MCCY looking at more ways to help arts and sports sectors

Mr Edwin Tong, Minister for Culture, Community and Youth, is paying special attention to freelancers in both industries.
Mr Edwin Tong, Minister for Culture, Community and Youth, is paying special attention to freelancers in both industries.

More help is on the way for the arts and sports sectors, with the Government looking into further support measures to cushion the impact of the Covid-19 pandemic.

Minister for Culture, Community and Youth Edwin Tong on Tuesday said his ministry is exploring measures that will be designed to allow people in both sectors to gain skills that can "sustain them in the immediate future and beyond, in a post-pandemic world".

Packages being explored will have some of these features to be "future-proof and future-ready for people in both industries", he said.

The Government last year rolled out the $55 million Arts and Culture Resilience Package (ACRP) and the $50 million Sports Resilience Package (SRP) to help people in both sectors, which, like others, have been hard hit by the pandemic and closure of venues.

In an interview where he took stock of his ministry's work over the past year and set out its priorities for the year ahead, Mr Tong said the ACRP has provided more than 13,000 work and training opportunities, of which more than 5,000 were for freelancers.

The scheme has also supported more than 1,400 digitalisation projects and programmes by local artists and organisations.

The $55 million package includes a one-time operating grant of either $75,000 or $50,000 for arts and culture organisations to defray costs. This is expected to benefit 225 organisations, Mr Tong said.

Under the SRP, the Ministry of Culture, Community and Youth (MCCY) had set aside $13.5 million in operating grants to help eligible businesses offset operating costs. It has received more than 120 applications for the grants, which are capped at $15,000 a month.

The SRP also includes a "Blended" initiative, which sets aside $5 million for organisations to hold "phygital" hybrid events. This will support an additional 100 events and reach an estimated 450,000 participants, he said.

The aim is to prop up businesses that would be sustainable were it not for Covid-19 restrictions, Mr Tong added. The measures are also being designed to ensure key aspects of talent are retained, he said, citing the need for both stage crew and performers.

"We do have to look at it very judiciously and make sure that as an ecosystem, they're able to survive. We are going to be applying those principles in any subsequent measures we may feel is needed."

There will also be help for freelancers who, he said, play a special role in the sports and arts sectors by lending a "degree of spontaneity and inventiveness".

"So in times when they are in difficulties like these, I think we have to help them and programmes will be designed to give them as much assistance as we can," he said.

Freelancers form a significant portion of the arts ecosystem in Singapore. The National Arts Council's 2016 Arts and Culture Employment Study found that 47 per cent of those surveyed were freelancers - higher than the national average across sectors of 14 per cent.

Mr Tong noted that public and private museums and galleries received 9.6 million visitors in 2019, while 15.6 million attended arts and culture events - both record highs. Covid-19 put paid to that uptrend last year.

Moving to other highlights, he said the inscription of Singapore's hawker culture on the Unesco Representative List of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity sent a message that the country is committed to preserving and enhancing this culture.

On Jan 30, MCCY will also begin a review of the Singapore Arms and Flag and National Anthem Act, which governs the use of national symbols. About 50 Singaporeans have volunteered to give their views and more people will be roped in over time, said Mr Tong.

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A version of this article appeared in the print edition of The Straits Times on January 21, 2021, with the headline MCCY looking at more ways to help arts and sports sectors. Subscribe