12 December 2023, 9:47 PM
The Minns government has unveiled details of Creative Communities, the new arts, culture and creative industries policy.
Creative Communities is a 10-year vision, the state’s first creative industries policy, supporting the traditional arts sector and cultural institutions, but encompassing industries informed by the state’s unique and diverse cultural strengths, including:
Creative Communities has the goal of sustainably growing the depth and breadth of creative industries throughout NSW, and over the next decade enabling creative individuals, organisations and communities throughout the state to reach their potential.
The NSW Government endorses, and through Creative Communities will focus on implementing Revive, the National Cultural Policy, by supporting the NSW cultural ecosystem.
Creative Communities also supports the Revive goal of exporting more Australian stories to the world. Australia has one of the largest creative trade deficits per capita in the world. We consume global stories faster and tell local stories less than most places on the planet. The NSW Government will measure and establish goals to increase the state’s creative exports.
Whole of Government approach
Creative Communities will guide the NSW Government’s efforts to enable, support and advocate for culture for the next decade. Commitments to support this include:
Creative people
Enabled by recent and ongoing improvements to creative infrastructure, the NSW Government will focus on investing in a wide variety of creative people and communities across the state. Additionally, the NSW Government commits to
Safeguarding and modernising workplace conditions for artists, including requiring individuals and organisations receiving government funding to commit to safe workplace standards.
Next generation creatives
Creative Communities encourages the next generation of culture workers and leaders to step forward. This will be a condition of NSW Government funding. Further commitments include:
Creative spaces
The NSW Government will activate creative spaces by a combination of continued direct public investment, seeking new sources of investment for the sector, and regulatory reform.
Creative Communities envisages that NSW will become home to a First Nations cultural centre and enhanced cultural tourism. It will forge strong and enduring partnerships with Indigenous creative communities, to create new work, rebuild connection and healing.
The NSW Government supports maintaining free public access to NSW State Cultural Institutions and collections. They have been built with public money over many decades and are the property and should be accessible by all NSW citizens.
A cultural space audit in 2024 will aim to identify underutilised assets that could be used for creative endeavours, including spaces held by NSW agencies, local councils and other landholders.
Ensure that cultural infrastructure and good design are included in major public housing and transport infrastructure investments, including by expanding the Heritage Floor Space Scheme.
The NSW Government will introduce further vibrancy reforms in 2024 - continuing to improve planning, liquor, outdoor, and sound and noise regulations to encourage cultural activity across NSW.
The NSW Government will also:
Ensure the White Bay Power Station will be available for ongoing cultural use, starting with the 2024 Biennale of Sydney.
Festivals
The NSW Government will support festivals across the state by:
Strengthening the co-ordination of festival support in NSW to properly position and grow the festivals sector, leveraging the wide range of industries involved, including improving staging for festivals and concerts following the development of a business for outdoor cultural infrastructure across central Sydney, Parramatta, Western Sydney, and Regional NSW.
Reviewing the Entertainment Act to identify ways to strengthen support for festivals, venues, artists, managers and music workers.
Creative reform
The NSW Government will establish a Cultural Front Door concierge, a simplified way for creative people to engage with government.
The NSW Government will reform of the Arts and Culture Funding Program (ACFP) making it a fairer and more equitable process, including reducing paperwork for applicants and simplifying the acquittal process.
The Minister will issue a formal direction to the state’s tourism body, Destination NSW, to formalise the state’s experience tourism policy focus. Such a direction will explicitly commit support for the arts, culture and creative experiences across NSW.
Promoting NSW arts and culture venues and activities, including local festivals and events, alongside major international/national entertainment (through refocussed Destination NSW marketing funding and state-wide calendar optimised to show local events and programs.
Screen
Screen NSW will be made more independent, and we will strengthen its capacity to serve the industry by shortening investment approval timeframes, contracting and payment times, and expanding the role of the board. Additional support for the sector includes:
Music
The reshaping of the music sector will be driven by Sound NSW with leadership from its newly appointed advisory board and in collaboration with Music Australia, Creative Australia’s new contemporary music office. The review of contemporary music has begun, and a ten-year music strategy and the 3-year implementation plan will be released in 2024. Additionally, the NSW Government will:
Regional NSW
The NSW Government will deliver a regional arts, culture and creative industries strategy in 2024 to grow and support sustainable participation in local activities. This includes:
Minister for Arts John Graham said, “We are lucky to live in NSW, a state rich in creativity. The state’s first arts, culture and creative industries policy commits the government to advocating for the value of culture, to enabling and investing in culture with the whole of government.
“The NSW Government believes creativity is one of the key things to celebrate about our state. That is why we are sharing our 10-year policy framework. This is where we’re starting, and where we’re heading. This is certainly not the end point. We want to unleash creativity across the state.
“Coming into government, the Minns Labor government promised to solve some of the obvious problems in the NSW arts, culture, and creative industries sector, and actively support and advocate to ensure the sector grows in significance to the state’s economy and in the life of the people of NSW.
Creative Communities has the goal of sustainably growing the depth and breadth of creative industries throughout NSW, and over the next decade enabling creative individuals, organisations and communities throughout the state to reach their potential. These creative sectors already represent 10% of the state's economy.
“A thriving cultural sector is welcoming for younger generations ... the grass roots for the next generation of great artists, makers, creative thinkers and doers. The drive for a thriving creative and cultural sector has a number of benefits and outcomes, including a more diverse and resilient economy.
“Creative Communities' commitment is to the artists, makers and workers in the arts, culture, and creative industries. We acknowledge the critical role of artists, creatives, and makers, as well as those behind the scenes – the crews in production, making sets and costumes, booking shows, and managing talent. They are all important to the health of the ecosystem.”
Read the full policy: https://www.nsw.gov.au/arts-and-culture/engage-nsw-arts-and-culture/resource-hub/creative-communities.