Alliance for Arts and Culture fights back with statement on gaming funding changes

The Alliance for Arts and Culture is lashing back at Housing and Social Development Minister Rich Coleman, who is set to cut arts festivals and others out of gaming funding.

Last week, the minister was quoted saying the arts technically should be able make a profit through ticket sales and don't qualify as true charities. And as the Straight has reported, there has been widespread confusion about his ministry's abrupt changes to eligibility to those gaming funds, which local groups had relied on, specifically the cancelling of that money for arts festivals and some youth-oriented arts groups. (See here, here, and here.)

Today, the Alliance released this official response to Coleman from Sandra Garossino, chair of the advocacy task force of Alliance for Arts and Culture, which represents nearly 400 organizations in Metro Vancouver and the B.C.-wide arts community:

Minister Rich Coleman Siphons Funds from the Heart of British Columbia

As a result of its own fiscal choices, the B.C. Liberal government is now forced to siphon funds from large and small social profit (non-profit) groups at the heart of British Columbia communities, large and small.

Government Policy Diverts Gaming Dollars Away from Charities

The purpose of Minister Coleman's changes to gaming eligibility criteria is not to make any positive change. The minister knows, as we know, that only a minute fraction of applicants will meet the new, only partially disclosed, eligibility criteria. The few that do qualify will only be eligible for tiny grants.

The real outcome is the diversion of gaming revenues away from the charitable purposes they were intended to support and into unspecified non-charitable government projects.

Damaging Dominoes

The damage does not end with gaming cuts alone. When the provincial government cuts support to BC festivals, the effect spreads far beyond a single budget line. Federal programs and private foundations frequently provide funds to match provincial contributions. Corporate sponsors naturally get nervous when their projects suddenly experience financial distress, and greener pastures are easy to find.

Abrupt and unexpected changes in grant eligibility jeopardize many other critical revenue sources. A single cut can swiftly multiply losses several times over, to devastating effect.

Minister Coleman Belittles Non-Profit Sector and Volunteers

We take particular exception to Minister Coleman's remarks demeaning the proud public service to British Columbia made by thousands of volunteers, donors, sponsors, and ordinary people who work incredibly hard in the arts sector year in and year out.

Out of the spotlight and behind the scenes, an army of dedicated citizens tirelessly labours to keep the doors open on our non-profit festivals, arts companies, orchestras, galleries and museums in villages, towns, and cities across this province.

At every turn they cut costs and stretch each precious dollar to the breaking point. They do this in the most honourable tradition of public service, for the privilege of presenting the finest BC, Canadian, and international talent to all British Columbians, including our children, at an affordable price (or for free) ensuring access to all.

These unsung heroes deserve better from our government leaders than to be dismissed as incompetent failures.

3.5 Million Attend BC Arts and Culture Presentations

Arts and culture in BC are hugely popular. The arts community is honoured to serve more than 3.5 million British Columbians, including some 300,000 schoolchildren who attend non-profit performances and exhibitions annually from Atlin and Fort Nelson to Victoria and Sparwood.

When the world turned its eyes to British Columbia at the Vancouver 2010 Olympic Games, our artists stood with our athletes to put Canada’s heart on its sleeve. The Cultural Olympiad showed all British Columbians the priceless value of investment in our own talent.

Non-Profit Sector Helps Small Business

When artists take the stage, they put British Columbians to work -- be they ticket sellers, dry cleaners, caterers, printers, waiters and waitresses, lighting suppliers, ushers, stage hands, sound engineers, taxi drivers, parking attendants, delivery drivers, florists, hair dressers, or babysitters.

This buzz of economic activity not only keeps British Columbians employed, it generates sufficient tax revenue to cover taxpayer investment in the arts, with more left over for schools and hospitals.

Small business is the backbone of British Columbia’s economy, and the arts sector is proud to support and partner with small businesses in communities across our province.

Public Support for Arts and Culture an Internationally Accepted Practice

It is deeply misguided to suggest that professional exhibitions and performances can be mounted on a strictly private enterprise model. If this were the case, none of the world’s greatest museums or professional companies would exist today--the Louvre, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Bolshoi Ballet, La Scala Opera, the New York Philharmonic, the British Museum -- not one of these pillars of modern civilization could survive without considerable government investment.

Each was built from humble beginnings, generation by generation, upon the bedrock of visionary leadership who made a pact with a future they would not live to see. They understood that a nation’s greatest prize is its heart, and that belongs to all the people, not just the rich and powerful.

Government Policy Means Art is Only for the Rich

Here in BC, if Minister Coleman’s view prevails, only the wealthy in our large urban centres will see the greatest performances and exhibitions, even those of our own homegrown and world-renowned artists.

Art Serves British Columbia

The arts community is proud of its service to all British Columbians, proud of its volunteerism, its enterprise and can-do spirit, proud to enrich our culture and traditions, proud to grow British Columbia's profile and reputation abroad, and proud to contribute to our provincial economy.

Re-Instate Gaming Grants and Consult with Charitable Arts Sector

We ask today for Minister Coleman to reinstate full access to gaming funds for arts and culture organizations throughout the province. We renew our calls on the government to consult with our sector so that together we can build a vibrant future for British Columbia.

Sandy Garossino
Chair, Advocacy Task Force
Alliance for Arts and Culture

Comments

4 Comments

bowser

Jun 16, 2010 at 2:09pm

I happen to agree that arts foundations ARE NOT charities. If what they are putting forth to the public is so important and wanted, then it seems the public would gladly support them financially. Unfortunately, the government can't support everyone who wants something for nothing, so they support the most deserving. The "arts" only seem to be important to members of the "arts" community. Most people I know have important things to deal with in their lives, and the "arts" just don't factor in.

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joker

Jun 16, 2010 at 2:27pm

So what is this dangerous domino effect? Will there be less junk on public display as art? I'm not sure that is so bad.

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mbell

Jun 18, 2010 at 1:05pm

Less junk meaning what, joker? More crowd-pleasing shows like Lion King or Blue Man group performances? 1. These large commercial enterprises make people pay $80 for their ticket when the average price for a show ticket would be more $25 around the different theatre companies of Vancouver. 2. I personally have my doubts about the artistic quality of such performances.
And Bowser, I can't believe that if you stopped to think for one second about how important art is in our daily lives, whether at home, at work, at school or in the streets, you would still say that you don't care about them. Think about culture and how it is fully part of your identity, as a person, as a Vancouverite. Art is real if it has supporters and I strongly believe that it's these "most people" that you know, just common people, that put their asses in theatre seats, attend musical events, buy books and theatre tickets.
What would BC look like without the colours of arts and culture? It would be grey, just like that little grey square and yes, the mountains and the beaches are pretty but Vancouver would be a sad place to live in.

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lauraliann

Jun 22, 2010 at 11:07pm

WOW. How did we arrive at a place where public and political values are so ignorant and misguided when it comes to art and culture?? I find this VERY scary. Bowser, if you had any idea how much the public has financially supported the arts you would be very embarrassed by your comment. Private patrons, ordinary people who believe in and value art and culture as a part of what makes a healthy society whole, are a huge part of what allows the arts to remain affordable. Not to mention the hundreds upon thousands of people, both from outside the arts sector, and artists themselves who subsidize events by working for free. Without this kind of public support your average 20 - 60 dollar music festival or theatre ticket would be well beyond what any average person could afford for a night out.
Many people (and I happen to know quite a few of them) who are not involved in the arts sector, but busy themselves dealing with "important things" like working in the downtown eastside, or environments that are high stress and deal with violence and abuse, also highly value arts and culture. The arts allows them respite from the stress of work, allowing them to succeed at what they do, despite the intensity of their work environments.

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