
service, the CCA being the only one in the mix concerned with
arts and culture. The two hour meeting was rigorously structured,
each organization having three minutes to present
their respective budget priorities and a final minute
at the end of the meeting to wrap up or answer a point raised
by the Minister!
Minister Flaherty
opened the meeting by saying that he was aware of the difficulties
posed by such time constraints, not only within the meeting
itself, but also with preparing his first budget. He indicated
that this consultation was just the beginning of a broader
consultation concerning the following budget, where more issues
beyond the well-known top five priorities of his government
could be addressed. Amongst some general concerns, he expressed
the government's desire to exercise frugality in federal spending,
whose growth of 15% over the past year is deemed irresponsible
and unsustainable.
Kindly but firmly
kept in line by Diane Ablonczy's use of her new stop watch,
each of the 18 spokespersons obviously kept to the essential
requests of their respective sectors. However, a good number
of major issues were addressed one way or another by one or
many of the presenters, whether it be the largely supported
need for a properly financed and regulated national child
care program, the inappropriateness of a GST rebate when so
much government investment is required in so many areas, the
risks of "over-accountability" for the not-for-profit
sectors, etc.
On behalf of the
CCA, I re-tabled the
submission we made last October in the round of pre-budget
consultations conducted by the previous government. Not surprisingly,
our priorities have not changed much over the past six months:
as reconfirmed at our March Conference, they are related to
increased and stable funding and to taxation issues.
Under funding:
- The CCA fully supports the Canadian Arts Coalition’s
request for at least a doubling of the Canada Council’s
budget over three years;
- The CCA requests that the new federal museum policy, long
in the making, be put in place and adequate funding for
museums and art galleries across the country be provided;
- The CCA considers the CBC part of the backbone of the
Canadian cultural sector. We support its plan for regional
programming in radio and television broadcasting.
Under taxation:
- The CCA fully endorses the government's promise to give
a $500 tax credit to parents of children under 16 years
old who enrol them in physical activity programs. We
urge that this credit be extended to all arts activity
programs for children under 16 because of the well-documented
benefits of individual and social wellness accruing from
exposure to the arts;
- The CCA urges the Minister to implement income averaging
for self-employed Canadians, including artists and cultural
workers. The growing number of self-employed people in the
Canadian labour market who face fluctuating income levels
would greatly benefit from such a measure of social equity.
- Finally, the CCA urges the government to put in place
policies to exempt all (or a maximum level) of creators’
copyright and patent royalties from taxation, as recently
proposed by the Canadian
Council of Chief Executives, measures which would greatly
contribute to Canadian creativity and international competitiveness.
While our most immediate
priority (the Canada Council’s budget increase) simply
drew the comment that they had heard abundantly about this
one from Heritage Minister Oda, I am pleased to report that
in his summing up, the Minister publicly committed to meeting
with the CCA again in the near future to further explore the
$500 tax credit for children’s arts training (to parallel
physical activities) and the exemption of copyright revenue
from taxation.
We will of course
keep pressing the government on those two issues, but will
also continue advocating for our other top priorities, the
Canada Council's budget increase remaining on top of the list.
Stay tuned for more information on the upcoming budget…
and on the preparation for the next one!

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