Thank you, Mr. Chair.
My name is Arash Mohtashami-Maali, and I am the Head of the Writing and Publishing Section at the Canada Council for the Arts. As an introduction to this presentation, I would like to give the members of the committee a brief description of the Canada Council and its mandate.
The Canada Council is a Crown corporation that was created by an act of Parliament in 1957 to “foster and promote the study, enjoyment and production of works in the arts”.
Our mandate is to help Canadian artists and arts organizations play a leadership role in Canadian society. Our role is to help our society to access its arts and culture and to engage with these leaders in building a better society based on such fundamental values as freedom of expression, the right to difference, and the right to a unique identity within a plural society.
This is the spirit and vision that we are bringing to our presentation to the committee, in order to share with you our ideas on Bill C-32. We understand perfectly the need for a reform of the Copyright Act. It is obvious that defining a legal framework for this subject within the larger conversation on intellectual property reinforces the commitment to focusing particular attention on the needs of artists and the arts in Canada. We applaud this effort, all the more so since new technologies and globalization, together with the influence of the Internet and new media, have not only contributed to the disappearance of physical borders, but have also made possible the universalization of ideas and literary and artistic creation, and the introduction of new working media for creators.
We have seen the effects of piracy in the arts, especially in the fields of music, film and literature, and it is time to equip the Canadian justice system with the necessary legal tools to protect the interests of authors and artists in Canada.
We all agree that the act must take to heart the protection of the arts and literature in Canada and must ensure the right to an identity that is both distinctive and diverse. This act has to support the best efforts of our artists, writers and intellectuals and their desire to maintain close ties and open dialogues with today's world, building a place of choice for Canadian culture and guaranteeing its survival.
We also wish to thank the committee for listening attentively to the different stakeholders representing the many artistic and cultural communities concerned. It is heartening to see that the bill is being given special attention thanks to this consultation.
Our unique perspective on Canadian creation and our profound understanding of this community mean that we have a privileged contact and first-line responsiveness for hearing the needs and the reaction of the arts communities regarding Bill C-32. We believe that this act, inextricably bound as it is to the fundamental values of our society, must play a unifying role. While it must reinforce in an ethical manner the role of the artist by recognizing his rights, it must also ensure the continuity and fair treatment of independent agencies, corporations and institutions.
As we mentioned earlier, the artistic and literary communities want an inclusive act with legal tools that not only respond to the current changes, but also includes those measures which, over the years, have protected intellectual property in the arts. While new realities have transformed the arts world, the traditional means continue to make up the bulk of the market.
The Canada Council is not a legal expert, but we understand the concerns of the different arts communities. We understand that the introduction into the act of such ideas as 'fair use' is a source of discord and disagreement within the arts community. Every day we witness the preoccupations within these communities, as they express their reservations about the application of these new ideas. We believe that the introduction of a more precise definition would help them come to a better understanding of the position of the act with regard to the rights of individuals and organizations.
We appreciate the declaration in the preamble to the act (paragraph 1) stating that this act is “an important marketplace framework law and cultural policy instrument that, through clear, predictable and fair rules, supports creativity and innovation and affects many sectors of the knowledge economy”. We are confident that the present efforts of the government and Parliament will ensure that Canadians benefit from an act that is progressive and far-sighted, an act that is open but also solid, and that will protect Canadians and their interests. We agree that clarity is the key element of an act that is vital to the cultural survival of our country. We support the effort to establish an act that unifies our citizens around the basic principles of our constitution, and we support the idea that this act must give artists, writers and thinkers “the ability to assert their rights...”
Thank you, Mr. Chair.