:
My name is Heather Ostertag. I am the president and CEO of the Foundation Assisting Canadian Talent on Recordings, commonly referred to as FACTOR.
FACTOR is a private not-for-profit organization that manages funds on behalf of the Department of Canadian Heritage as well as contributions from Canada's private radio broadcasters.
Please allow me to provide some brief historical background on the foundation. In 1982 FACTOR was created as a result of a collaboration between the music industry and Canada's private radio broadcasters. In 1985 FACTOR merged with the Canadian Talent Library, creating an even larger pool of funding for artists. In 1986 the Department of Canadian Heritage, previously titled the Department of Communications, launched what is now referred to as the Canada Music Fund.
FACTOR and its sister organization, MUSICACTION, entered into an agreement to manage components of the initiative. FACTOR and MUSICACTION have continued to administer various programs on behalf of Canadian Heritage.
Personally, I have been involved with FACTOR since 1985 and have witnessed the increased support from the Canadian government over the years. The fund was launched with a commitment of $25 million over five years. It is so greatly appreciated by the artists and the music industry that the department has, over time, increased its commitment to the music industry. The recent announcement to recommit to an additional five years, with a value of $138 million, was well received.
The objective of the funding has always been to respond to the current needs of Canadian artists. From the outset, the intent of the government funding has been to support the production, marketing, and promotion of projects by Canadian artists, both domestically and internationally.
Under its current and previous agreements, FACTOR is contractually bound to fund projects from all genres of music as well as culturally diverse projects.
FACTOR has historically identified and addressed the ever-changing needs of the artists. The ongoing, direct relationship FACTOR has with its clients facilitates the foundation's ability to identify the ever-changing needs of artists. As a result, FACTOR has continually gone on record to request additional funding. While it is appropriate for FACTOR to request additional financial support, we recognize that it would be inappropriate to suggest where the much needed funds come from.
We recognize, however, that there will always be a finite amount of funding available. Further, we recognize the difficulty in the decision-making process encountered by both the funders and the administrators. It is not possible to provide funding for every proposal received.
The assessment process used by FACTOR is similar to the Canada Council's. It is a peer assessment that determines which projects will receive funding. Applicants effectively select their jury of peers during the process of application, which requires them to select a musical genre. Musical genre selection is not required for the purpose of slotting the artists into a niche but rather to allow them to choose the jurors who work in a specific genre as those best suited to adjudicating their proposals.
Each genre jury member has been accredited to ensure that he or she has a deep understanding of the genre and an ability to assess projects based on their creative merits.
The board of directors of FACTOR does not make creative decisions, nor do members listen to the music. If a project is recommended for funding through the creative assessment process, it will receive an offer of funding.
For the year ending March 31, 2009, FACTOR invested almost 30% of its funding in culturally diverse projects.
FACTOR is represented coast to coast to coast by the provincial music industry associations in each territory and province in Canada. They conduct juries across the country simultaneously. These relationships are invaluable to FACTOR, because they help to ensure that there is a national voice in the decision-making process.
FACTOR is not in a position to fund every proposal it receives, because there is a finite amount of funding available. That is the unfortunate reality of administering funding programs. However, I believe that the process we have, and the relationships we have with the provincial music industry associations, help to ensure that all proposals are given a fair and equal opportunity for consideration, regardless of genre.
Thank you.
:
My name is Andrée Ménard. I have been the General Director of MUSICACTION since 2001, and so this is my ninth year. I have prepared a brief that is somewhat technical, but it is a response to the many comments and observations that have been made to this committee since the start of your study.
MUSICACTION was created in 1985 as an initiative of radio, record and performing arts professionals mainly to support the development of Canadian francophone music. The three members of MUSICACTION are the Canadian Association of Broadcasters, ADISQ and Quebec's Association of professional songwriters and music composers, the SPACQ.
In 1986, the Department of Canadian Heritage became one of MUSICACTION's partners when it transferred to MUSICACTION the management of some components of the SRDP, which was the original sound recording program. Since 2002, MUSICACTION has been managing two components of the Canada Music Fund, that is, the new musical works and the collective initiatives components. MUSICACTION has a budget of $8 million, with $5.5 million from the department and $2.5 million from private broadcasters.
The new musical works component includes not only production programs, but also national and international marketing, management and showcase support. The collective initiatives component is intended to support professional development and promotion activities for young artists, such as singer-songwriter competitions, galas, trade meetings and festivals that showcase singers and songwriters. Recently, the music showcases initiative was created to promote artists from outside Quebec, that is, those from francophone minority communities across Canada.
Furthermore, MUSICACTION receives project applications from all musical genres and does not exclude any. Last year, 320 production and marketing projects were approved, accounting for close to $6 million. About half of the projects are in the popular song, music and contemporary folk genres, while the other half is made up of jazz, instrumental, classical, world, urban, hip-hop, alternative and traditional music. We cover a great diversity of styles.
Our experience shows that creators of contemporary, experimental and electroacoustic music tend to apply in greater numbers to the musical diversity program of the Canada Council for the Arts when looking to receive support for specialized music production and distribution. However, it has also been shown that artists in the classical music, jazz, folk and world music genres have been applying to MUSICACTION in the nine years since I have been at the helm of the organization. For example, Effendi Records, whose representatives you heard from last week, receives over $100,000 a year to market jazz albums from artists who received an equivalent sum from MUSICACTION.
MUSICACTION offers substantial support to emerging artists and businesses that support their development. Last year, we supported the production of 83 albums. Of that number, 37 were first albums and 20 were sophomore productions. This goes to show that we do not work with established artists, but with those whose careers are emerging.
There are two ways for artists to receive funding from MUSICACTION. The first is as a recognized producer, a status that is assigned to record companies according to musical genre, the number of roster artists and sales generated. The music entrepreneur component, which was created in 2006, provides funding to Canada's largest record companies and has provided substantial support to new firms. We now support some 20 companies that, thanks to base funding guaranteed by MUSICACTION, mainly support young artists. Those companies include firms that specialize in the classical, jazz and hip-hop genres.
The second way to access funding is through the jury selection process, which is used by artists who fund their own projects and by over 60 small businesses that represent them. The first assessment criterion is artistic and takes into account in the scoring the artist's professional environment, which includes their management, tour organizers, record labels, licences and distribution. The assessment also considers a project marketing plan.
Some four committees, made up of artists, industry professionals and media representatives, distinctly evaluate projects from artists outside Quebec, as well as francophone vocal music, alternative music and the other musical genres we are dealing with today, that is, classical, instrumental, jazz and world music.
Last year, the jury acceptance rate for those other musical styles was 54%, or 15 approvals out of 28 projects received, compared with a 35% approval rate for all popular music projects.
The funding awarded to other musical styles amounts to 50% of funding requests, compared with 30% for francophone vocal music. That is to say that MUSICACTION treats other musical genres as well as if not better than more popular styles.
Contrary to what has been said, access to MUSICACTION funding does not mainly depend on profitability. Of all projects funded by MUSICACTION, very few achieve the levels of sales that are usually equated with commercial music. Sales make up only one of the factors evaluated as part of the professional environment.
With regard to other musical genres, in particular, sales considerations are rarely used to exclude projects, because most applicants have similar outcomes, that is, few sales. Generally speaking, we select the best artistic projects.
Lastly, allow me to point out that MUSICACTION stopped collecting royalties on album sales in 2006. Therefore, our funding is a contribution, not a loan.
I hope that these few technical observations have helped to clarify the comments that you have heard since the start of these hearings. Thank you.
Good morning, Mr. Chair, and thank you for your invitation to appear before you today with regard to the specialized music sound recording program and the specialized music distribution program of the Canada Council for the Arts.
I'm Carol Bream, director of communications, and my colleague Russell Kelley is head of the music section.
Music is one of the seven main artistic disciplines the council invests in through a range of programs. The other disciplines are dance, theatre, visual arts, media arts, writing and publishing, and interdisciplinary arts.
The Canada Council's programs are peer-assessed, and in 2008-09 the Canada Council used over 800 peers for this purpose. Our grants totaled about $144 million, and we gave 6,200 grants to professional arts organizations and individual professional artists.
[Translation]
I will begin with an overview of the activities of the Council's Music Section. My colleague will then describe the sound recording programs that we have been administering since 1986 on behalf of the Department of Canadian Heritage. He will then speak to the impact that the changes announced recently by the department will have on the musicians in whom the council invests.
The Music Section invests in the creation, production and dissemination of Canadian music, as well as in the development of individuals, groups, small ensembles, orchestras, opera companies and other professionals in the Canadian music community.
Particularly relevant to our meeting today, the Music Section has managed a program for sound recording development on behalf of the Department of Canadian Heritage for 23 years. This program funded sound recordings in a number of genres, most notably in jazz, folk, world music and Canadian contemporary classical music. We learned on July 30 of this year that, after more than two decades, the memorandum of understanding would not be renewed and that the opportunities offered to the specialized music sector might disappear or be significantly reduced under the revamped Canada Music Fund.
Our preliminary analysis of the new Canada Music Fund appears to support the view that many musicians in jazz, folk, world music and contemporary classical music may no longer have access to sound recording support at the federal level. Meanwhile, provincial support for sound recording is uneven.
The specialized music sound recording and distribution programs of the Canada Council for the Arts resulted in over 94 CDs per year and supported leading-edge creation in a wide range of genres by professional musicians who use recordings as key business tools for finding work and audiences, both in Canada and abroad.
There is a key difference between the Canada council 's approach and the industry approach, which values the profit potential of a recording. For the musicians who receive funding from our programs, a recording is a business tool. But it may or may not eventually be profitable in the same way or at the same level as FACTOR or MUSICACTION define this concept in relation to the important programs that they deliver.
Artists in whom the Canada Council for the Arts has invested are the backbone of the many summer festivals in jazz, folk, world music and chamber music that are so popular with audiences across Canada.
Russell Kelley, head of music, will speak about the music ecosystem in Canada and about the potential impact of the changes to the Canada Music Fund on musicians in whom the council has invested over the past two decades.
Russell, the floor is yours.
First of all, I would like to touch on what we call the musical ecology system in Canada. At one end of the spectrum, it includes the highly commercial entertainment side of the music industry. This includes radio, television, record labels, and the musicians who are able to get recording deals with major labels or who are working towards that end. Such musicians and their record labels are able to access readily the funding from FACTOR and MUSICACTION.
On the other end of the spectrum, the ecosystem also includes young, mid-career, and more established musicians in less commercial genres like contemporary classical music, world music, jazz, folk, and audio sound art. As the department's website notes, and I quote:
This is music not generally part of prevailing musical trends, as it emphasizes artistic considerations—creativity, free expression and/or experimentation—that do not necessarily meet conventional criteria and formats as defined by the popular music marketplace.
These are the professional musicians in whom the Canada Council has been investing. These professional musicians have been able to access small grants to make high-quality recordings for sale and promotional purposes for the past 23 years under what is now called the Canadian musical diversity component of the existing Canada Music Fund.
The combination of all types of music produced in Canada makes up this vital and dynamic ecosystem, and it includes the funding ecosystem in which the council has been pleased to share a role. The ecosystem is now threatened by the likely loss of funding for the musicians who have received support for recording activity from the Canada Council.
These musicians have had access to about $1.3 million or just 5% of the $27 million or so in the new Canada Music Fund. The success rate, even in the council's small part of the Canada Music Fund, has only been about 22%. That is to say, fewer than one in four applicants received a grant from the Canada Council through the two programs we delivered. It is never, ever a slam-dunk to get a grant from the Canada Council.
The artists who the council invests in are as intent on developing and sustaining careers in music as those on the more commercial side of the music industry. This means that every two or three years they must be able to record a new high-quality CD to maintain and develop audiences and new markets.
So how could the revamped Canada Music Fund affect these musicians? A summative evaluation conducted by the Department of Canadian Heritage in 2007 with respect to the Canada Music Fund highlighted that more than 80% of the artists who benefited from the Council's Canadian musical diversity component achieved increased technical quality of their sound recordings.
In today's digital world, high-quality sound recordings are essential for the artists who seek our support to secure touring opportunities and to promote their music in Canada and around the world. Again, Canadian Heritage's summative evaluation found that more than 86% of recipients of the Canadian musical diversity component confirmed that the funding enhanced their career in exactly this way.
More controversially, it has been stated that there was considerable overlap between the projects supported by FACTOR and MUSICACTION and those of the Canada Council and that the artists supported through the council's component of the existing fund would, for the most part, by implication, be accommodated by other partners in the newly constituted Canada Music Fund.
Without trying to be argumentative, our own analysis of all funding—Canada Council's, FACTOR's, and MUSICACTION's—for the past three and a half years plus the findings of the summative evaluation raise serious questions about this conclusion.
I should note that we were trying to determine impact on recording support opportunities for these artists who come to our component, and we recognize that the artists who come to our component are also exactly the same artists who come to our touring programs, our career development programs, and all of those other program supports as, similarly, those who are mostly supported by FACTOR and MUSICACTION for recordings are also supported through their programs for touring and market development.
Our statistics show that the overlap between artists supported by any of the Canada Council music programs and those supported by any of the programs at FACTOR and MUSICACTION is about 15% annually. This means that, at most, 15% of the artists receiving support from the Canada Council for activities such as touring, market promotion, showcasing, and sound recording, also receive support from FACTOR or MUSICACTION's similar programs. We consider, when I mention ecosystem, that this is both appropriate and part of what we think is how you deliver support to the entire community. In other words, a minimum of 85% of the musicians the council supported may not be able to find similar support elsewhere at the federal level in the future.
In looking at the last 18 months, our research showed that of the 2,770 grant recipients from both FACTOR and MUSICACTION combined, only 79 of those recipients, or 3%, received sound recording funding from the Canada Council in the same period.
For the professional musicians, ensembles, and groups served by the musical diversity program where the traditions of working as independent artists have been the norm, the reduction of recording costs and the practice of selling from the stages of the festivals, churches, community centres, auditoriums and clubs in which they play, as well as through self-developed distribution channels, are proving to be a significant advantage at the moment, as long as the recordings can be made to an acceptable professional standard. This is not a given if funding is unavailable to these artists to achieve that goal.
:
I would still like to receive the list.
I consulted the Internet to find the list of your projects that were approved last year. Of course, the specialized music category was not listed. I would like to see it. I saw that barely 1% of the $6 million that you distributed went to the emerging artist category, which is part of specialized music—at least, in the category called SEA, the amount was 1%, that is, approximately $60,000 out of a total of $6,283,497.
The categories in your list may not be adequate. If you could update your list, I would like you to send it to us, once again through the chair.
Ms. Ménard and Ms. Ostertag, your testimony is astonishing. The people from Canada Council for the Arts, who are right beside you, do not say the same thing at all. You said, among other things, that you are not concerned about profitability, that you do not ask for royalties from your members and that you study creative projects.
However, the Canada Council for the Arts says that you give priority to the potential profits of a recording. That is what they just said, and they are sitting right beside you. They also said that 85% of musicians who received sound recording grants for specialized music have no other place to apply for such grants.
I would like to know how you feel about that. How can you say that you are not concerned about the profitability of the projects of the musicians or producers that you fund? What do you say to the statements of the Canada Council for the Arts witnesses, who have contradicted you outright? They said the opposite of what you said, and I want to know what the truth is.
At the outset, I'd say I'm disappointed at the tone of these meetings, frankly. The government put substantial support behind the Canada Music Fund, $27.6 million annually and $138 million over five years. It is the most money that has ever gone into this fund. They consulted broadly, both informally and formally, with groups.
Frankly, I want to take some issue with something the Canada Council has in its document, where they say that 15% of artists receive support from the Canada Council, but they don't talk about the music diversity fund. The government does deserve some credit, because the government has dramatically increased the amount of funding to the Canada Council. So to say that 15% of artists who are receiving support from the Canada Council also receive support from FACTOR, I'm actually pretty happy with, because we have extended the total amount of funding for the Canada Council. And you, by virtue of that, are reaching further and helping artists more. But you failed to put that in, and it doesn't deal with the music diversity fund.
This is about the music diversity fund, and the opposition wants to talk about cuts when we have in fact put more money into the program. It's not a cut; it's a reallocation. Specifically, we're talking about putting money.... And Ms. Fry can laugh, because she thinks it's funny.
I actually think it's very important that the government is looking forward. We're looking at the digital transition. We've virtually doubled the amount of money. We've gone from $500,000 to $900,000 for the digital transition. We're looking forward. Music has changed in how it's disseminated, how it's recorded, how it's listened to, how it's purchased, everything. Everything has changed with music.
Ms. Ostertag, you've been around music since 1985. That's a long time. I've been around artists too; I've been around artists who have specifically told me how much FACTOR has assisted them. Can you give me some indication of how this music fund will assist artists, those who are aspiring artists, those who are in specialized music, and those who are aspiring to be in more than specialized music? How will this fund assist them?
Good morning to everyone.
First, on behalf of the Department of Canadian Heritage, I wish to thank the committee for inviting us to appear today to explain the context surrounding the changes that were made to the Canada Music Fund as part of its recent renewal.
My name is Jean-François Bernier, and I am a director general at the Department of Canadian Heritage; I oversee all cultural industry programs and policies. With me is Pierre Lalonde, the director responsible for music in my branch. For those of you from Quebec, that is his real name. There is a very popular Quebec artist who is also named Pierre Lalonde.
Of course, we will be pleased to answer any questions from committee members. My presentation will take about 10 minutes or so. I know that you have heard from many witnesses, but I think that the department's presentation is important in today's context.
Canada is recognized internationally for its music-related public policies, as Mr. Angus mentioned earlier today. The Government of Canada's policy framework comprises a set of legislative measures and programs that work together to ensure that Canadians have access to a diverse range of Canadian music choices. The Canada Music Fund is a pillar of this federal policy framework. It was created in 2001 to replace the Sound Recording Development Program, which had been in place since 1986. So we have had assistance programs for the music sector in place since 1986.
The objectives of the Canada Music Fund are to enhance Canadians' access to a diverse range of Canadian music choices, to increase the opportunities available to Canadian music artists and entrepreneurs, and to ensure that Canadian music artists and entrepreneurs have the skills and tools to succeed in a digital environment. With an envelope of $27.6 million, the fund provides direct assistance to Canadian authors, composers and entrepreneurs.
The Canada Council for the Arts also supports Canadian music through a variety of programs. The council invested close to $30 million in 2008-09 for that purpose. In total, close to $57 million every year goes to support Canadian music.
[English]
In 2007 a major evaluation of the Canada Music Fund was conducted. This evaluation is part of the cycle of sound program management. The Federal Accountability Act states that departments and public agencies, such as the Canada Council, must regularly review their program spending. The evaluation report was made public in October 2007 and has been available on the department's website since then.
A separate branch of the department is responsible for the evaluations. Most evaluations, including this one, are carried out by independent experts. They provide objective information about program rationale, relevance, success, impact, and cost-effectiveness. They are used to help in decision-making for the renewal and ongoing improvement of programs, as well as resource allocation.
The 2007 evaluation of the Canada Music Fund included a survey of funding applicants, interviews with key informants from all areas of the music sector, specific case studies, and a review of statistical and financial data.
As part of the survey, more than 1,500 questionnaires were sent to funded and non-funded applicants from three components of the Canada Music Fund: the Canadian musical diversity component, the new musical awards component, and the collective initiatives component. In all, 534 decided to respond. In-depth interviews were held with more than 40 informants, including key associations representing the Canadian music industry and all Canada Music Fund administrators.
The evaluation report confirmed that the fund contributes to improving Canadians' access to a wide selection of Canadian music. It also noted improvements that could be implemented to increase the fund's efficiency. The report recommended simplifying the Canada Music Fund's structure by reducing the number of components and administrators. It also recommended broadening eligibility to promote innovation and the development of business opportunities provided by digital technology. Lastly, the report recommended increasing support for touring and international showcasing.
As you can see on page 4 of the deck that was distributed to all members, the department undertook a series of initiatives to follow up on the evaluation and in the context of renewing part of the fund's resources, which were set to expire in March 2010. The department presented the evaluation report in detail to all Canada Music Fund administrators, six of them. We also gathered comments from a number of stakeholders to identify their specific challenges and issues. National associations such as ADISQ, CIRPA, and CMPA, as well as entrepreneurs, including those in niche music sectors, were consulted. Specific groups and individuals also voluntarily offered their comments and suggestions to the department.
In June 2008 the department met with distributors, including distributors for niche music, to learn about the challenges and needs related to the online distribution and marketing of music. As part of our policy development responsibilities, we also commissioned and consulted a number of studies. In addition to these initiatives, a number of discussions were held with stakeholders in the Canadian music scene during events such as the Juno Awards, les Rencontres de l'ADISQ, and Canadian Music Week. At all the industry gatherings, we were there.
All these initiatives emphasized that the environment had changed and that the Canada Music Fund needed to be better adapted to meet the challenges of digital and international market development.
[Translation]
A new generation of the Canada Music Fund was announced by the minister on July 31, 2009, in the context of a major event, the FrancoFolies de Montréal. The renewal of the fund is part of an overall strategic vision to firmly support cultural industries in their transition into the digital era. This strategic approach was also reflected in other announcements, including the Canada Media Fund, the Canada Periodical Fund and the Canada Book Fund.
As of April 2010, the Canada Music Fund will continue to support a wide variety of Canadian music through a simplified structure that will be streamlined from seven components to five, and from six administrators to five. The fund will provide increased support for priority international and digital market development initiatives, and its eligibility will be expanded. The department is currently working with FACTOR and MUSICACTION to put the new approach into operation, and it will likely result in new programs with these administrators.
Lastly, in addition to supporting priority activities, the reallocation of resources will help eliminate an overlap within some of the fund's components and Canada Council for the Arts programs, which currently target similar clientèles and music genres.
In 1986, when the Sound Recording Development Program was created, the department turned to the Canada Council for the Arts to administer, on its behalf, a musical diversity program that would stimulate the recording and distribution of niche—or non-mainstream—music. The program started with a budget of $250,000, which increased to $1.4 million in 2001 with the creation of the Canada Music Fund.
Until 2005, the other components of the Canada Music Fund, those not targeting musical diversity, mainly supported larger Canadian labels, leaving little room for smaller labels or independent artists. In 2005, further to the recommendations of the fund's first evaluation, the department made major changes, which helped make funding more accessible.
These changes contributed to a considerable increase in the production of a wider variety of all genres of music—jazz, classical, world music, folk—you heard FACTOR and MUSICACTION refer to all these musical categories. The diversity of musical works of all genres was encouraged throughout the fund. Today, as a result, almost half of all albums produced through CMF components administered by FACTOR, MUSICACTION and the department are part of the “non-popular” or niche music genres.
[English]
As a further illustration of this, 26 out of 40 albums nominated for the 2009 Polaris Music Prize were funded by CMF components other than the Canadian musical diversity component. This prize honours creativity and diversity in Canadian music by recognizing high artistic integrity, without regard to genre or sales history.
[Translation]
In conclusion, the process leading to the renewal of the Canada Music Fund followed proper procedures. Although difficult choices had to be made, the fund's modernization offers an opportunity to be better adapted to the pressing issues of the digital and international environment, all the while preserving the musical diversity expected by Canadians.
That concludes my presentation. Thank you for your attention.
We will be pleased to answer your questions.
:
It is Mr. Rodriguez's fault.
Thank you very much for coming, but I must say that I am extremely disappointed with your presentation. When you talked about the main recommendations set out in the Summative Evaluation of the Canada Music Fund, it seems that there are things that do not correspond to what I read in the report.
You say that the structure has been simplified. In fact, there are three lines on the simplification of the structure. We are talking about helping the industry benefit from digital technology opportunities. However, the word “digital” does not appear anywhere in the report. New technologies are mentioned once, but digital technology is never mentioned.
You also talked about increasing support for tours. The report instead states that we need to “Increase the level of support to the artist, including more funding for skills development [...] and to marketing [...]”. That is what it says. There is one part of the first recommendation, which you did not take into account, and it says: “Shift resources from production to online distribution and marketing.” I am being honest with you here—
You talk about technology, but never ever— You have forgotten part of the report. In any case, there was one part that you twisted, and you are also twisting the issue of digital media.
The report is extremely interesting, and I recommend that all committee members read it, particularly the parliamentary secretary. However, this report cannot have brought you to the solutions you have identified, meaning, slashing the cultural diversity program to invest in digital media. That is not what the report says at all.
It has been suggested that the recommendations in the report will form the basis for a process by which we can start talking about and reviewing the CMF. I want to share a few quotes with you. Recommendation 1, or the main recommendation, states, “ [...] no one had a clear vision on what the next version of the CMF should look like [this is on page 11 in English]—nor is it the purpose of an evaluation study [...]”.
That is not the purpose of an evaluation study!
I will continue, “For this reason, a main recommendation of this study is that PCH should develop options for the next generation of the CMF and obtain feedback on these options from stakeholders.” Were the stakeholders consulted? They came here and told us that they were not.
I want to read other quotes. You will see that, as indicated in the report, this is the basis of the process. Nowhere does it mention cutting specialized music programs. The word “digital” appears no where in the report.
The report also states that, “The survey of CMF recipients found that both CMD and NMW projects [Canadian musical diversity, which we are talking about, and new musical works] have had a positive impact on the careers of funded artists. The case studies of artists supported this finding.”
The report states a little further on: “Of the three CMF components covered by the survey of the recipients, the CMD component (grants for specialized music recording production) had the largest incremental impact on the production of sound recordings.” Those are your own findings.
After that, how can you cut the Canada music program?
The report also states, “No major duplication/overlap issues were identified.” This is on page 10. So, really, I am quite surprised. You have just told us something that previous witnesses did not know, that there are new programs, meaning, that money will go to MUSICACTION and FACTOR.
Have I understood correctly? There are new programs that will be available. The Canada Council for the Arts said that these organizations were profit-driven, but they deny it. That is quite interesting. It seems that there is a disconnect from the report. The report does not say what you are telling us today, and normally, since this forms the basis for the process, you should have undertaken further consultations.
Later, we will look at a motion in which I ask for information on who was consulted and the methodologies used. It's not about the report, because the report sings the praises of the musical diversity program. So it can't be that. The report and what you are saying do not match. They are inconsistent. There had to have been another consultation, which perhaps you are hiding from us, because it can't be based on this one. So, we will wait for new consultations.
In closing, do you not believe that the best solution would be to take the $1.3 million that you took out of the musical diversity program and transfer it to the Canada Council for the Arts? That way, with that money, in addition to the $180 million allocated to it, the Canada Council for the Arts could really take care, once and for all, of the creators who are really creating specialized music, including audio art.