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CCA Bulletin 45/06
Ottawa
, October 27, 2006
How
the Canada Council intends to spend its extra $50M if
and when it gets it.
Just the Facts
On
Tuesday October 24, the Canadian Conference of the Arts (CCA)
attended, along with representatives of some 40 national arts
service organizations, a meeting convened by the Canada Council
of the Arts ( the Council) to explain how it intends to distribute
the $20M + $30M it expects to see added respectively to its
2006-07 and 2007-08 budgets. You will remember these one-time
increases were announced as part of the May 2, 2006 budget
of the new federal government.
Council's
officials were very cautious to explain that although the
increase has been promised, there remained steps to be taken
before the money is theirs to distribute. A key step in this
process is the tabling in Parliament of the Supplementary
Estimates, something which is expected to happen in the coming
weeks. But it remains possible that the whole process of government
leading to the allocation of the first or the second installment
of the announced increases may be derailed by the fall of
the minority government. Thence the caution shown by the Council,
which opted nonetheless for this tentative declaration of
intent on how it will spend the additional money if and when
it gets it.
Why
then did the Council make any form of announcement at this
particular moment? Essentially because of the time crunch
involved in the allocation processes this fiscal year and
to give the national arts service organizations a heads up
on the Council's intentions to help ensure that eligible organizations
have as much time as possible to prepare their submission
for additional funds.
The
Council says that faced with the impossible task of adequately
responding to all the needs of the artistic communities (even
with what has, until further notice to be considered one-time
increases to its budget), it has determined to make strategic
investments. The focus will be on strengthening the arts sector
by enhancing the work of Canada 's highest-achieving arts
organizations and individual artists and by giving the public
increased access to the work of Canadian artists. In allocating
these new funds, the Council intends to take into account
the need to deal with the future growth of organizations of
all sizes, regions and with diversity in all its forms. The
Council says it wants to report to Parliament on the impact
of the $50M, to demonstrate the value Canadians get for their
tax dollars and to help support requests for larger and permanent
increases to its base budgets.
Tell
me more
Here,
in a nutshell, is how the Council intends to proceed:
- The
full additional $ 50M will be allocated: the Council will
absorb all additional related administrative costs out of
interest revenue coming from its endowment fund;
- 2/3
of the money ($33M) has been earmarked for the 900 or so
organizations on operating grants, for enhancement of their
currently planned activities (either in terms of existing
artistic, audience development or administrative capacity).
The projects must lead to outcomes that can be attained
and measured, or documented within the two year period;
- The
first part of the increase (i.e. the $33M) will be allocated
further to a competitive process, through the established
peer jury system. Officials said clearly that this being
a competitive process, not all eligible organizations would
get money. They added that arts organizations which have
a major impact on the national and international arts scene
and which tend to receive the largest Council grants will
be subject to an additional level of scrutiny by a multi-disciplinary
committee that includes international peers;
- The
remaining third of the increase will be split evenly between
one-time support to individual artists and financing access
projects (touring and dissemination) which have been presented
already, have been deemed worthy by peer juries but could
not be funded fully, or funded at all, out of the base budget.
This portion of the one-time increase will not require any
new applications but will be allocated to 2006-07 applications
which could not be funded;
- In
all cases, it is the intention of the Council to issue notification
of supplementary grants before the end of the current fiscal
year for spending to be completed before the end of fiscal
year 2007-08;
- For
the 300 or so organizations whose three-year cycle is coming
up fore renewal in 2007-08, the Council has decided to extend
the current arrangement for one year, except for publishers,
who will move on as scheduled to the 2-year cycle already
developed. The Council further indicated that it is working
with the provinces which have multi-year funding cycles
to synchronize processes.
Council
officials insisted many times on the tentative nature of their
communication and said that their intended process had been
communicated to the government. The Council has subsequently
told the CCA that the application forms and guidelines for
the new funds will be on the Council's website on Monday November
6.
Participants to the
meeting clearly appreciated being given a heads up by the Council,
but quite a few expressed disappointments on behalf of those
organizations which once again would be shut out of funding.
There however seemed to be a consensus that the cultural sector
must rally around making the $50M part of the base budget of
the Council and work together to clearly establish the need
for larger (and permanent) increases to the Council's budget
to meet the real needs of artists and arts organizations of
all kinds across the country.
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