Wednesday, September 27, 2006

Ottawa: Budget Reductions and the Arts

The following was circulated by the Canadian Conference of the Arts and may be of interest:


Ottawa, September 26, 2006


The First Cuts Are Not Always the Deepest: Federal Government
Announces $1 Billion Reallocation of Expenditures


Just the Facts

On September 25, 2006, the Minister of Finance, the Hon. Jim Flaherty, and the President of the Treasury Board, the Hon. John Baird, announced a broad set of cuts to federal government expenditures totaling just over one billion dollars. This exercise was previously announced in the May 2, 2006 federal budget, but the details were only made public yesterday.

Under the regrettable guise of cutting "wasteful programs," there appears to be two major areas where the interests of the arts and culture sector are directly affected. These cuts are a difficult pill to swallow given that they were announced on the same day that the Government of Canada reported a $13.2 billion surplus (over $5 billion greater than estimated), which will be entirely dedicated to paying down the debt.

The first is a reduction of $4.63 million to the Museums Assistance Program (MAP) at the Department of Canadian Heritage (PCH). This program is hardly "wasteful," given that it provides financial assistance to regional Canadian museums and related institutions for activities that facilitate Canadian's access to their heritage, foster professionalism in museological activities and operations and foster the preservation, protection, and management of representative collections of Aboriginal cultures.

Another $1.105 million will be removed from "Operating/Program Efficiencies" at PCH (for which there are currently no details, despite inquiries by the CCA) and a reduction of some $12 million will be imposed on the Public Diplomacy program at the Department of Foreign Affairs, which is a program that has funded academics and
cultural organizations for their international work.

The Canadian Conference of the Arts (CCA) is disappointed at the news of yesterday's announcement, as the Government's decisions run counter to the views expressed in our recently-filed pre-budget submission, A Creative New Way of Thinking. Included among the CCA's nine recommendations to the Finance Committee are the following: -The CCA asks the Standing Committee on Finance to ensure that it understands the unique funding needs of each of the PCH's agencies and institutions, and recommends to the Minister of Finance and his officials that they address the critical nature of these budgetary challenges.
-The CCA encourages the Minister of Finance and the Standing Committee on Finance to address the funding situation of the federal museum and heritage institutions in the upcoming federal budget, as well as the urgency of the development and implementation of a new federal museums policy.
-The CCA calls upon the Standing Committee on Finance to recommend placing the PCH's "Tomorrow Starts Today" suite of programs on a permanent funding basis and expand matching fund programs to complement the changes in the capital gains tax treatment announced in Budget 2006.

Further, yesterday's announcement unfortunately does not mean that the worst is necessarily over for the arts and culture sector. For instance, the Government has already committed to reducing federal spending by the same amount once again in 2007-8. The government also announced yesterday that the budgetary surplus for 2005-06 rang in at $13.2 billion, all of which will be dedicated to paying down the national debt. None of the surplus will be used for new support to programs or other federal initiatives, which is problematic given the chronic nature of underfunding and a general lack of resources for our important sector.

Tell Me More

The cuts to the Museum Assistance Program (MAP) are a serious disappointment and the CCA shares the dismay of the Canadian Museums Association (CMA), which has been has been actively calling for the development of a new federal museums policy and a funding strategy for some years. The cut further reduces the budget of the Museums Assistance Program to just over $3 million and the CCA continues to unequivocally support the CMA in calling for the Government to accelerate the inauguration of a new, much-needed museums policy and funding program, which Minister Oda had supported strongly when she was Heritage Opposition critic.

Other cuts may affect the cultural sector and their real impact remains to be ascertained. This is the case for example with the cuts of more than $55 million to youth employment programs that could impact all cultural institutions that rely on young workers during the summer as many organizations, from festivals to museums to galleries across the country take advantage of youth employment programs each and every year in order to fill staff vacancies. This additional way of supporting arts and culture may very well have vanished.

Finally, the cuts to the Public Diplomacy program at the Department of Foreign Affairs will be acutely felt by our academics and cultural organizations, which have played an increasingly active and valuable role in the promotion of Canadian studies and culture abroad. Their presence on the international stage enhances the appreciation of Canada as a sophisticated and diverse society. It is the hope of the CCA that the Minister of Foreign Affairs, the Hon. Peter McKay, will soon clarify the Government's position on public diplomacy, and the place of arts and culture in the broader context of Canada's new international policy.

The expenditure cuts present some interesting insights into "Canada's new government." The announcement included over $90 million dollars of spending cuts to the broadly-defined "voluntary sector," including the outright elimination of Volunteer Canada, an initiative of the previous government.

These cuts are a signal that the challenge to voluntary and civil society organizations that receive federal support is no longer merely to advocate for increased funding, but to present a compelling case about the benefits that accrue to all Canadians from their work. Yesterday's announcements can also be interpreted as a potential pre-cursor to the 2007 federal budget. The new Government has clearly indicated that it is reducing the role of the federal government in the lives of Canadians where they deem its role is non-essential.

The arts and culture sector must accept that its principal mission for the next year is one of rationalizing continued federal support through a variety of programs and agencies. We can take absolutely nothing for granted, the clock is ticking. What we, as members of the arts and culture sector and as citizens, deem to be essential and valuable must be continually and consistently communicated to all federal officials, both elected and non-elected.

What Can I Do?

The position of the Government of Canada is that the announced expenditure review measures are not subject to appeal, as each cut was reportedly reviewed and approved by the Federal Cabinet. The CCA nevertheless encourages you to speak with your Member of Parliament and encourage them to adopt a better understanding of the vital role that voluntary and civil society organizations play in the lives of all Canadians. You should stress the importance of maintaining an active partnership between the federal government and civil society, especially the arts and culture sector, which is a vital component of the democracy we all cherish as Canadians.

This is not a test -- the new Government is exercising its responsibility in the review of all programs and services of the federal government. It is up to us to work collectively to ensure that in so doing, they fully appreciate what is at stake for all Canadians.

Alain Pineau
National Director / Directeur général
Canadian Conference of the Arts / Conférence canadienne des arts
Tel: (613) 238-3561 ext. 12 / poste 12
alain.pineau@ccarts.ca | www.ccarts.ca

Thursday, September 14, 2006

Youth Poetry Ambassadors Wanted

*YOUTH POETRY AMBASSADORS WANTED!*

Re:verse, Canada's online magazine for young writers, is searching for poetic visionaries to take part in our new National Poetry Ambassadors Program (NPAP). NPAP's mission is to seek out leading young poets and have them headline an online community of writers from all provinces.

As a National Poetry Ambassador, you will be responsible for:

* Publicizing each Re:verse issue challenge by posting posters in
your high school.
* Making announcements about Re:verse to your local writing/arts clubs.
* Gathering digital submissions from your peers or encouraging your
peers to submit to Re:verse personally.
* Helping the Re:verse team choose which poems will be published in
our e-zine.

As a National Poetry Ambassador, you will be entitled to:

* One or more of your poems featured each year in Re:verse.
* Preferred contact when Re:verse is looking for paid writers to
fill new e-zine content.
* Unlimited access to poetry markets, valuable internet links,
writing contests, and more via our youngpoets.ca forums.
* A student membership to the League of Canadian Poets, an excellent
resource for aspiring writers of all ages.
* A guaranteed spot in our Young Poets Week Mentorship that happens
each April.

If you are interested in becoming one of Re:verse's National Poetry Ambassadors, please email Chelsea Rooney, Re:verse's English Editor, at ezineeditor1@gmail.com.

******************

*ON DEMANDE DE JEUNES AMBASSADEURS DE POÉSIE!*

Re:vers, le magazine canadien en ligne pour jeunes écrivains est à la recherche de poètes visionnaires qui sont prêts à prendre part à notre nouveau Programme National d'Ambassadeurs de Poésie (PNAP). La mission du PNAP est de trouver de jeunes poètes qui devront publiciser une communauté en ligne d'écrivains provenant de toutes les provinces.

En tant qu'Ambassdeur-Ambassadrice Nationale de Poésie, vous serez responsable de :

* Publiciser chaque parution de Re:vers en affichant les posters à
votre école secondaire.
* Annoncer Re:vers dans vos clubs locaux d'écriture et d'arts.
* Rassembler des soumissions numériques de vos pairs ou encourager
vos pairs à les soumettre personnellement à Re:vers
* Aider l'équiper de Re:vers à choisir quels poèmes seront publiés
sur notre magasine électronique.

En tant qu'Ambassdeur-Ambassadrice Nationale de Poésie, vous aurez droit à :

* Au moins un de vos poèmes sera présenté chaque année sur Re:vers.
* Un contact préférentiel lorsque Re:vers est à la recherche
d'écrivains rémunérés pour l'écriture de contenu pour le magazine
électronique.
* Un accès illimité aux marchés de poésie, des liens Internet de
valeur, des concours d'écriture et plus, via nos forums sur
youngpoets.ca
* Une adhésion à la Ligue des Poètes Canadiens, une excellente
ressource pour des aspirants écrivains de tous âges.
* Une place garantie pour notre semaine de mentorat jeunes poètes
qui a lieu chaque mois d'avril.

Si vous êtes intéressés à devenir un ou une des Ambassadeurs-Ambassadrice Nationale de Poésie, veuillez communiquer par courriel avec Zoe Danielle Migicovsky, Éditrice francophone de Re:vers au ezineeditor2@gmail.com.

Monday, September 11, 2006

David Adams Richards Book Launch in Miramichi


David Adams Richards
Author of
THE FRIENDS OF MEAGER FORTUNE
Will launch his newest book at Books Inn in Miramichi
SEPTEMBER 15TH, 7-9 pm

Book Description

From Canada’s beloved Governor General’s Award and Giller Prize winner, David Adams Richards, comes a sweeping, spellbinding novel of New Brunswick in the 1930s and ’40s that is perhaps his finest work to date.

Teenaged Will Jameson has a temperament of iron, standing up to men twice his age when he takes over the Jameson lumber company after his father’s death. His younger brother, Owen, is sensitive, literary, and fanciful. But when Will dies suddenly and Owen’s beloved Lula rejects him, Owen’s deeper character comes to light: joining the army in the hope of getting himself killed, instead Owen returns home a decorated war hero.

Then he falls in love with the beautiful, childlike Camellia – the wife of Will’s old friend Reggie Glidden – and soon Owen and Camellia find themselves watched on all sides, caught in the teeth of an entire town’s gossip and hypocrisy. Inexorably, they are pulled into a chain of events that will end with death, disappearance, and a sensational trial.

”The Friends of Meager Fortune” is a transfixing love story and a devastating portrait of a society – but it is also a brilliant commemoration of the passing of a world. Owen Jameson begins what will become the greatest cut in New Brunswick history, his men setting up camp on the notoriously dangerous Good Friday Mountain. The teamsters spend months in pitiless ice and snow, daily pitting themselves against nature and risking their lives for scant reward, in the last moments before the coming of mechanization that will make them obsolete. This heroic, brutal life is all Meager Fortune, the camp keeper, knows. A good and innocent man, he shows unexpected resolution in the face of the betrayals of the more worldly men around him.

Rich with all the passion, ambition, and almost mythic vision that defines David Adams Richards’ work, “The Friends of Meager Fortune” is a profound and important book about the hands and the heart; about true greatness and true weakness; about the relentlessness of fate and the evil that men and women do. Wise, stark, and without a false word in it, it cements David Adams Richards’ claim to be the finest novelist at work in Canada today.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

DAVID ADAMS RICHARDS won the Giller Prize, the Governor General’s Award and the Trillium Award. He is the author of the celebrated Miramichi trilogy, Nights Below Station Street (1988), winner of the Governor General’s Award; Evening Snow Will Bring Such Peace (1990), winner of the Canadian Authors Association Award; and For Those Who Hunt The Wounded Down. His novel, The Bay of Love and Sorrows, published in 1998, received widespread critical acclaim and has been made into a feature film.

Thursday, September 07, 2006

Oct 1 Deadline for NB Arts Board Applications

Mr. Robert Bryar, newly appointed Programs Officer for the New Brunswick Arts Board (artsnb), would like to remind NB professional artists that the deadline for the following program grants and awards is October 1, 2006:

Creation and Documentation Grants
Aboriginal Arts Grant
Excellence Awards
Lieutenant Governor’s Award for Lifetime Achievement in the Arts
School of the Arts Prizes
and the new Emerging Artist of the Year Prize.

Please note that the following awards are no longer offered: Municipality of the Arts of the Year Prize; Prize for Arts Philanthropy; and Award for Arts Organization of the Year.

The New Brunswick Arts Board is pleased to announce that the Creation Category A Grant has been raised to $15,000 and that the Documentation Grant is now $7,000. Information on all of these programs and application forms can be found at www.artsnb.ca, or call (506) 444-4444 or 1-866-460-2787, toll free within NB.

Coffee Shop and Flash Fiction Workshop beginning September 20

The Coffee Shop and Flash Fiction Workshop is an intense social and learning excursion into Fredericton's coffee shop sub-culture for discussions about off-beat topics in contemporary fiction such as the role of sex, violence and humour in fiction, creating characters through stealth and lurking, the use of digital devices for story plotting, e-publishing, and using the Internet as a writer's tool.

Each session will be held in a different coffee shop (or coffee house) and will begin with a one hour open discussion followed by one hour in which each participant will write a flash fiction story based on the discussion topic. Some or all of the stories will be read in the final hour. During the final two weeks, participants will meet with Biff (instructor) to discuss individual writing projects or next steps in their writing careers.

No previous experience is necessary. The workshop will be held on Wednesday’s from 6 to 9 pm beginning September 20.

For more information, call Andrew Titus at 506-452-6360.

Wednesday, September 06, 2006

A Community Arts Forum with Electoral Candidates in Fredericton

A Community Arts Forum with Electoral Candidates
Hosted by the Charlotte Street Arts Centre
Moderator: Susanne Alexander, Publisher, Goose Lane Editions

Thursday, September 7, 2006 at the Charlotte Street Arts Centre, 732 Charlotte St., Fredericton from 7 – 9 pm. Admission is free

Topics include:

· The Provincial Government’s role in arts and culture
· Arts Education
· Promoting Arts in New Brunswick and encouraging artists to pursue their calling

Questions will be taken from the floor

This is a great opportunity to hear what candidates have to offer.
September 18 is Election Day. Make your vote count!

Arabesques

*New Call for Submissions*

The *Arabesques International Literary and Cultural Review * is now accepting submissions for the October issue "*The New Romance*", November issue "*War and Politics*", December issue "*Colors*" and would be very happy to read and consider your contribution.
Arabesques which is published in Algeria and US emphasizes the deep importance of culture, civilisations dialogue and identity in contemporary writing. The journal is also open to all writers in english and welcomes international writers.

SUBMIT TO /THE ARABESQUES REVIEW/


*Join us to envision a culture of peace and a sustainable world.*

/The Arabesques Review/ is looking for new writers. Click here to check out our submission guidelines.

For more details, see our web site at:
*http://www.arabesquespress.org/*

**

email: *submissions@arabesquespress.org*

National Free Press Notice

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