When the COVID-19 pandemic arrived in the sprint of 2020 and Alberta businesses shut down, the province’s live music industry was one of the hardest hit.
After the federal government announced a $500-million package for arts and culture support in May of 2020, Tyson Boyd was hopeful that the independent music venue he co-owns and operates, the Starlite Room, would be eligible for assistance.
Only it wasn’t. At least not at first.
The problem was for-profit venues like the Starlite Room didn’t qualify for assistance in the federal government’s program — only not- for-profit organizations and artists were eligible.
“That came as a real shock to our whole industry,” says Boyd. “We quickly realized that we weren’t actually structured within, or even considered a part of, the cultural and social fabric of this country.”
So, that summer, Boyd, along with hundreds of operators from venues across Canada, started the Canadian Independent Venue Coalition, a group of venues, agencies, promoters, production companies and festivals, that advocates for emergency support funding and an economic recovery plan for the live music and touring industry in Canada.
“We learned that a lot of the government structure for arts and culture in the music industry hadn’t been touched since the early ’90s,” explains Boyd. “This funding structure was set up to support artists, and directly supporting recording was something that the government could wrap [its] head around.”
Thanks to the noise made by the CIVC’s #SupportCanadianVenues movement, which included a petition aimed at the Minister of Canadian Heritage that garnered over 26,000 signatures, the federal government was receptive, and venues were eventually able to receive some subsidies, mostly in the form of rent and wage assistance.
“We’re slowly carving our way back into a place in arts and culture rather than clubs and nightlife,” says Boyd. “We’re essentially rebranding as an industry, which is hopefully helping people understand the need to make sure that for-profit venues don’t all shut down.”