Tory ridings given funds to celebrate Canada Day
Ottawa spreads out majority of $7 million for festivities in Conservative-held areas
OTTAWA— The government has doled out about $7 million to small cities and towns to help pay for Canada Day celebrations, but the department in charge has only disclosed details about a fraction of that spending.
And although the money is meant to help all Canadians celebrate the red and white, it appears a lot of the funds — based on what little information the government has released — has gone to ridings that are Tory blue.
Canadian Heritage has approved nearly 1,700 events taking place between June 21 and July 1 — a period that captures National Aboriginal Day, St. Jean Baptiste Day, Canadian Multiculturalism Day and, ultimately, Canada Day.
The amounts handed out are small: They can cover anything from cake for a picnic to general funding for festivals that attract tens of thousands of visitors. The department has only made public 130 of those projects — about 8 per cent of the total number, based on an analysis by The Canadian Press. Late Tuesday, the department said that it spent all $6.7 million in the Celebrate Canada fund, as well as $300,000 in funding from Aboriginal Affairs, but offered no additional details.
A Canadian Heritage spokesman, Len Westenberg, said the department received 1,938 funding applications this year and approved funding to 1,658 events. The government decides which of the successful applicants to publicly announce, he said.
The only publicly available figures about the fund are contained within the hundreds of press releases Canadian Heritage issues each year. The Canadian Press found announcements for 130 projects since Jan. 15, the deadline to apply for money from this year’s funding pool.
In all, The Canadian Press identified funding announcements totalling $430,269 that 20 Conservative MPs have made over the past six months. That suggests $6.3 million, almost 94 per cent of the $6.7 million fund, has been quietly doled out without the fanfare of a government announcement.
Most of the funding that has been disclosed appears to have gone to ridings where the Conservatives appear to have a chance at winning or holding on to a seat in the fall election, scheduled for Oct. 19.
Of the 30 ridings where municipalities are known to have received funding, 27 have a good chance of going or staying Conservative, based on an Elections Canada report that predicts results based on how the votes played out in 2011.