Arts, culture and sports groups for adults, along with environmental organizations, won’t receive any grant money from the B.C. government this year, under new rules and restrictions announced today.
The changes, which are expected to impact hundreds of charities and non-profits across B.C., come as the province cuts the amount of money it provides to community groups out of more than $1 billion in annual gambling, casino and bingo revenue.
Housing and Social Development Minister Rich Coleman admitted government will spend less on charities than it did in 2008 because of tough economic times.
The amount of gambling revenue allocated to community gaming grants this year is $120 million, down $36.3 million from 2008/09.
More than 6,800 organizations receive a share of the money each year, and many have said they would be unable to operate without the government support. When government tried to clawback millions in funding in last September’s budget update, outraged groups created a political nightmare for the Liberal government in the form of a flurry of bad news stories and protests.
As part of the new cuts announced today, any charity of non-profit group that serves arts and culture programs to adults will have its funding eliminated this year, Coleman said.
Exceptions apply to youth groups, as well as groups that use the money to host fairs, festivals or museums. However, those groups will only receive $4 million, about half the amount of previous years.
Environmental groups, including wildlife rescue organizations, will also receive no funding this year. Adult sports groups and school playgrounds have also had their funding eliminated. Sports for youth, and sports for people with disabilities, retain their grant money, government said.
Some organizations will remain unaffected by the change. Public safety organizations, such as local search and rescue groups or volunteer fire departments, will get 100 per cent of the grant money from previous years, government said.
Funding also remains uncharged for charities and non-profits in the “human and social services” sector — food banks, meal programs, shelters, transition houses, public health programs and boys and girls clubs.
Parent Advisory Councils will see funding cuts from last year restored to 2008 levels. PACs now receive $20 per student (up from $10 per student last year) but lose any additional bingo affiliation grants.
The province will honour any three-year commitments it had signed with charities, but said it will only offer year-to-year deals in the future. As well, it reaffirmed a funding cap of $100,000 per group, or $250,000 per provincial organization.
The changes also signal the end of bingo affiliation money for charities, as the province rolls bingo grants into the larger community gaming grant pot. Some groups may see gaps in funding because the bingo grants had different application deadlines, but the province has offered “interim partial payment” to help affected organizations.
To offset grant cuts, Coleman pointed to $10 million for arts groups and $10 million for sports groups promised this coming year as part of a three-year, $60 million, Olympic legacy fund announced in the provincial budget last week. However, the money is not placed in community gaming grants, and will require a separate application process for charities.
NDP arts critic Spencer Herbert slammed government for cutting money from charities. He called the announcement “fun with numbers” as the province trumpets a small amount of new funding for arts and sports in its budget, but then removes a larger amount in grant cuts.
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