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“This miserable rout”
- A Brief Review of the Canadian Advisory Committee on the
Status of the Artist
When
the General Conference of the United Nations Educational,
Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) met at its twenty-first
session in 1980 to consider and adopt the Recommendation concerning
the Status of the Artist, it was the end of a long process
of consultation with civil society organizations and debate
among governments about issues of critical importance to the
world's artists and creators. The Recommendation was welcomed
by artists and their associations since it contained substantive
recommendations to governments for concrete actions on a range
of issues:
- "The word 'status' signifies
on the one hand, the regard accorded to artists in a society,
on the basis of the important role they are called upon
to play therein and, on the other hand,
recognition of the liberties and rights, including moral,
economic and social rights, with particular reference to
income and social security, which artists should enjoy."
- The education and training of artists
and the importance of arts education.
- Social status, such as measures to ensure
equivalent status to other workers, protection of freedom
of expression and protection of intellectual property rights.
- Employment, working and living conditions
of artists and recognition of the rights of their professional
and union organizations.
- Measures related to income, support
during periods of unemployment, and retirement issues.
Canada reacted to the UNESCO Recommendation by creating
the federal Siren-Gélinas Task Force on the Status
of the Artist which reported in August 1986. In response
to its 37 recommendations, the federal government appointed
the Canadian Advisory Committee on the Status of the Artist
(CACSA), comprised of artists and officials from associations
and guilds, which drafted and recommended adoption of a
Canadian Artists Code. This led to the enactment of the
federal Status of the Artist Act, which was proclaimed into
law in June 1992.
The Act was divided into two parts. Part I (General Principles)
set forth the government's recognition of artists' contributions
and their rights; it also called for the establishment of
the Canadian Council on the Status of the Artist, to give
voice to the concerns of the artistic community and to recommend
appropriate action by the government. Part II (Professional
Relations) called for the creation of the Canadian Artists
and Producers Professional Relations Tribunal (CAPPRT or
the Tribunal), responsible for implementing the statutory
framework governing professional relations between artists,
as independent entrepreneurs, and producers in the federal
jurisdiction.
The Act has now
been in effect for more than a decade. CAPPRT has certified
25 arts organizations as collective bargaining units for artists
working in federal jurisdictions; it reports to the government
through the Minister of Labour but has a special relationship
to the Department of Canadian Heritage. It is directed by
a panel of up to 6, currently chaired by David Silcox.
Although the Tribunal and its functions have followed the
path set out for it in the Act, the Canadian Council on the
Status of the Artist has not enjoyed the same level of development.
In fact, despite the fact that its existence is mandated by
the Act, the Council disappeared when the last of its appointed
members' terms were left to expire.
In June 1995, then Chair, actor Albert Millaire, wrote a frustrated
letter of resignation to the Honourable Michel Dupuy, then
Minister of Canadian Heritage: "When you
read what I shall call my humble chairman's report, you will
understand why I can no longer continue working at this task…..
It is now the spring of 1995 and I hear the Tribunal is finally
about to begin operations after 4 years of ferocious opposition
from senior civil servants, hesitation on the part of the
Departments concerned …We defended our legislation all
the way up to the Prime Minister Brian Mulroney and we are
proud to see our efforts have been rewarded at last. …After
the elections, we were pleased when you were appointed. The
first thing you discussed with me during our one and only
meeting was the desire rife in your entourage to wipe us out.
I could not understand this as we are enshrined in the Act.
..I do not want to be a party to this miserable rout and owe
it to myself to devote all my energies to ensuring that my
profession survives".
The letter and report, which signaled the demise of CACSA,
were written in the context of the round of cuts to the arts
now known as "program review", when many of DCH's
programs of support to the arts were cut along with the funding
to Canada Council, the CCA, and many others. The fact that
the Act was passed just three years' previously is fortunate,
as the window of opportunity for legislation favouring support
for artists was certainly closed by the mid-90s.
Throughout this period, the CCA, Equity, ACTRA and other arts
groups continued to press DCH to re-appoint the Council, knowing
that a review of the Act after 7 years was required and that
the Council would be the perfect steering mechanism for the
consulting firm hired to perform the review. In spite of the
fact that Minister Sheila Copps publicly announced her intention
at re-appoint the Council to a UNESCO meeting in Sweden in
1998, no progress in that direction was made and the review
process went ahead in the winter of 2002. Many of the leaders
of arts organizations who participated in the review felt
that the result would certainly have been more comprehensive
and analytical had an expert Council been steering the consultants
charged with producing the document for DCH and HRDC.
Among the key findings of the review were the following:
- While the Act serves a useful
purpose, "the Department of Canadian Heritage may wish
to explore other policies and programs to improve the socio-economic
circumstances of self-employed artists." It notes that
in the perception of most artists and arts administrators,
a perception which appears to be confirmed by the available
data, the Act has not improved the
economic status of professional Canadian artists. (CCA emphasis)
- Since other organizations funded by
the government provide advice on behalf of artists, there
may be no role for a Council. The report actually suggested
the Canada Council or the CCA might take on this role.
- There was also a series of comments
on CAPPRT relating to its procedures, its powers in the
case of first agreements, and its continuing independence.
In responding to
the second recommendation, the CCA contemplated providing
secretariat services for the Council, but concluded that the
Council must be able to operate independently since it might
take positions that would compromise the CCA's Board and membership
(which is composed of both labour and producer groups, among
others). The CCA Board has formed a committee to articulate
the rationale for re-appointing the Council and to work with
DCH, HRDC and the arts stakeholders to push the issue forward.
Here are some of the arguments:
- The Council should be re-appointed
with special attention to professional independent artists
(rather than producers or distributors), whose interests
it is mandated to serve. It should always act in the best
interests of independent artists, regardless of discipline,
geography, or language.
- No other organization in Canada has this
specific mandate at present. The Council would be in a position
to take a proactive stance and deal with all economic, social
and legal issues on behalf of independent artists in Canada.
Each organization which has a mandate to deal with the issues
that affect the working lives of artists is limited in one
way or another in its scope and capability to address all
of the issues.
- The Council would assist the Minister
of Canadian Heritage in high profile cases which are not
appropriate for the Minister's direct involvement but where
expert mediation is required.
- The Council would be the best place for
developmental work on amendments to the existing Status
of the Artist legislation. The Council could act as a non-partisan
clearing house for recommendations to the government.
- There is a need for an independent body
to guide the evolution of the SofA legislation. Many measures
which were outlined in the Canadian Artists' Code, such
as tax provisions and access to social benefits, remain
to be implemented and will require considerable orchestration
with related, existing legislation.
- DCH has recently established similar
national advisory panels for the music and sound recording
industry, and for the film industry. These are high profile
industries which bring hundreds of millions of dollars into
the Canadian economy - but they wouldn't exist without the
individual artists. The same importance should be accorded
to a legislated council that serves the needs of individual
creators who are at the core of the industries.
The CCA's 2004 annual policy conference,
entitled From Act to Action: Moving Forward
with Status of the Artist, will engage participants
in a strategic discussion to elaborate the arguments for
the Council and to develop tactics which would help to strengthen
political will to take this important next step in the evolution
of the federal legislation. The original visionaries who
set the Act in place saw it as a way of improving the ability
of artists to support themselves through the income from
their work. In spite of the difficulties in the path, their
wisdom and foresight should be validated by implementing
their vision for the sake of the upcoming generations of
artists.
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