|
Regional Arts Fund - Double or nothing?
3 December 2003
THE FUTURE OF THE REGIONAL ARTS FUND HANGS IN THE BALANCE as the
Government enters into Budget preparation for 2004.
Established by the Howard Government in 1996 with an initial commitment
of $7.5 million over three years, the Regional Arts Fund is a core
component of the Governments Arts for All policy
a policy to provide genuine opportunities for people
in rural and regional Australia
to participate in and experience the arts.
The program was renewed in the 2001/02 Budget with funding of $7.6m
for a three year period, but this comes to an end next June and
no commitment has been made to continue it.
The Regional Arts Fund (RAF) is unique in that it is the only source
of Federal funding specifically targeted at arts and cultural development
in regional and rural Australia. Unlike the other key elements of
the Governments Arts for All policy the Playing Australia,
Visions Australia and Festivals Australia programs, which fund the
presentation of work mostly from elsewhere the
Regional Arts Fund supports locally determined cultural development
for people in regional, rural and remote Australia.
This makes it especially valuable to communities working to preserve
their unique local identities and who wish to benefit from the powerful
role that the arts can play in overall community development.
The Regional Arts Fund has been very successful in achieving its
aims, chief of which are to support sustainable cultural development
in regional areas particularly in smaller and isolated communities
and to encourage the formation of partnerships.
An Overview of the first 18 months of the latest round of the
program (July 2001 to December 2002) produced by the state regional
arts bodies and Regional Arts Australia (RAA) in June, dramatically
illustrates the positive impacts of the program, with project descriptions,
testimonials, pictures and detailed budgetary figures.
The report reveals that the state regional arts agencies have together
supported over 570 grants from the RAF in that period for projects
with a total value over $12.8 million. This represents a national
average of over $3.10 raised for each $1 from the RAF. An estimated
1.125m regional Australians participated in the projects and 2,300
artists gained employment from them.
The RAF Overview has been employed by RAA in intensive lobbying
in Canberra in the past few months. Regional Arts NSW has also circulated
the NSW section to every regionally based Federal MP in NSW, with
a letter urging their support for the continuation of the Fund.
Along with the other state regional arts agencies, Regional Arts
NSW also participated in a comprehensive formal review of the RAF
conducted by the
Dept of Communications, IT & the Arts (DoCITA) in September
for the Dept of Finance and Administration, which advises the Government
on lapsed programs.
The detailed NSW input to this review highlighted the truly unique
place of the RAF in the funding landscape for arts and cultural
development in this state. It provided compelling evidence of the
ongoing need for the type of community-based cultural development
program provided by the RAF in NSW and amply demonstrated the benefits
of the program in terms of its social, cultural and economic impacts.
It also mounted some persuasive arguments for the efficiency of
the current administrative arrangements for the RAF. The results
of the review, however, will not be known till next year.
Meanwhile, in a hopeful sign, the Federal Minister for the Arts
and Sport, the Hon Mr Rod Kemp, requested from RAA a proposal for
the continuation and extension of the Regional Arts Fund. Accordingly,
the RAA Board met in October and developed a proposal for a new
and more comprehensive RAF, drawing on the detailed information
produced during the DoCITA review.
The proposal currently before the Minister seeks to maintain the
Fund in real terms over the next four years with an annual index
matched to CPI, and proposes funding for a number of new and much
needed initiatives which are not currently addressed by the program.
These include initiatives to target remote communities, increased
support for individual artists and arts-workers, funding for smaller
community festivals, arts partnerships with the heritage sector,
a program for young people and a program to place more much needed
specialist arts workers in regional communities.
An expanded Regional Arts Fund would go some way to meeting the
significant needs of regional and rural New South Wales for assistance
with arts and cultural development. Cutting the RAF altogther would
be a kick in the teeth for a sector thats already doing it
tough.
CONTACT your local Federal
MP and let them know the RAF is important to you. (If you are unsure
of your electorate you can find it here).
For more information about Regional Arts Australias
lobbying efforts, contact Ruth Smiles, Executive Officer, Tel 08
8444 0400 Email ruth.smiles@countryarts.org.au
Website www.regionalarts.com.au
|