Contact Your Councillor
If you don't have time to call your councillor (which is always better), please email ASAP!
You can use our sample letter below to add personal touches and and send it to council in support of the HRM arts and culture sector.
It is vital to be respectful and to copy the following on your email:
- Your Councillor (find them here)
- Mayor Andy Fillmore: mayor@halifax.ca
Please let us know here when you make contact!
THEN ASK YOUR Councillor FOR A FOLLOW UP (VIRTUALLY OR IN PERSON)
- Here's how you find your Councillor
- Ask for a meeting to discuss your concern
- Please let us know here if you get a response!
- If comfortable, and you have the time, take a photo with the Councillor and post it using the messaging we have attached (or your own) with the hashtags provided.
TEMPLATE LETTER
Dear Mayor and Councillors,
My name is
If applied to the Grants to Professional Arts Organizations, a 10% cut would translate to approximately $81,000 in budget reduction for project grants. Hardly worth writing home about in terms of savings in the overall budget. But for the arts organizations that rely on that funding, these cuts are monumental. And as a resident of Halifax, I want you to understand that a vibrant, healthy, appropriately supported arts sector is essential to a good quality of life in this city. Professional arts organizations provide programming that is beneficial to health and wellness, creating a sense of wonder and belonging for all who partake. These programs are not luxuries: they are what makes HRM an exciting, healthy, and vibrant place to live in.
The arts are not a luxury good. They are a fundamental asset to any city or community. Halifax punches well above its weight, with world-class artists and arts organizations working year round to make excellent experiences for residents and visitors alike, from small theatre companies presenting at The Bus Stop Theatre to Symphony Nova Scotia, from Nocturne to Upstream Music, from Neptune Theatre to the Jazz Festival, from AfterWords Literary Festival to Mocean Dance.
In the most recent Arts Vibrancy Index, Halifax ranked #4 out of 22 metropolitan areas in the census, indicating the impact of the arts sector on a place’s economic growth, yet Halifax is trailing behind with respect to per capita investment in arts funding and HRM Council has yet to achieve its own funding goals set in 2017.
Please do not consider a cut to the arts. Instead, please work with your colleagues on council to appropriately support the professional arts organizations that do so much to bring people together into public spaces; foster social engagement; train our capacity to reflect on meaning (asking “what does this mean?”). The arts exercise our capacity to understand others, ourselves and our relationships between each other and the world at large. In a world of deepening division and the entrenchment of ideologies – both fuelled by social isolation – the arts are an essential antidote. The arts create social cohesion by allowing us to recognize what makes us, us. The Halifax I want to live in includes a rich, diverse, publicly supported thriving arts sector.
Sincerely, <INSERT YOUR NAME, CITY, AND POSTAL CODE HERE>