CCA Bulletin 48/06
Ottawa,
November 17, 2006
CCA
Analysis of the 2006-2007 Supplementary Estimates (A)
Just the
Facts
The
2006-2007
Supplementary Estimates (A) were tabled in the House of
Commons recently. Of interest to members and supporters of
the Canadian Conference of the Arts (CCA) is the combination
of new funding, as well as internal transfers of existing
funding, announced for the Department of Canadian Heritage
(DCH), including its agencies and crown corporations.
The
new funding received is fairly minimal - outside of about
$5 million to Library and Archives and the National Film Board
(NFB) combined, the rest of the funding is comprised either
of money that was already announced (the $20 million increase
to the Canada Council), money that was owing to the sector
in any event (the $9.7 to the Book Publishing Industry Development
Program [BPIDP] that has been anticipated since the tabling
of the Main Estimates), or new funding for purposes outside
of arts, heritage and the cultural industries. This last category
includes items such as: $30 million for the Global Centre
for Pluralism, $12 million for the Games Hosting Program,
and the roughly $12 million for multiculturalism related programs
and initiatives.
Thus,
the bulk of the funding changes announced in the supplementary
estimates ($16 million) represent funding transfers from one
part of the DCH portfolio to another, which are detailed in
the following text and the linked tables posted at CCA's
@gora.
Tell
Me More.
Table
1 summarizes the new funding and funding transfers presented
in the Supplementary Estimates. Virtually all funding transfers
represent transfers within the DCH portfolio (i.e.
transfer of funding from one purpose to another). The purposes
of the new or transferred funds shown in Table
2 are as follows:
Arts
Canada
Council for the Arts : The $20 million in additional
funding announced in Budget 2006 appears in the Supplementary
Estimates (this is normal as the Main Estimates did not reflect
the $20 million - budget announcements are typically rolled
in to the Supplementary Estimates when they are tabled). There
is an additional $965,000 in new funding to the Council: the
development of Official Language Minority Communities ($600,000),
the Canada Music Fund ($250,000) and the Commission internationale
du théâtre francophone ($115,000).
National
Arts Centre : Transfer of $2.1 million made
up of $1 million for the Québec Scène Festival,
$ 600,000 for 'the creation of cultural content on-line and
other digitization projects', $350,000 for the development
of Official Language Minority Communities and $168,000 for
the Governor General Performing Arts Awards.
Broadcasting
and Audiovisual Production
Canadian
Broadcasting Corporation : Transfer of $2 million
for 'the creation of cultural content on-line and other digitization
projects' and an internal reallocation of $33.7 million 'for
capital projects related to English and French language radio
and television services'.
National
Film Board of Canada : Transfer of $2.9 million
for 'the creation of cultural content on-line and other digitization
projects' ($2.5 million) and the development of Official Language
Minority Communities ($420,000). The NFB also received new
appropriations of $3.2 million, which represent a carry forward
of $3.4 million in operating budget, less $190,000 in 2005
Expenditure Review Committee Savings (the Supplementary Estimates
do not indicate what the NFB cut back as part of this expenditure
review process).
Telefilm
Canada : Transfer of $20.4 million out of Telefilm
Canada to DCH for the Canadian Television Fund. This money
now appears as a DCH expenditure on the Canadian Television
Fund, a result of the implementation of the new and simplified
CTF governance framework, as announced in the recently published
DCH Plans and Priorities.
Telefilm Canada also received a $550,000 transfer for the
development of Official Language Minority Communities.
Heritage
Canadian
Museum of Civilization : Transfer of $1,554,250
for 'the creation of cultural content on-line and other digitization
projects.'
National
Museum of Science and Technology : Transfer
of $323,620 for 'the creation of cultural content on-line
and other digitization projects.'
Library
and Archives of Canada : Transfer of $3.5 million,
for 'the creation of cultural content on-line and other digitization
projects' ($2.5 million), preservation and accessibility of
Canada 's films ($550,000) and the creation of the Dictionary
of Canadian Biographies ($400,000). The organization received
a new appropriation for an operating budget carrying forward
($2.2 million) and collecting, processing, etc., the political
papers of the Right Honourable Paul Martin ($481,000). The
new appropriations were partially supported with funding available
at Library and Archives from the 2005 Expenditure Review process
($610,000) and existing funding to the organization ($626,000).
Department
of Canadian Heritage (DCH)
The
Department has received an
additional $73.8 million in Voted Appropriations for a
variety of purposes. Most of the new monies received accrue
to purposes other than arts or cultural industries, with more
than half of the new monies allotted to the new Global Centre
for Pluralism ($30 million), 'which advocates pluralism as
a foundation for good governance and human development through
research in and dialogue about ethnic, cultural, linguistic
and religious diversity,' (p.131, Supplementary Estimates)
and to sport ($12 million to the Games' Hosting Program).
A
number of smaller funding allotments appear for programs and
initiatives associated with multiculturalism: funding to the
Multiculturalism Program ($5.9 million), funding to support
programs dealing with discrimination faced by various communities
during wartime and in immigration ($1.96 million for the National
Historical Recognition Program, $2.7 million in symbolic payments
as a result of the Chinese Head Tax, $1.4 million to Community
Historical Recognition Program).
The
Book Publishing Industry Development Program (BPIDP)
received an additional $9.67 million, which brings its funding
level in line with previous years' funding. As mentioned in
the CCA's 2006 Budget analysis, the 2006-2007 Main Estimates
brought a decline for BPIDP funding, but sources in the department
indicated at the time that funding would be forthcoming in
the supplementary estimates, which has turned out to be the
case.
Of
note, some of these new appropriations have been defrayed
by governmental measures: $1.75 million in the 2005 Expenditure
Review Committee process and $6.12 million in the 2006 Expenditure
Restraint initiative
It
is important to note that the Supplementary Estimates do not
provide information as to the "losers" in this process, i.e.,
the programs or other budget line items that were cut back
as a result of these expenditure reductions.
Other
Expenditures
The
Supplementary Estimates A also include an additional $100,000
to the Department of Foreign Affairs and International Trade
(DFAIT) for grants in aid of cultural relations, namely in
support of the International Centre of Film for Children and
Young People.
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