Mr. Chairman, committee members, good morning. My name is Caroline Fortier. I am the Executive Director of the Alliance for Children and Television, the ACT, a Canadian not-for-profit agency that I will describe briefly to you a little bit later on in my presentation.
First of all, I would like to inform you that your jacket contains additional information about the alliance as well as an overview of a study.
At the outset, I would like to thank you for giving us an opportunity to speak this morning. I would then like to introduce you to the two members of the ACT board of directors who will also be talking to you this morning. You will be given, in English this time, a brief summary of their respective career paths.
Monsieur Peter Moss is chair of the ACT and has been a member of our board since 2005. Mr. Moss has worked in the field of children's entertainment for over 25 years. In television, he has worked in both private and public broadcasting. He has been creative head of children's programming for the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, and VP of programming and production for YTV and Treehouse TV. He has been an executive producer for the Children's Television Workshop, now Sesame Workshop, and president of CINAR Animation.
Animation production credits include executive producer for Jacob Two-Two, Mischief City, and If the World Were a Village, and creative producer for Weird Years.
In the theatre, he has worked as a director at the Stratford Festival, among many other theatres, and was artistic director of YPT in Toronto for 11 seasons.
Monsieur Steven DeNure is vice-chair of the ACT and has been active on our board of directors for more than three years. He is also president of DECODE Entertainment, a leading producers and worldwide distributor of children's programming. Prior to co-founding DECODE, Mr. DeNure was president of Alliance Productions.
His list of credits is extensive, from animated series such as ReBoot, Angela Anaconda, and Franny's Feet, to kids' dramas such as Radio Free Roscoe, and Naturally, Sadie, as well as benchmark one-hour dramas like Due South and North of 60.
As you can certainly see, Mr. Moss and Mr. DeNure are committed, active and productive people working in the area of youth content creation. In a nutshell, these men are passionate about children's television.
I could say the same thing about all of the members of our organization, which is basically composed of Canadian creators, artisans, educators, producers and broadcasters of youth content on all platforms. They have all brought the same desire to produce high-quality Canadian youth television, an objective that the alliance has been striving to achieve with them since it was established, in 1974, through its professional training activities, its annual awards for excellence for the best anglophone and francophone production and its interventions with government bodies and other organizations, just as we are doing today.
That is, then, a brief description of ACT. I would now like to turn the floor over to Mr. Peter Moss.