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CCA Bulletin 37/06
Ottawa,
September 7, 2006
CCA
Encourages Pre-Budget Finance Committee to Adopt “A
Creative New Way of Thinking”
On
September 5 2006, the Canadian Conference of the Arts (CCA)
sent its brief A
Creative New Way of Thinking to the Clerk of
the federal Standing Committee on Finance for consideration
as part of its upcoming fall pre-budget deliberations.
The
CCA, in response to extensive
consultations with its membership at its March 2006 policy
conferences, and again in recent weeks as it prepared its
brief, has elected to situate its 2006 pre-budget recommendations
against the broader canvas of social and economic change in
all sectors of Canadian life. The intent of the CCA's nine
recommendations is to encourage a substantive response by
the federal government to these fundamental changes that affect,
amongst others, hundreds of thousands of Canadians working
in the arts and cultural sector.
The
CCA has participated in the pre-budget consultations for over
two decades. During this time we have put forward ideas and
recommendations so that the federal government and the arts
and culture sector can more effectively work together in contributing
to the development of the country's arts and cultural industries.
Over
this period of time, the CCA has watched the evolution of
the Canadian economy and labour market with great interest.
For many years the interests of Canadian artists, creators,
and arts professionals were seen at stark variance to those
of the majority of Canada's labour force. This is no longer
the case, however, as the number of self-employed in the Canadian
economy has grown considerably (with the arts and culture
sector still showing however one of the highest rates of self-employment
in the Canadian economy), with workers who possess a range
of sophisticated skills necessary to pursue several different
opportunities simultaneously to earn a livelihood.
The
CCA argues that it is time for the federal government to address
the realities and inequities confronted by self-employed professionals
in general, and to seek solutions to the challenges they face
working in a labour, taxation, and social benefit system developed
for employees in the traditional, industrial meaning of the
word. It is now clear to the CCA that it is time to recalibrate
many of the policies and regulations that recall an era where
self-employment was an aberration. Now, self-employment is
becoming the norm. It is time to ensure that the federal government
enables and protects all Canadians who face
the challenges and uncertainties related to self-employment
and have to rely on multiple sources of income for their livelihood.
As
for the specific realities of the cultural sector, the CCA
is somewhat encouraged by some developments reflected in the
2006 federal budget and by the fact that Canada was the first
country to sign and ratify the UNESCO Convention on Cultural
Diversity. By so doing, it is the expectation of the CCA and
its members that the federal government will maintain and
enhance the support it provides to the arts and cultural sector
as a whole. To that end, the CCA expects that the Government
will ensure the vitality of Canadian culture through the judicious
use of legislation, regulation, our national cultural institutions
and agencies, as well as adequate public funding.
The
CCA encourages the Minister of Finance, the Members of the
Standing Committee on Finance, and federal policy makers to
give serious consideration to our nine pre-budget recommendations,
and step through the looking glass into a 21st Century where
Canadians exercise greater choices in their career management
than ever have been considered before.
Summary
of the Canadian Conference of the Arts' Pre-Budget Recommendations
to the Standing Committee on Finance
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The CCA sees
the extension of the $ 500 children's physical activity
tax credit to include artistic activity as another form
of benefit to Canadian families and children, and we urge
the Standing Committee on Finance to formally endorse
our position.
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The CCA recommends
that the Standing Committee endorse the benefits of taxation
measures to support creativity such as a minimum $ 30
K exemption on revenue deriving from copyright and residual
payments, and tax exemption to grants to individual artists
and creators.
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The CCA recommends
that a constructive approach be taken by the government
to resolve the inequity in EI and CPP programs for self-employed
workers.
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At a minimum,
the CCA recommends that the Standing Committee discuss
the ongoing issue of income averaging with officials from
the Department of Finance to determine if a new system
could be developed. The CCA also requests that the basic
personal deduction limit for self-employed Canadians be
raised to $10K.
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The CCA supports
requests for further increases in the budget of the Canada
Council and asks that the increase of $ 30 million to
the Council's 2007-08 budget announced in the May 2006
federal budget be made permanent.
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The CCA asks
the Standing Committee to ensure that it understands the
unique funding needs of each of the PCH's cultural agencies
and institutions and address them.
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The CCA encourages
the Minister of Finance and the Standing Committee to
address the funding situation of the federal museum and
heritage institutions in the upcoming federal budget,
as well as the urgency of the development and implementation
of a new federal museums policy.
- The CCA calls upon the Standing
Committee to recommend placing the Canadian Heritage's “Tomorrow
Starts Today” suite of programs on a permanent funding
basis and expand matching fund programs to complement the
changes in the capital gains tax treatment announced in
Budget 2006.
- The CCA recommends that in its
report to the Minister of Finance, the Standing Committee
address the concern about over-accountability burden of
not for profit and charitable organizations concerning the
public financial support they get.
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