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Conferences and Events
National Policy
Conference & Chalmers Conference 2006 |
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Mapping
Canada's Cultural Policy:
Where
do we go from here?
March
2 to 4, 2006
Sheraton
Hotel, Ottawa
Register
early and save $100 on Conference fees! Early bird registration
ends February 10, 2006!
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IMPORTANT
NOTICE: This is a dual conference: National Policy
Conference and Chalmers Conference. The National Policy
Conference is open to all; the Chalmers Conference is intended
for representatives of arts
service and cultural organizations only .
For all inquiries,
please contact Paul Galipeau, Executive Assistant (613) 238-3561
ext.20 or by email at: paul.galipeau@ccarts.ca
For the latest
update on the Chalmers Conference portion of the CCA's 2006
conference please click here.
From
the Desk of Alain Pineau, CCA National Director
Ottawa,
November 18, 2005 - Within the first two weeks of
my mandate as the new National Director of the Canadian Conference
of the Arts we have seen the unveiling of the Economic Update
by the Minister of Finance, and the spectre of a federal election
is now looming in the not-too-distant future. Once the writ
drops, legislation to revise the Copyright Act (Bill C-60)
and the Not-For-Profit Corporations Act (Bill C-21) will die
on the Order Paper, plus the work of the Standing Committee
on Canadian Heritage on its review of federal feature film
policy, and the Standing Committee on Foreign Affairs and
International Trade's consultations on Canada's new international
policy statement will grind to a halt.
It is against this backdrop that the CCA is embarking on a
comprehensive consultative process with its members and the
larger arts and cultural sector, to chart a course for our
advocacy efforts with the next government and beyond. As National
Director, I personally encourage you to be an active part
of this important process.
On the afternoon of March 2 2006, the CCA will convene the
Chalmers Conference for arts service organizations to be followed
on March 3 and 4 2006 by a national policy conference open
to individual artists, arts professionals and arts organizations,
students, and decision-makers; a further Chalmers Conference
meeting will conclude the conference on the afternoon of March
4. Entitled "Mapping Canada's Cultural Policy: Where Do We
Go From Here?" these discussions will take place at the newly-renovated
Sheraton Ottawa Hotel. The conferences will be immediately
followed by a meeting of the Board of Governors of the CCA,
which will then develop an action plan based on the ideas
exchanged over the course of our three days together in Ottawa.
It is not an overstatement to say that this is the most intensive
consultation and discussion on federal cultural policy that
the CCA has undertaken for many years. I hope that through
this process we can collectively identify issues that remain
important for the arts and cultural sector, as well as other
developments that are lurking off on the horizon. Working
together, we can establish a set of attainable objectives
that will guide the work of the CCA and other cultural organizations
in the years to come.
CCA considers the March 2006 event the first step in a two
part process, culminating in a major pan-sectorial conference
the following year (2007) where we will focus on those issues,
both new and old, identified at the March 2006 event. In the
meantime, the Secretariat of the CCA will invest a great deal
of time and energy to ensure the issues our membership deems
most important are given the attention they deserve both during
the election and with the resulting government. In 2007, we
will be ready to engage in an informed and forward-looking
process to carry us forward as an organization and as a sector.
Collectively, we have a great opportunity to influence the
priorities of a newly-elected federal government in the cultural
area. The CCA is determined to lead, to take advantage of
the shifting political landscape, and to assert with clarity
and tenacity the aspirations of Canadian artists, creators,
producers and arts professionals.
I urge you and your colleagues to be with us in Ottawa from
March 3-4, 2006 for the national policy conference, which
will be bracketed by a Chalmers Conference on the afternoon
of March 2, 2006 and on the afternoon of March 4, 2006. Your
experience, insight and passion are central to the success
of these events!
Click
here for more information regarding the 2006 National Policy
Conference and the 2006 Chalmers Conference - Mapping Canada's
Cultural Policy: Where do we go from here?
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