Hamilton

Councillors confused about where new arts money is going

The new money in the pipeline for arts, community festivals and services got stuck Friday at a meeting to discuss the proposed new grants as councillors pushed for more detail about $5 million being handed out.

'My only issue is, we're giving out $5 million, and I don't want to do it on the fly': Ferguson

A member of the Hamilton Philharmonic Brass Quintet performs at Supercrawl 2013. Both the orchestra and the festival will have to wait a week to find out if the proposed grants from the city will make it to the next phase. (Adam Carter/CBC)

The new money in the city pipeline for arts, community festivals and services got stuck Friday at a meeting to discuss the proposed new grants. 

Councillors on the city's grants committee said they felt uncomfortable with the level of information they had to approve more than $5 million in grants.

They requested documents clearly outlining how this year's proposed funding compares to last year's — even though the fund is a new program this year so the comparison may not hold exactly. They also want to see a note about what grants were boosted or came entirely from the new $500,000 for arts and $250,000 for other categories the city allotted in March.

"My only issue is, we're giving out $5 million, and I don't want to do it on the fly," Coun. Lloyd Ferguson said. He said he needs to be able to understand and to defend where the money is being spent.

The committee took a 15 minute break to have finance staff run back to their office to print out a new spreadsheet, but even with the new documents and yellow highlighters in hand, the councillors decided to wait a week.

The grants come out of a total $5.4 million fund called the City Enrichment Fund that brings together several pots of money that were previously spread out. The overhaul was approved last year, and the city got 290 applications for funding total this year. There are four individual categories in the new fund: 

  • Arts
  • Communities, Culture and Heritage
  • Community Services
  • Sports and Active Lifestyle

One of the sticking points in Friday's meeting was where the new $750,000 is going — the $500,000 for arts, and $250,000 to be split up across the other categories. In general, for any group getting more money than they did last year, or getting money for the first time, that money came from that additional pot, said city finance director John Hertel. But Ferguson wanted a specific note about what extra money came from the new boosted funding. 

Theatre Aquarius is poised to receive the biggest jump in funding under the city's new strategy for funding arts. The theatre got about $74,000 from the city last year, but in new grants up for review Friday, staff are recommending a grant of $210,000.

The new fund also opened the doors to some new applicants that haven't received funding before. One recommendation is for $48,000 for An Instrument for Every Child, a project of the Hamilton Music Collective. Another: Dusk Dances Hamilton, which city staff proposes giving $10,000 to. (See all of the proposed grants on the city's website.)

The meeting will reconvene May 15 at 12 p.m., and could then move on to city council's audit and finance committee before a full council hearing later in the month. The week's delay will not affect the timeline. 

kelly.bennett@cbc.ca | @kellyrbennett