Who will answer?

On the 18th of November AABC sent a letter to each MLA in British Columbia. Yes, all 84 of them! See them here .

The letter posed the following two questions:

RE: Arts and culture funding in British Columbia

1. Are you satisfied with our standing in comparison with other provinces? If not, how would you like to see this changed?

2. What portion, if any, of gaming revenue do you think should go to charities?

To see the complete letter and accompanying background information, go to Questions for MLAs . You can find your MLA and ask them to reply to the questions from AABC.

Their replies will be posted here. So far, we have received one reply by email and one letter (from Gordon Campbell) Both are posted below in their entirety. We are eagerly awaiting others.

Dear Mr. Durrie:
Joan McIntyre thanks you for your letter of November 18, 2010 and asks me to reassure you that she remains an avid supporter of Arts and Culture in BC.
Regards,
Per/Judith Fee
Constituency Assistant to
Joan McIntyre, MLA
West Vancouver-Sea to Sky

__________________________________________________________

December 1, 2010

Dear Mr. Durrie:

Thank you for your letter and accompanying notes and citations relating to provincial funding for the arts in British Columbia. I appreciate the time you have taken to bring this information to my attention.

Since 2001, the BC Arts Council has provided over $124 million to assist artists and arts organizations. We look forward to better days when we can be even more supportive of our lively arts and cultural sectors–not just because of their great importance to individuals and communities but to British Columbia’s overall economy as well.

I have shared a copy of your correspondence with the Minister responsible for gaming grants, the Honourable Rich Coleman and the Minister of Community Sport and Cultural Development, the Honourable Stephanie Cadieux, for their review as well. Minister Coleman will ensure that the appropriate ministry official responds directly to your specific questions at the earliest opportunity.

Again, thank you for writing.

Sincerely,
(signed)
Gordon Campbell

THE ASSEMBLY COZIES UP TO THE MINISTRY

Isn’t there a name for people who go to bed with others and get paid for it? Well I suppose it’s all about money after all, isn’t it? Remember the $10 million Spirit Festivals for which the Ministry would kindly instruct arts groups on how the content of their “approved” festivals could reflect the glory of the winter Olympics? The Spirit lives on! The Assembly of BC Arts Councils is making news by announcing their whole-hearted approval of Festivals Number One. Read all about it in the Globe and Mai l: “B.C. community arts groups to get $1-m for Spirit Festivals.”

If you have any doubts about who is cozy with whom, please notice the last line:

“Festival details have not yet been announced. “We are still determining what we’re going to do in the major centres,” Ms. Cadieux told the Globe.”

“What we’re going to do …”?? What ever happened to arms length?

It’s a sad day when one of our largest arts service organizations bows down to government interference in the arts.

Just to refresh your memory, here are two posts from AABC the were picked up by the Georgia Straight and elicited a lot of enthusiastic comment:

What I really think of the B.C.  Spirit Festivas idea by John McLachlan.

Tom Durrie asks Assembly of B.C. Arts Councils to refuse to disperse spirit festival funding

Don’t say we didn’t tell you.

New Edgewater Casino at BC Place will double gambling in city. Does this have to happen?

Read EDGEWATER CASINO below and then go to Vancouver, not Vegas! to express your opinions to Mayor and Council. Remember that citizen action works! Sign the petition by BC Association for Charitable Gaming .

Read how organized crime thrives on gambling. Is this what we want in downtown Vancouver?

Want to be alarmed? Read: Isn’t it kind of strange that Vancouver would have a super-sized casino downtown?

And more recently: Anti-casino crusader points finger at Vancouver city hall

AND JOIN AABC

We’re pleased to offer a free membership to Arts Advocacy BC.

Join your voice to a growing list of citizens in British Columbia who care deeply about the role of the Arts in our lives, our society and our economy.

AABC is focused solely on arts advocacy.

We are a volunteer-driven society that works in a complementary fashion with people and organizations who share our view that arts and arts funding is necessary in BC.

Why is AABC opposed to gaming expansion?

As explained on the BC Association for Charitable Gaming website expanded gaming does not mean expanded funding for arts and other charities. We also believe that Vancouver’s heart and entertainment centre should be devoted to the arts, not gambling.

Join us now.

EDGEWATER CASINO

Ian Reid
Posted: Aug 26th, 2010

Two months ago the crash of the BC Liberal’s new on-line gambling site highlighted the massive expansion in gaming that’s taken place since the Liberal’s took power, underlining the crass lie of their 2001 election promise.  The broken on-line site takes BC into new gambling territory, becoming the first government in North America to launch its own on-line gambling operation.

On-line gambling isn’t the only area where the BC Liberal government is pushing the gambling envelope.  Earlier this year the government announced that Edgewater Casino -operated by the Las Vegas gambling company Paragon Gaming – will be relocated in the new BC Place redevelopment, across the street from its current location in the Plaza of Nations.

The announcement generated a storm of controversy when it became known that Paragon minority partner, BC Liberal insider and political appointee T. Richard Turner played a rainmaker role in the negotiations between the government and Paragon. When the deal hit a rough spot over the BC Place roof cost overruns, Turner picked up the phone and called Minister Kevin Kreuger to tell him the government’s consideration of a cheaper roof was jeopardizing the casino deal.  The government dropped the cheaper alternative. And let’s don’t forget that, in the words of Jonathan Fowlie: “Donor who  gave Liberal’s $50,000 got casino contract two months later:”

T. Richard Turner, the Liberal insider who pushed for a retractable roof on BC Place, donated $50,000 to the B.C. Liberal Party two months before his company was named as the preferred bidder for a mega hotel and casino project next to the stadium, Fowlie wrote last April.

Lost in all the flack about on-line gaming and insider deals was another important fact:  The new casino is a huge expansion of gambling in the city of Vancouver.
The government’s press release fudged the expansion, noting only that “Edgewater Casino will be relocated as part of the rezoning process.”  What the government didn’t say was that the new casino gets 1200 more slot machines and over 100 additional table games to ease the pain of moving.

The deal makes the new casino three times the size of the current Casino.  The new Edgewater will be BC’s largest, almost 50% larger than Richmond’s River Rock casino.  And alone the new casino will double the amount of gambling within the city.

The new slot machines and tables means a lot more money will leave the pockets of British Columbians.  According to the government, Edgewater’s gaming revenue is projected to increase to $130 million a year, up from the last reported revenue figure of just under $75 million in 2005/06.  But even the $130 million may be significantly underestimated.  The smaller River Rock casino pulls in over $200 million a year in gaming revenue.

“Stop the expansion of gambling that has increased gambling addiction and put new strains on families,”  BC Liberals said during the 2001 election. It was one of many promises they just didn’t keep.
More slots, more poker, more roulette.  Vancouver’s new casino makes it clear that the BC Liberal government is not only willing, they are determined to expand gambling in BC regardless of their hypocritical promises.

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