Thank you, Mr. Chair.
Today, we are completing this study on the federal government's Status of the Artist Act.
For decades, artists and the cultural community have been pressuring to improve the status of artists.
In 1971, the federal government released the Disney report, the first complete picture of the economic problems experienced by Canadian artists. Nothing came of it.
In the early 1980s, the Federal Cultural Policy Review Committee, the Applebaum-Hébert Committee, was created. The committee was to examine the status of the artist, but also do a complete review of Canada's cultural institutions and policies. In the report they submitted in 1982, the commissioners noted that in spite of the pressure from the arts community and the extraordinary contribution made by artists to Canadian life, artists' living conditions were virtually unchanged.
Another task force was created a little later, and in 1986 it released the results of its work in the Siren-Gélinas Report. We're talking about Paul Siren and Gratien Gélinas. Mr. Gélinas is a legend in Quebec. The report proposed a number of amendments to the Income Tax Act and proposed to offer better financial security for artists, including by the income averaging that Mr. Beaulieu has talked about today.
In 1989, the Standing Committee on Communications and Culture created the Subcommittee on the Status of the Artist and directed it to review the numerous earlier reports on issues relating to the status of the artist. In 1990, the report was tabled. The federal government then committed to enacting legislation on the status of the artist. A host of recommendations were made that the government committed to acting on. Finally, in 1992, the Status of the Artist Act, a law that is too toothless to eat a bowl of soup, was born.
To sum up, our committee is concluding this study today, and, quite frankly, I'm a bit concerned to see that we are still going to be making recommendations to the government that may not see the light of day or that will be applied piecemeal and have no teeth.
I will conclude by quoting the 1982 Applebaum-Hébert report: “the income of many, if not most, of these artists classifies them as highly-specialized, working poor.”
If we do nothing, that's how things will stay. Our artists deserve better.
Thank you.