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IN DEPTH

Arts funding

Where Canada's main political parties stand on culture

Last Updated: Tuesday, October 7, 2008 | 3:48 PM ET

A view of the Vancouver Symphony Orchestra, conducted by Bramwell Tovey.A view of the Vancouver Symphony Orchestra, conducted by Bramwell Tovey. (propaganda foto/VSO)

BQ.

Bloc Quebecois

  • Create a Quebec-only regulator of broadcast policy.
  • Introduce a law recognizing Quebec’s distinct cinema and obligate Telefilm Canada to also recognize it.
  • Add $50 million to Telefilm funding, with $20 million earmarked for Quebec films.
  • Create a separate fund for French-language documentary and Imax films.
  • Give all responsibility for Quebec cultural policy to the province.
  • Create a fund to boost artists’ incomes for as long as five years.
  • Allow artists to apply for Employment Insurance.
  • Exempt authors and composers from taxes on rights and royalties.
  • Eliminate federal sales tax on books.
  • Raise the annual funding for the Canada Council for the Arts from $180 million to $300 million.
  • Create a $30-million festivals funding program controlled by the Quebec government.
  • Create a new museums policy that takes account of the needs of museums across Canada and Quebec.
  • Introduce incentives to distribute the works of regional and emerging artists, including dedicated space on online media.
  • Create a Unesco secretariat devoted to cultural diversity in Canada and base it in Quebec.
  • Modify licences for satellite radio to provide more space for francophone broadcasting.
  • Maintain foreign ownership restrictions on broadcast enterprises.

Green Party.

Green party

  • Increase funding to all of Canada’s arts and culture organizations — including the Canada Council for the Arts, Telefilm Canada, orchestras, theatres and publishers — commensurate with increases to other sectors of the economy.
  • Provide stable base funding for the CBC.
  • Ensure that the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) reserves more bandwidth for independent and non-profit stations.
  • Require cinemas and video chains to have 20 per cent Canadian content.
  • Restore arm’s-length principles in governance of arts and culture and require heads of federal agencies to be appointed by an independent committee rather than by government.
  • Eliminate provisions that would allow the federal government to rescind tax credits from films deemed “unfit.”
  • Increase support for community arts programs and facilities with a stable base at a percentage of the federal budget.
  • Equalize federal funding for arts and culture among provinces, territories and municipalities.
  • Provide incentives to all provinces and territories to improve arts and culture education.
  • Extend income tax relief and incentives to artists based on successful models established in Ireland and Berlin.
  • Allow artists to access social programs such as Employment Insurance, workers compensation and the Canada Pension Plan.
  • Allow the averaging of artists’ incomes over a number of years for income tax purposes.
  • Protect Canada’s cultural identity during international trade negotiations.
  • Restore a transport service between museums and galleries.

Liberal Party.

Liberal party

  • Reverse $44.5 million in funding cuts to cultural programs announced this summer.
  • Restore the Public Diplomacy Program, which funded artists touring overseas, and which was cut in 2006.
  • Increase the Canadian film and production tax credit to 30 per cent.
  • Double funding for the Canada Council for the Arts, bringing its annual budget to $360 million.
  • Increase funding for international arts promotion by $15 million over three years.
  • Invest $16 million in the Canadian Museums Assistance Program, which helps museums send exhibits on tour.
  • Direct the CRTC to demand Canadian content as a prerequisite of broadcast licences.
  • Launch a digital media strategy that would develop an industry creating educational and entertainment projects for new media.
  • Allow the averaging of artists’ incomes over a number of years for income tax purposes.

NDP.

New Democratic Party

  • Introduce income averaging for artists for tax purposes, modelled on the long-standing practice in Quebec.
  • Provide an annual federal tax exemption of $20,000 for income earned from copyright and residuals.
  • Reform the CRTC to ensure that prime-time television in French and in English is written by, directed by, stars and tells stories about Canadians.
  • Mandate a permanent increase in broadcasting of Canadian drama on TV.
  • Maintain effective regulation of foreign ownership of broadcast interests.
  • Provide Radio-Canada and the CBC with stable, secure and adequate funding.
  • Protect and properly fund Telefilm and the Canadian Television Fund and enhance federal film tax incentives.
  • Expand the federal film tax incentive to include costs of post-production.
  • Establish targets and a strategy to enhance distribution and screening of domestic films.
  • Protect and properly fund the Canada Council for the Arts.
  • Reverse $44.5 million in cuts to culture.
  • Develop a strategy for supporting and preserving Canadian museums and heritage buildings and lighthouses.
  • Give ordinary Canadians expanded access to Canadian content online through a digital culture service.
  • Ensure copyright reform compensates creators of art and has input from stakeholders, including consumers, artists, educators and software innovators.

Conservative Party.

Conservative party

The Conservative party's full platform was released Tuesday, Oct. 7, a week before the election.

  • Maintain funding for arts and culture at or above existing levels.
  • Improve effectiveness of arts allocations. The prime minister says he wants to "shift spending to programs that are the most effective."
  • Create a new, refundable tax credit of up to $500 for children under age 16 enrolled in arts or cultural activities. Make this credit accessible to low-income families.
  • A new Conservative government will not reintroduce rules that would allow government to rescind tax credits from film or TV shows considered “unsuitable.”
  • Prohibit spam to collect personal information under false pretences and to engage in crime.
  • Give self-employed Canadians the opportunity to access maternity and paternity benefits.
  • Reintroduce federal copyright legislation that brings intellectual property protection in line with other international jurisdictions and protect artists, consumers and creators.

  • Improving enforcement on counterfeiting and privacy.

  • Increase the threshold for foreign investment review (the policy does not say whether this would be applied in the broadcast industry).

  • Work to ensure that appointments to federal agencies reflect the diversity of Canada.

  • Guarantee alternating French- and English-language CRTC chairs; guarantee one English, one French vice-chair.

  • 25 per cent of CRTC committee members to be francophone and Quebec broadcast hearings to have majority of French-speaking members on their panels

  • Increase funding to TV5, the international French-language television network by $25 million over five years.

  • Promote national recognition of important historic occasions, including the 400th anniversary of English settlement in Newfoundland, the 200th anniversary of the War of 1812 and the 150th anniversary of Confederation.

The Canadian federal election takes place Oct. 14.

Susan Noakes is an arts news writer for CBCNews.ca.

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