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Nearly
all speakers and panellists are confirmed, and ancillary events
organized, for CCA's National Policy Conference in Regina,
Saskatchewan, on 19 and 20 November 2004.
Although
the conference proper begins on Friday 19 November, the action
begins the previous afternoon for those who are in town.
Thursday
18 November
CCA
is holding an INFORMATION/POLICY SOUNDING SESSION
with Jean Malavoy, the new National Director, for
CCA members and those interested in membership.This will take
place from 4pm-5.30pm at the T.C. Douglas Building (3475 Albert
Street).
Following
this session (5.30pm-7.30pm), there will be a PRE-CONFERENCE
RECEPTION for participants, hosted by the Saskatchewan
Arts Board and SaskCulture at the T.C. Douglas Building. This
is an opportunity to meet and mingle with local artists and
cultural workers, and network with other conference participants.
CCA will have a registration table set up, so conference
participants can pre-register and get their materials ahead
of time, if they wish.
Artistic
component
A
stimulating artistic component will run throughout the conference,
providing new insights into the topics under discussion. This
has proved to be a highly successful part of past conferences
and much enjoyed by participants. This year, the artistic
component is presented through the "Art in the City"
project as part of the Regina 2004 Cultural Capital of Canada
activities.
This "Art in the City" project is presented
by the Saskatchewan Arts Alliance, in collaboration with the
City of Regina, with the financial support of the Government
of Canada through the Cultural Capitals of Canada, a program
of the Department of Canadian Heritage.
Conference
Programme
Date
/ Time |
Venue
|
Event
|

|
4.00-5.30pm
|
Lobby
of the T C Douglas Building , 3475 Albert Street , Regina
|
CCA
information session for members and
potential members; an opportunity to meet the new National
Director of the CCA, Jean Malavoy,
to discuss key issues for the cultural sector, and related
CCA actions. |
5.30-7.30pm
|
Saskatchewan
Arts Board and SaskCulture
invite participants to a reception to
meet and mingle with local artists and cultural workers,
and network with other conference participants. Live
entertainment.
CCA
will have a registration table set up, so conference
participants can pre-register and get materials ahead
of time, if desired. |
On
Friday and Saturday, CCA will provide a free shuttle
bus service between the Hotel Saskatchewan Radisson
Plaza and the MacKenzie Art Gallery . There will
be 2-3 shuttle runs each morning, prior to the start
of the conference, and 3 each afternoon following the
end of the day's proceedings. The journey takes
about 15 minutes.
There
will be artistic components throughout each day.
Details will be available shortly.
|

|
8.30-9.00am
|
MacKenzie
Art Gallery , 3475 Albert Street , Regina
(Shumiatcher
Theatre) |
Registration
: pick up conference kits; translation devices
will be available if needed. There will be simultaneous
translation for all plenary sessions in the theatre.
|
9.00-9.20am
|
Welcoming
remarks : Denise Roy , President
of the CCA; Skip Kutts, President of
the Saskatchewan Arts Alliance; Jean Malavoy
, National Director of the CCA.
Videotaped
welcoming remarks from Paul Siren ,
the "godfather" of status of the artist in Canada .
|
9.20-9.45am
|
A
representative from the Department of Canadian Heritage
will address the government's response in 2003 to the
review of the SofA legislation, and provide initial
key findings from a new DCH study fiscal measures for
artists. |
9.45-10.15am
|
Guest
Speaker: Albert Millaire CC, QC: renowned
Quebec actor, and a former Chair of the Canadian Council
on Status of the Artist, will speak on the original
mandate for, and purpose of, the Council on SofA - how
it worked; why it died.
Patrick
Close , CCA Board member and Executive Director
of CARFAC Saskatchewan, will outline the vision and
rationale for reinstatement of the Council. |
10.15-10.45am
|
Why
have an Act for collective bargaining? What does
it do for artists and producers? A session provided
by the Canadian Artists and Producers Professional
Relations (CAPPRT). Josée
Dubois, Executive Director and General Counsel,
and John Van Burek, theatre director,
teacher, and translator, and CAPPRT member. |
10.45-11.15am
|
BREAK
|
11.15-12.30pm
|
Conversation
I : What have been the effects on artists'
lives, and the operations of arts organizations, of
the federal and/or provincial SofA legislation?
What realistic amendments could be made to the federal/provincial
legislations to improve artists' working lives?
Is there a relationship between federal and provincial
legislations? If not, should there be?
Which affects the other more? How can the relationship
be strengthened? Where and how does collective
bargaining fit into the equation?
Moderator
: Susan Wallace, Executive Director,
Canadian Actors Equity Association
Panellists
: Bastien Gilbert, Regroupement
des centres d'artistes autogérés du Québec
(RCAAQ); Saskatchewan writer, poet, journalist and teacher
Dave Margoshes ; Bill
Skolnik , musician and head of the Toronto
Local of the American Federation of Musicians (AFofM);
and Lucy White,
Executive Director of the Professional Association
of Canadian Theatres ( PACT ).
There
will be a Q&A session following the panellists'
presentations. |
12.30-2.00pm
|
LUNCH
and networking
(Agra
Torchinsky Salon on the 2 nd floor of the Gallery) |
2.00-3.30pm
|
Conversation
II : What have been the panellists' experiences
regarding establishment of provincial commissions or
councils, or involvement with the previous federal Council?
Can what has been learned from these discussions
be applied to the role/mandate of a renewed federal
council? How could it best be constituted?
What could be its relationship to the provinces, provincial
legislation, and any provincial commission or council?
Moderator
: Patrick Close , CCA Board member
and Executive Director of CARFAC Saskatchewan
Panellists
: Michel Beauchemin
(Secretary to the Association québécoise
des auteurs dramatiques, and co-Chair, Creators Rights
Alliance); Arlette Cousture,
well-known Quebec author, journalist and broadcaster,
and an original member of the Canadian Council on Status
of the Artist; writer/poet Robert
Dickson (professor at Laurentian University,
and a member of the Ontario Advisory Panel on Status
of the Artist), and Brenda
Niskala (writer, Executive Director
of the Saskatchewan Publishers Group, and a member of
the Saskatchewan Minister's Advisory Committee on the
Status of the Artist, 1993).
There
will be a Q&A session following the panellists'
presentations. |
3.30-4.00pm
|
BREAK
|
4.00-5.00pm
|
Artistic
presentation
Round-up
of the day's events |
Date
/ Time |
Venue
|
Event |
 
|
8.00-9.30am
|
MacKenzie
Art Gallery , 3475 Albert Street , Regina
Breakfast
in the Agra Torchinsky Salon on the 2 nd floor; plenary
sessions in the Shumiatcher Theatre. Venues for
workshop sessions will be announced. |
Buffet
breakfast.
|
8.45-9.15am
|
Guest
speaker: The Honourable Joan Beattie ,
Minister of Culture, Youth and Recreation for the Province
of Saskatchewan . |
9.30-10.45am
|
Status
of the Artist at work
In
the Province of Quebec : Anne-Marie Des Roches
, Union des artistes
In
the international arena: Suzanne Capiau ,
lawyer, lecturer at the Universities
of Brussels, Metz and Paris in the fields of authors'
and neighbouring rights; expert on status of artists
for international and European organizations.
There
will be a Q&A session following the panellists'
presentations. |
10.45-11.15am
|
BREAK
|
11.15-12.30pm
|
Conversation
III : Four other provinces have embarked on
provincial SofA: British Columbia , Newfoundland and
Labrador , Ontario , and Saskatchewan . What
have these experiences been like? How successful
have they been, or will they be? What is left
to do? How is it being tackled? If something
didn't succeed, what were the main reasons? What
would be each person's vision for the ideal provincial
SofA?
Moderator
: Trudy Schroeder, General Manager of the Winnipeg
Folk Festival and CCA Board Member.
Panellists
: Burt Harris (musician, lawyer,
co-author of the 1994 Report of the BC Advisory Committee
on the Status of the Artist ); Frank Fagan ,
Executive Director, Association of Cultural Industries
of Newfoundland and Labrador; Garry Neil
(arts consultant and principal in Neil Craig Associates,
and currently working on development of Ontario SofA);
Sheila Roberts (consultant with the
Saskatchewan Arts Alliance Status of the Artist initiative).
There
will be a Q&A session following the panellists'
presentations. |
12.30-2.00pm
|
LUNCH
and networking
(Agra
Torchinsky Salon on the 2 nd floor of the Gallery) |
2.00-3.30pm
|
Workshop
I - discussions around the reinstatement
of a Canadian Council on Status of the Artist
Workshop
II - discussions around possible amendments
to the federal Status of the Artist Act
Workshop
III - developing a "road map" for provincial
Status of the Artist legislation
Workshop
IV - Aboriginal issues under Status of
the Artist legislation
Venues
and facilitators/resource people to be confirmed. |
3.30-4.00pm
|
BREAK
|
4.00-4.45pm
|
Plenary
session : reports from the workshops.
Final discussions. |
4.45-5.00pm
|
Wrap-up,
thanks, final announcements .
|
Programme
subject to change without notice.
All
proceedings will be simultaneously translated.
|
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