Yes, there's no question that it's an important point. This can't be lost. I'll give an example. We talked about the importance of our national museums and galleries. People ask why the government isn't increasing funding, for example, for the MAP program, the museum assistance program, or why we couldn't be doing more for our national museums. Yet again, you have to draw back to 10,000 feet, and look at the entire suite of programs that we have to support Canadian culture.
For example, in the budget, the indemnification program is a simple concept. There are galleries and museums all across the country, from the big, from the Art Gallery of Ontario, to Glenbow Museum, to the smallest, the Port Moody Station Museum, a little museum in my riding—all shapes and sizes of museums. They apply to the Government of Canada for indemnification; that is, the Government of Canada agrees to be an insurance underwriter for the cost of transporting and hosting paintings, sculptures, any kind of exhibit that might be shown in a gallery or museum across the country.
Local museums can't take this on. Local museums in this country are overwhelmingly volunteer organizations. It's not as if somebody like my father, a retired dentist, is going to take on the financial liability of hosting something from Rembrandt. He's not going to expose himself to that, to vandalism or what have you, nor is a volunteer organization. The Government of Canada steps in and backs them up, helps underwrite and fund them. We've doubled that.
Some people ask if the government couldn't be doing more for galleries and museums. On the cash side, we say sure, there's always an explanation for that, but if you draw back and look at the indemnification program, $3 billion is a massive relief for our galleries. The current envelope of $1.5 billion is usually taken up and consumed within the first three months of the year. We recognize that. Also, the big, professional organizations that have decent-sized budgets can go straight after those funds and crowd out the little guys. So we fixed that.
The reason I mention it is that there's a similar parallel to the CBC. The CBC's budget is being reduced by 10% over the coming three years, it's true. However, on the other side, our government has created the Canada Media Fund. The Canada Media Fund receives $100 million per year from the Government of Canada. All told, the total partnership is $375 million. So $1 billion per year of A-based, Government of Canada money goes to the CBC, plus they get their ad revenue, which constitutes about a third of their operating budget. On top of that, we're committing $100 million every year to the Canada Media Fund, a public-private partnership that we created, which in total kicks $375 million into Canada's audio-visual sector.
All those shows are created and have to be Canadian in content and available in multiple platforms. The CBC leads the country in multiple platforms. It allows the CBC to access up to $375 million worth of productions of Canadian content to be shown on Canadian platforms all across the country. What we’ve done is take the Canada Television Fund and the Canada Media Fund, merge them together, and create a partnership.
The Canada Media Fund and the Canada Television Fund were created by the Liberals after the 1995 cuts to the CBC as sort of a stopgap from some of the blowback it received from those cuts. Those were both sunsetters and were lapsed every year. So production companies relying on those funds in order to create their Canadian television shows didn't know if those funds would be available multiple years down the road.
What we did is merge those two funds, create the Canada Media Fund, and build a partnership with the private sector. We put in $100 million, and the private sector kicks in $275 million this year into this fund. Now we have all this money available. And better than that, the fund is not a sunsetter; it's an A-based fund. In budget 2011, which we passed just after the last campaign, we A-based it, which is to say that it's not a sunsetter any more, it's now a permanent part of the Government of Canada's funding infrastructure for Canadian television and shorts and movies, and content in both official languages. Part of it is reserved for productions in French, part of it is reserved for productions in aboriginal languages and in aboriginal communities, and part of it is reserved for all these things that are critical to Canada's diversity across the country.
When people are critical of the reductions to the CBC, I understand, but you have to draw back and see the entire suite of things being done to support Canada's audio-visual sector. In that regard, I think we're doing very well.