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Too little, too late: Muted applause for $250m arts recovery package

Artists and entertainers will be able to apply for a slice of a $250 million support package to help the sector recover from coronavirus restrictions.

Jun 25, 2020, updated Jun 25, 2020

The package is made up of grants and loans, with a focus on helping touring artists, actors and producers on the stage and screen.

Prime Minister Scott Morrison has acknowledged the sector was one of the earliest hit by coronavirus restrictions and will be among the last to return to normal.

He says the package will help a range of jobs throughout the sector while helping tourism and hospitality more broadly.

“This package is as much about supporting the tradies who build stage sets or computer specialists who create the latest special effects, as it is about supporting actors and performers in major productions,” he said.

Critics say it’s far too little, too late.

Media, Entertainment and Arts Alliance boss Paul Murphy said it was a slap in the face for workers in the industry who remain ineligible for JobKeeper.

“There is absolutely no relief for freelance and casual workers who have lost their jobs and suffered significant reductions in income,” he said.

Greens Senator Sarah Hanson-Young said the package fell well short of what was needed.

“The industry itself was calling for a package of close to a billion dollars,” she said.

Arts Minister Paul Fletcher defended the time taken to deliver the support package.

“We think this comes at the right time to get the sector restarted,” he told Nine.

“What we now need to do is get the sector back to work so Australians can see the bands they love, see the performers they love.”

The long-anticipated package includes $75 million worth of grants to help productions and tours return, with funding slices ranging from $75,000 to $2 million.

It also includes measures to help local screen productions and organisations.

A task force on the creative economy will be announced in coming weeks, working with the government and the Australia Council to implement the plan.

The grants and loans will be delivered over the next year.

The Government said some of the sector’s 645,000 workers were already receiving $100 million in support measures.

Social-distancing requirements have played havoc with the arts and entertainment scene, forcing performance venues to shut their doors.

Morrison will work with the national cabinet to develop a timetable for the entertainment industry with regard to the lifting of restrictions, so they can plan when to reopen.

There remains no clarity on when crowds of more than 100 can gather.

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THE PACKAGE AT A GLANCE:

OVERALL

* $250 million worth of grants and loans covering the entertainment, arts and screen sectors

* Some of the sector’s 645,000 workers are already receiving $100 million a month through JobKeeper and cashflow support

SPECIFIC MEASURES

* $75 million in 2020-21 for grants of between $75,000 and $2 million to help put on festivals, concerts, tours and events as social distancing restrictions ease

* $90 million in concessional loans for new productions and events

* $50 million for Screen Australia to support local film and television producers to secure finance and start filming again

* $35 million for the Australia Council for the Arts to support theatre, dance, circus, music and other organisations

* Ministerial task force to oversee the recovery

* Prime Minister Scott Morrison to seek national cabinet support for a firm timetable on the lifting of restrictions to allow the arts and entertainment industry to plan for the future.

Source: Prime Minister’s Office

-AAP

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