Last week I wrote a blog post that was picked up by the Georgia Straight where I shared my views of the Spirit Festival grant program.

Thanks to all who responded, commented (60+), Retweeted (60+) and “liked” on Facebook (700+).

Here is a sample of some of the comments people made. The positive comments far out numbered the negative comments. In fact, there was really only one negative commenter who left a few comments.

POSITIVE COMMENTS

Bravo! You’ve said what surely everyone is thinking.

Hear hear!

Thanks for speaking up. I agree with you completely.

Starting a festival just to access a grant is the same as buying a rope to hang yourself with.

Another brilliant, articulate and bang on assessment from John McLachlan.

Brilliant & great incite from the voice of experience. Thank You John.

Thank you John. You said it.

Few festivals thrive in February (other than maybe the Push Festival — which is brilliant) — but BC spirit festivals?? They’re kidding, right? They aren’t? Oh my freaking god.

Thanks you John! we don’t need spirit festivals, or retractable roofs or whatever. Its just a little too ‘art for the state’ flavoured for this jew…..

Thanks, John. Too bad we can’t draft you onto the BC Arts Council. The gagged silence from those who are supposed to be the custodians of culture in BC is deafening.

Amen, John. This is without doubt the worst example of incompetent mismanagement of the cultural sector in Canadian history. The BC Arts Council does need to take a very strong public stand now, but the real villains are Minister Krueger and Premier Campbell whose unprecedented political interference in the cultural life of this province makes us the laughingstock of the whole country. The only artistic production in this province that needs its funding cut is Liberals du Soleil.

Well said and thank you, John McLachlan. These Spirit of BC festivals grants for artistic propaganda promoting the BC so-called So-Cred-Liberal government on the backs of struggling arts organizations sound suspiciously like Leni Riefenstahl’s work for Hitler’s Germany. Let’s remember that artists like Kurt Weill, Bertolt Brecht, George Grosz, Kurt Schwitters, Otto Dix and others left Nazi Germany. Can BC afford this kind of exodus because it’s already begun – Crystal Pite, Kika Thorne, Cheyanne Turions and others. Elaine Carol, Artistic Director, MISCELLANEOUS Productions

This has Campbell written all over it. He’s just looking for another expensive party for his rich friends and a chance to wave his fucking red mitts in the air. There’s sea of drunks on Granville street already and it’s free! Give the money BACK to the real arts.

Agreed!

BC Spirit festival? The spirit of fascism, is being celebrated, attempting to thwart the spirit of artistic creation? pulling funding from that which goes against their corporate business like ideological spirit..? thats what this is about. Cant wait for these pigs to wake up to a complete rejection by the citizens of BC. sooner than their 3 year nondate. I can say I never once darkened the door of any BORELYMPIC festival during those horrible 2 weeks.

Well said. Haven’t business types always assumed that the art community lacks acumen of any kind? Are they trickling some scraps our way to appease us? Please, we must not re-elect them.

This program is worse than those stupid Millennium grants. How many arts organizations and artists were looking for ways to celebrate the Millennium? The quintessential top-down policy.

In this case, how many arts organizations in the north want to hold festivals in February? Another fine business model from the supposedly fiscally-prudent govt.

I can’t wait for winter with hordes of people driving to Wells from the Lower Mainland and Victoria in their all-season tires

How about a Spirit of BC Rail Festival? We could set up model trains all over BC and then sell them to the highest bidder – after a few insider shenanigans!

Or a Spirit of PST Festival? Set up yard sales & kiosks and charge the good ol’ pre-HST %.

No doubt there are many Spirits lurking in the wings that would make excellent themes. Otherwise, I hope every arts group boycotts this nonsense.

These ‘Spirit Festival’ organizers should have taken a look at Calgary’s desperate attempts to keep their ‘Olympic Spirt’ on life support after the 1988 Games. There’s a reason why you’ve never heard of the Calgary Winter Festival.

It’s like the people who won’t take their Xmas decorations down until well into February – give it up and move on already.

Well said, John. Thanks for the straight talk.

We need the BC government to restore arms-length funding of culture and art, and stop bleeding real artists and cultural organizations dry!

Diverting funds from real art to a blatant propaganda event is reprehensible behavior and indicates no respect or understanding of what art or culture is. Real art and culture creates a real legacy.

John, In complete agreement with your thoughts on this issue. It’s really disheartening to see the BCAC on life support and the adverse affect the radical funding cuts are having on the provincial arts sector. Spirit Festival concept is complete rubbish designed to buy votes in non urban communities and simultaneously to tell the “real cultural workers” in the community exactly what they (Liberal gov’t) think of them. The gov’t just doesn’t give a damn about culture and art. That much seems pretty clear.

Totally agree. Everyone I talk to think that the idea of ‘Spirit Festivals’ is really tacky.

Is there any chance that the government will back down on this ill-conceived and incredibly gauche idea? Is this REALLY going to happen? Maybe it’s a government conspiracy…they’re hoping that all the arts orgs will be so upset that everyone will boycott, so they can shrug ‘your loss’ and put the money back in their pockets ?

Given the unanimous opposition to the BC Spirit Festival expressed here, will artists take the next step and boycott it?

Artists and concerned citizens can complain all they want – but what does any of it mean if grant applications continue to be submitted?

If you hate what the government is doing to the arts – if you hate this festival in particular – you have to unite and, in solidarity, declare you will have nothing to do with it.

Boycott the BC Spirit Festival.

Consider this folks – the ‘Spirit Festival’ grant can only be applied for by Members of the Assembly of BC Arts Councils, or Aboriginal Friendship Centres, Band Councils or other Aboriginal cultural organizations.

Too bad they didn’t resurrect the BC Festival of the Arts. Every year a different city took it on, it supported all manner of art and artists, all at the same time. It was uplifting to be present at one whether or not you were a delegate.

And February? A bad storm and there go your participants

Right on John. I was wondering when someone would speak the truth about this ridiculous idea. 30 million thrown away while bonafide groups, like mine, the Vancouver Philharmonic Orchestra, limp along after 100% cuts. It;s sheer insanity.These Liberals wouldn’t know art from a f-art. These are scary times for democracy and the arts, two things that go hand in hand.

Right on!!! Thanks for speaking up when so many of us feel we can’t . Millions of dollars being sucked up by/for the Olympic Games…AGAIN, instead of being used for and by the community at large. It would be laughable if not so devastating.

BRAVO!

Well put, John. And yes, shameless hussy productions will boycott this BC Spirit Festival grant crap. Why not go out in flames?!

Boycott the Spirit Festival!

I applaud John McLachlan and Jane Danzo for standing up and telling everyone that what the Campbell Liberals are doing to the Arts in BC is unacceptable. They give us something to cheer for but unless we stand with them and form a united artistic protest we lack a strong enough voice. If we apply for these Spirit Grants and implement the government’s vision of what artists should do, we sell out our own community and our own visions. Let’s do what artists do best – show people what is and what is possible!

This is bang on. The only art gallery in my northern B.C. town lost all it’s funding from the province and is now fundraising locally in order to keep its doors open so that local artists have a place to show their work. It’s sad times and a festival celebrating last year’s news isn’t new or innovative.

I did NOT vote for this. Stop killing the Arts.

Oh yeah, Spirit Festivals. Those are those parades Kim Jong Il throws, right?

Sorry but if you had worked in industry and business as I have for many years, you’d be well aware of the handouts given to that sector not involved in the arts (Sun-Rype, mining companies, lumber, and the list goes on and on)!

The more restrictions you put on arts-based funding, the less art that gets made…. so, are we all to assume that this province, and this country are becoming too elitist for the majority of the citizens to actually live here?!

The cultural crème de la crème are replying to you Mr. Campbell and Mr. Krueger in these comments in support of John’s position. And we are only the tip of the iceberg.

When are each and every one of us finally going to take back the power into our own hands and start demanding that this government remember that we are their employers and we pay their salary and we have the power to fire them? Now that’s a festival I could get behind!!!

We must address public mistrust of government funding of the arts. We are a province of people who don’t get the business, jobs, and value impact culture plays in our quality of life and our prosperity as a province. Perhaps it’s from too long and so recently being solely reliant on resource based industries.

Providing seed money to the arts is economic stimulus and is the lifeblood of our ability to fully join the knowledge based economy, fight the brain drain, and lure central business activity like head offices to BC

NEGATIVE COMMENT

If the arts community cannot sustain itself as opposed to perpetual reliance on the taxpayer for funding, then it has no reason to exist.

The arts community faces a huge challenge in British Columbia and its relationship to public funding. How do we change our situation from the mess we are in where the Minister feels we are “vicious” and the public doesn’t even know there’s an issue at stake.

The traditional view of where economic value comes from in this province needs to be updated. The population is still stuck thinking it’s only from resources, tourism, and good public sector jobs. Though it’s true, this accounts for a huge amount, the general public just doesn’t really get how much cultural economic activity exists and how much it adds to our economy.

Money is just one half the battle. In fact, it’s often said that making the economic argument is the weakest approach. The other half is that we need to show the value of supporting arts and how it filters through to making the lives of people better in so many ways. The general public (voters) don’t see this now.

The public’s worldview just doesn’t include the value of arts either economically or socially. Until that changes, we are stuck in our ghetto.

We have our work cut out for us. And it will be hard because we are a varied group of people working in many different areas of the arts.

We don’t have a natural way to be united as one and that is what works against us. The BC Arts Council could be the way, but in its current state, it can’t be because it has no power or authority.

Somehow, we need an organization with a strong leader to come forward and do two things: Lead and Organize. I don’t know who that is. It is not the Assembly of BC Arts Councils as its mandate is too closed and it’s now dealing with giving out grants. It could be the Alliance for Arts and Culture, but its mandate is strictly Metro Vancouver and if its mandate were to change it would make those “not in Vancouver” nervous.

We need an organization and a person who wants to lead.

We need someone who we can rally around who has the guts to stand up and be noticed and who can take the message to the people in an effective and clear way. If a person or organization showed this in any way, I’d donate time and money to help.

We need to put forward the reason for arts funding support like a marketer would by understanding who we are selling to and moving the needle of support where it’s possible to be moved and ignoring it where it’s not.

It would be a huge undertaking.

Who? Where? What? When? How?

Am I completely off-base or dreaming? What are you thoughts?

August 26, 2010

Dear Mr Durrie,

Thank you for taking the time to write to us regarding the BC Spirit Festivals funding announcement and the Assembly of BC Arts Council’s role therein.

As you may know, the Assembly aims to “advance arts and cultural development in the Province of British Columbia through the furtherance of the respective objectives of B.C.’s community and regional arts councils and other similar organizations”. To this end, one of the Assembly’s key activities is advocacy on behalf of its members.

We hope the attached Q&A document and press release will provide you with further information regarding our role in administering the BC Spirit Festivals funding.

We are pleased to work with the Ministry and the BC Arts Council in increasing funding opportunities for our members and are optimistic that the Spirit Festivals will help mobilize community and regional arts councils and cultural organizations to showcase the best in arts and culture that our communities have to offer. For information on becoming a member, please visit our website: www.assemblybcartscouncils.ca

Yours sincerely,

Joan Richoz

President

Assembly of BC Arts Councils

For Immediate Release

August 5, 2010

ASSEMBLY OF BC ARTS COUNCILS ADVOCATES FOR

BC COMMUNITIES

NANAIMO- Building on its success in administering BC Arts and Culture Week and BC 150 funding programs, the Assembly of BC Arts Councils (the Assembly) has been asked to administer the BC Spirit Festival’s $3 million funding program in partnership with the British Columbia Arts Council.

The result follows months of advocacy work on behalf of its members with Ministry staff.

“Advocacy is our number-one purpose” noted Joan Richoz, President of the Assembly of BC Arts Council. “Over the past year, we have significantly increased our advocacy activities and are encouraged that our efforts have indirectly led to increased funding for our members, and in turn their communities, by the creation of the BC Spirit Festival grants.”

The Ministry of Tourism, Culture and the Arts announced last week $3 million in funding would be available for Assembly members, Aboriginal cultural organizations, Aboriginal Friendship Centres or Band Council applicants. Not wanting to administer the project themselves, the Ministry has asked the Assembly, in partnership with the British Columbia Arts Council, to employ a peer assessment process for determining program funding support.

“The Spirit Festival grants will help mobilize and strengthen arts councils and cultural organizations throughout the Province” said Assembly Executive Director, Junko Sakamoto. “As a result, they will provide the opportunity for individual arts and cultural organizations to work collaboratively in showcasing the best of what their communities have to offer.”

“Having strong regional and community arts councils is a great benefit to arts and cultural organizations and their communities over the long-term. The BC Spirit Festivals are a positive way to get individual organizations to work together with their arts councils and other cultural organizations.”

As an umbrella group, the Assembly brings to the attention of all levels of government the needs and concerns of its members, namely B.C.’s community and regional arts councils and other cultural organizations. An apolitical non-profit society, the Assembly is dependent on government grants for a significant portion of its budget. Its funding sources include the BC Arts Council, 2010 LegaciesNow, ArtsNow, and BC Gaming funds (Ministry of Housing and Social Development) to name a few.

-30-

For more information on the Assembly of BC Arts Councils, please visit:

http://www.assemblybcartscouncils.ca

Contact: Junko Sakamoto, Executive Director, Assembly of BC Arts Councils

1-888-315-2288


ASSEMBLY OF BC ARTS COUNCILS

BC SPIRIT FESTIVALS GRANT ADMINISTRATION

Q&A

Q. 1 Does the $3M go directly to the Assembly? What is your organization’s role vis-àvis the British Columbia Arts Council in terms of administering this grant?

No. The money does not go directly from the Ministry to the Assembly of BC Arts Councils. The money goes to the British Columbia Arts Council who has asked the Assembly to provide third-party delivery of the funding.

This is not a new undertaking for the Assembly. In 2008, we were asked to administer the BC 150 funds to community arts councils. We also partnered with the British Columbia Arts Council to deliver this program. For the past 11 years, the Assembly has been the provider of third-party delivery of funding for Arts and Culture week in partnership with the British Columbia Arts Council and ArtStarts in Schools.

Q.2 a What advocacy activities has the Assembly carried out over the last year?

Over the past year we have significantly increased our advocacy efforts.

In July 2009 when Gaming funding cuts were announced which heavily impacted arts organizations, we carried out an in-depth survey with our members to gauge the impact of the cuts. We then sent letters to Premier Campbell, Ministers Krueger, Hansen and Coleman, demonstrating the value of arts and culture in our communities and describing the consequences of the cuts. We also urged our members to write to the Premier, Ministers and their own municipal governments. Members also attended pre-budget Finance Committee consultations which led to the Finance Committee’s decision to put forward the recommendations of members and community arts organizations to government. As such, we set up a dialogue with the Ministry and we are pleased with our leadership on behalf of members.

Q.2b How does this fit with your organization’s purpose?

The Assembly of BC Arts Councils is a provincially incorporated society and federally registered charity dedicated towards advocacy , resources and community .

The Assembly is the voice for the arts in BC: it is the largest representative body of community and regional arts councils (and in turn, their member arts and cultural organizations) throughout BC and works in partnership with other agencies, organizations and individuals to advance arts and cultural development in the Province of British Columbia.

Q.3 How did the Assembly propose the idea of the BC Spirit Festivals funding?

In January 2010, the Assembly invited Minister Krueger to attend our 31st annual conference in Richmond in May. During his keynote speech, he spoke about the $30 million 2010 Arts and Legacy Fund his government had created and he asked our members to send him their ideas and proposals for how to spend the money.

Many members spoke to him personally at the conference and others sent him their ideas and proposals. The Assembly also sent 4 proposals including one to increase the funding for Arts and Culture Week, a program we have been co-producing with ArtStarts in Schools. All our proposals caught the eye of the Minister and he requested a meeting with our Executive Director, Junko Sakamoto, to further discuss the ideas.

Q.4 How will the BC Spirit Festivals help individual organizations?

Funding is available to assist BC Spirit Festivals in communities across BC. Each community is encouraged to work collaboratively to develop its festival program.

Preference will be given to festival programs that build local partnerships, work with professional arts organizations, and engage professional artists and diverse communities.

The deadline for applications is : October 6, 2010 at 1:00pm. For more information on applications, who can apply and how to apply please visit:

http://www.assemblybcartscouncils.ca or contact our office directly by calling 1-888-315-2288 and we will be happy to discuss your application proposal before you make a submission.

TOM DURRIE, BA, MA, MMus
307—1683 Adanac Street
Vancouver, BC  V5L 2C7
[email protected]

604-215-0019

August 23, 2010

An open letter to the Assembly of British Columbia Arts Councils

Ms. Joan Richoz, President,
Assembly of BC Arts Councils

PO Box 92 Station A
Nanaimo, BC V9R 5K4
[email protected]

Dear Ms. Richoz:

I am writing to urge you to decline the participation of the Assembly of BC Arts Councils in the dispersing of BC Spirit Festivals funding.

We have recently heard Ms. Jane Danzo, former chair of the British Columbia Arts Council, decry government involvement in arts funding and the erosion of arms-length arts policies and decision-making. “Arms-length,” as I understand it, means that government allocates a budgetary amount for the arts, and that money is administered by an independent body, in our case the British Columbia Arts Council, using peer-assessment juries. Responsible and progressive arts councils will often fund artists whose activities are not necessarily popular or supportive of government policies. If we look at the history of art, it is clear that there are sound reasons for this. Our current government seems to be shying away from subjecting itself to the possibility of a lively, invigorating, and challenging arts scene. Freedom of expression is the essence of art. Would you want to support officially determined limits to this freedom?

In my opinion, the BC Spirit Festivals program is a blatant political project designed to make artists and arts groups throughout British Columbia promote and support the government’s agenda. In other words, the government is offering funding to arts groups that will, as Minister Kreuger put it, “… bring(s) together artists, cultural organizations and all British Columbians to celebrate the spirit of B.C. in our communities.” While “celebrate the spirit of B.C. in our communities” is open to interpretation, one immediately suspects a very strict limit on what artists are permitted to do. To make this even more clear, the application guidelines specify: “A limited number of grants are available to assist community, regional and Aboriginal arts organizations with programs that support the vision of the 2010 Sports and Arts Legacy and the BC Spirit Festivals. ” [emphasis added] Peer juries, in determining awards, will, of course, have to abide by the guidelines.

In light of the fact that artists and arts organizations throughout the province are reeling from severe cuts to their funding, it seems ironic—I’m tempted to say offensive—that the Ministry would now come up with an idea of a celebratory festival. What is there to celebrate?

With this in mind, I urge you to take a strong but polite stance and simply say “No thank you, Mr. Kreuger.”

Sincerely yours,

(signed)

Tom Durrie
Charter member, BC Arts Council (1996-99)

cc:
The Georgia Straight
The Vancouver Sun
The Tyee
CBC
Vancouver Alliance for Arts and Culture
Arts Advocacy BC

Hearing Dr. Stanley Hamilton (BC Arts Council Interim Chair) on the Early Edition this morning, who could possibly be surprised by his position. Surely, the Ministry was not likely to appoint someone who would support Jane Danzo’s stance on government interference with Arts Council policies.

Just a couple of quotes:
Jane Danzo: “The board of Council has no independent voice from government.”

Stanley Hamilton (re the Legacy and Spirit Festival funds): “We have to wait to see what the Minister and his team have decided is [sic] going to be the ground rules.”

And: “{BC Arts Council} staff will work with the Ministry to determine programs.”

Doesn’t sound very arms-length to me.

When asked if Spirit Festival projects would have to meet with government approval, Dr. Hamilton replied: “You will be subjected to a peer review process, not a political process.” He failed to mention, however, that every grant application must meet certain guidelines as set out by the Arts Council. Don’t try to kid me into believing that the guidelines will not be overseen by the Ministry.

‘Nuff said.

DO SOMETHING DIFFERENT

DO SOMETHING DIFFERENT

If what you’re doing isn’t working, do something different. If you find yourself in a hole, stop digging.

Sound advice which the arts community does not seem to be heeding.

Yesterday, I asked a random dozen or so people if they knew who Jane Danzo was. No one had heard of her. So much for the dramatic resignation!

Then David Diamond (Headlines Theatre) spoke, on the CBC’s Early Edition, in definitive terms. That is, he did not appeal, in polite terms, to government generosity.

Now, I fear that will be the end of it.

David also said that his colleagues in the arts community had advised him not to speak out.

What are we afraid of?

A number of years ago, I proposed the formation of a provincial union of artists and arts groups to create a powerful lobby and an articulate and passionate public voice. The response was, “Oh, that sounds too much like biting the hand that feeds us.” You can see where the.cautious and humble approach has gotten us.

What are you doing that is different?

Unless we were to have an enlightened government that would take a leadership role in the arts, we will see the continued erosion of support for the arts. And I believe it’s safe to say that private and corporation philanthropy will take its cues from government. Change can only happen when the arts become an election issue. That means taking risks. That means engaging the public—all those people who never heard of Jane Danzo, or David Diamond, for that matter.

So far, there have been mild protests, extensive letter and postcard campaigns addressed to government, and two people who have spoken out. No wonder arts advocates are looked at as a “special interest group.” We’re preaching to the converted and to the unconvertible.

What are you going to do to make a difference?

Last week, the Chair of the BC Arts Council, Jane Danzo, resigned stating that it was her best way of advocating for change and to show her displeasure with the way the BC Arts Council is required to operate by the Government.

See letter here

I don’t know Jane and I don’t know all the machinery at the BC Arts Council so I could be completely “off” on what I am about to say, but here goes.

Many in the arts community seems to be applauding Ms. Danzo for her bold and courageous move (see Alliance for Arts and Culture’s response ) and I join them in saying it’s great to hear her reasons and frustrations but…

It seems to me that if she’d spoken her mind while she still held the position and made the Government very uncomfortable, they would have fired her which would have had a much bigger impact than the footnote articles the story is now getting in the media.

The move would have made the Government look bad (which they are). We are left now with one more person (soldier in the battle for arts funding) like the rest of us, on the outside but with no explosive impact.

My challenge to the rest of the BC Arts Council board? SPEAK OUT NOW before your term is up or you decide to resign.

Make the Government very uncomfortable.

Get removed.

At least it will have some impact.

This is a post from John McLachlan’s blog here .

The trick to surviving in this small, cash-strapped world of non-profit arts seems to me to be about taking the long view and using all the tools you have whether they be knowledge of opportunities, knowledge of the landscape and the world around you or even your “spidey” sense of where things are headed.

Cuts to arts funding are raging through the system right now in my home province of British Columbia. Organizations are freaking out as they receive letters telling them their funding is being cut by 50%, 60% and even 100% in some cases.

The hornets nest has been disturbed. Everyone is buzzing like crazy and looking for people to sting such as the Minister, the Premier, the Government in general and even other arts organizations who “got more than we did.”

Yes, having funding cut to zero is an emergency. Yes, having funding cut by 50% is serious. Organizations need to deal with it or maybe decide to fold and put their efforts to better use in a newer, more effective way.

Provided an organization isn’t dead and there is some chance of a future, even if it’s remote, then they’ve just been handed a great opportunity to remake themselves and be better because of it.

The biggest danger

The biggest danger I see for non-profits are the ones that have been funded to the point that they are still ok. It’s very easy to be lulled into complacency and not make the changes necessary to be more fit and strong.

“If it ain’t broke, you just haven’t looked hard enough” business author and strategist Tom Peters has been known to say. I think this advice for the non-profit arts sector is very timely.

I believe organizations should be opening up to new ideas and getting their ear to the ground, listening to members, talking to people outside their usual focus and, yes, looking down the road to how they could see the world being and how they could see their organization working in that new world.

What if they’d done that five years ago? Would they be in such dire shape today?

A common theme:

  • So many non-profits:
  • start out small and smart
  • grow
  • get funding
  • start new projects
  • get more funding
  • go after projects in different areas
  • get funding from only one or two sources
  • start feeling entitled to what they get
  • get sloppy
  • have too much staff
  • have an office space they can’t really afford
  • morph themselves to fit other project funding
  • lose their way and become mediocre
  • receive funding cuts
  • scream and rant
  • cut back
  • refuse to change
  • struggle along on life-support slowly becoming less and less relevant but taking years to die.

For god’s sake, if you are running a non-profit arts organization and you still have a pulse, REMAKE YOURSELF NOW.

© 2010 Arts Advocacy BC