Prizes The Canada Council for the Arts promotes public awareness of the arts through its communications, research and arts promotion activities. In particular, every year, the Canada Council awards a broad range of prizes to over 200 Canadian artists and scholars in recognition of their work. The Canada Council administers various
Governor General's Awards, including
Medals in Architecture,
Literary Awards,
Performing Arts Awards, and
Awards in Visual and Media Arts. among others. The
Killam Research Fellowship, granted for two years with a prize of $70,000 per year, provides support to scholars by granting them time to pursue research projects of broad significance and widespread interest within the disciplines of the humanities, social sciences, natural sciences, health sciences, engineering, or studies linking any of these disciplines. This award is one of the most distinguished
research fellowships in Canada, and was established by the
Killam Trusts through
Dorothy J. Killam, in memory of her husband,
Izaak Walton Killam.
Musical Instrument Bank The
Musical Instrument Bank (
MIB; ) is an initiative of Canada Council wherein preeminent Canadian
classical musicians, especially young artists, compete for the opportunity to become the steward and performer of a classical instrument from the Musical Instrument Bank on a 3-year loan. The MIB was established in 1985 with a $100,000
bequest from the Barwick Family along with the fundraising efforts of businessman William Turner and cellist
Denis Brott, both of
Montréal. Since then, the Bank has received donations and loans of
violins,
cellos, and
bows—created by such
luthiers as
Stradivari,
Gagliano,
Guarneri, and
Pressenda—as well as generous bequests for the Canada Council to purchase additional instruments. Each year the organization receives some 16,000 grant requests, which are reviewed by peer assessment committees. In 2006–07, the Canada Council awarded some 6,000 grants to artists and arts organizations and made payments to more than 15,400 authors through the
Public Lending Right Commission. Grants and payments totaled more than $152 million.
Public Lending Right Through its
Public Lending Right (PLR) program, the Canada Council financially compensates over 17,000 Canadian authors annually for providing free public access to their books in
Canadian public libraries. Authors are compensated through direct payments ranging from
CA$50 to $4,500 a year. Eligible work includes original writing, translation, illustration, narration and photography contained in library books across a range. The
Public Lending Right Commission is a permanent advisory board that works with the Canada Council "to define the program's criteria and promote the program among eligible authors, illustrators, narrators and translators" from a variety of literary and scholarly genres. The Commission consists of writers, translators, librarians, and publishers, as well as non-voting representatives from the Canada Council, the
Department of Canadian Heritage,
Library and Archives Canada, and
Bibliothèque et Archives nationales du Québec. The creation of a PLR program was first deliberated in 1977, when the Council sets up the Payment for Public Use Committee to discuss the matter. Also that year,
UNEQ (Union des écrivaines et des écrivains québécois) is founded in order to defend the rights of Quebec authors. In 1982, the Applebaum-Hébert Committee recommended that the federal government create a program to pay authors for the use of their books in libraries. Soon after, in March 1986, the
Payment for Public Use (PPU) program was established by a Cabinet decision, with an initial budget of $3 million allocated to it by the
Treasury Board Secretariat. This would make Canada the 13th country in the world to develop a PLR program. The initial name was promptly changed to Public Lending Right and catalogue-based system was adopted. The PLR Commission developed and approved its Constitution and Bylaws in 1988, its second year of operation. In 2008, the Commission would unanimously adopt a
growth management strategy, including a new four-tier payment scale for PLR payments, which was implemented two years later. The Commission first moved in favour of the possibility of
ebooks being eligible in the PLR Program in 2011. However, it would not be until 2016, when the Program opened registration to ebooks. Also in 2016, the Program would begin to consider the future eligibility of
audiobook materials, and the Canada Council would pledge to increase direct payments to authors through the PLR Program. In 2012, author
Roy MacSkimming published the first of three major research studies related to PLR; subsequent reports would address the arrival of new technologies and compare the Canadian model to other PLR systems operating around the world. The PLR Program would finally open registration to audiobooks in 2019. For the first time, works must have been published during the previous 5 years in order to be eligible for registration. ==See also==