The Scotsman

Music venues face ‘absolute cliff edge’ as funding is set to be cut

- By BRIAN FERGUSON Arts Correspond­ent

Scotland is facing the“mass closure” of live music venues within the next few months, industry leaders have told MSPS.

Nick Stewart, head of the Music Venues Alliance in Scotland, today warned many venues are facing an “abso - lute cliff edge” at the end of October, due to the prospect of emergency funding run - ning out and huge uncertaint­y over when and how they will be able to get back up and running properly.

Experts have predicted that more than half the jobs in Scotland’s previously booming music industry are under threat due to the long-lasting impact of the corona virus pandemic.

Giving evidence to Holyrood’s culture committee, Mr Stewart, who is also manager of Sneaky Pete’s in Edinburgh, raised concerns that £2.2 million pledged by the Scottish Government for “grassroots venues” was only intended to support them until the end of October and not been distribute­d yet.

Although indoor music venues have been told they can star t preparing to reopen in the middle of next month, Mr Stewart insisted live gigs would not be financiall­y viable in most small-scale venues due to the need to enforce social distancing restrictio­ns.

He also raised concerns about the prospect ofv enu es never re opening again and being put up for sale if the businesses running them went under.

The live music sector was pledged £2.2m by the Scottish Government on 10 July, but applicatio­ns to a new fund – which is aimed at help venues with a capacity of under 600 stave off the threat of closure - were not opened by its arts agency Creative Scotland until 19 August.

However official guidance states that grants of up to £50,000 are only intended to support businesses until the end of October, when the UK Government’s furlough scheme is due to be wound up.

Creative Scotland has told the Scottish Parliament that of the £97m allocated to Scotland by the UK Government from a £1.57 billion arts rescue package announced in July more than £74 million has still to be allocated.

However Mr Stewart told the committee that his his understand­ing was that this was all accounted for.

He was giving evidence days after First Minister Ni cola Sturgeon was accused of withholdin­g the remaining £74 million from the cultural sector when she insisted that the government’s resources to help arts organisati­ons and companies were “finite.”

She has urged the UK Government to extend the furlough scheme to help support the cultural sector while venues remain closed.

Mr Stewart said :“In terms of how long funding will last for, the£2.2mfundf or grassroots music venues is not designed to get us through till 31 March. It is intended to get venues through till 31 October. Thereafter, there is no further funding in place.

“We are in an environmen­t where we don’t know what is actually happening with that £74 million. We have advice that any further support from the Scottish Government will have to be found elsewhere in its budget.

“The £2.2m figure was decided on because it was the fixed costs for the grassroots music venues to get through three months.

“Once we get to the end of October, we will be at an absolute cliff edge, there is no plan for what happens next and that is when the job retention scheme ends.

“It would be foolhardy for most businesses to try to continue at that point. We urgently need informatio­n on what kind of future funding we can get to keep us going. There must be a plan or we are going to see mass closures.

“It would be great to prioritise getting venues to reopen, but venues all seem to agree that the real priority is to protect public health. We need continued support in some form to allow us to do that.

“Any venues that are permanent closed are very unlikely to be reopened by anybody else.

“While live music is wildly popular, it is very expensive and difficult to run a grassroots music venue.

“Given local licensing conditions and property values, it has been very rare for people to open a grassroots venue. It seems venue unlikely that venues that do close would subsequent­ly reopen. Most likely a canny landlord would decide to turn the building into something else.”

An official report published last year suggested the -then boo ming Scottish music industry was supporting about 4,300 jobs and generated up wards of £430 min economic impact.

There have been prediction­s that three quarters of Scotland’s music venues may not survive the impact of the pandemic if social distancing restrictio­ns remain in place well into 2021.

Mr Stewart added :“Most grass roots music venues physically cannot host sociall y-distanced performanc­es. At Sneaky Pete’s, for example, if you were to try to do a show there, it would have a capacity of 12, instead of 100, including performers and staff.

“If we get to a point where socially-distanced shows are allowed to happen and the furlough scheme has ended that will actually be the crunch point for some venues because they will try to trade and will probably do so unsuccessf­ully. That could be the unravellin­g of them.”

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 ??  ?? PORTRAIT OF BRITAIN 2020 WINNERS: Clockwise from main: Julia Fullerton-batten’s Ann, Lockdown Day 74; Andrew Testa’s portrait of Captain Tom Moore; Kristina Varasinka’s self portrait; Sam Gregg’s entrant The Happy Couple Margate, Kent; Byron Hamzah’s Nurse Rehan Mosafeer; Paul Craig’s Kemeel; Slater King’s On shift at the hospital, during the pandemic
PORTRAIT OF BRITAIN 2020 WINNERS: Clockwise from main: Julia Fullerton-batten’s Ann, Lockdown Day 74; Andrew Testa’s portrait of Captain Tom Moore; Kristina Varasinka’s self portrait; Sam Gregg’s entrant The Happy Couple Margate, Kent; Byron Hamzah’s Nurse Rehan Mosafeer; Paul Craig’s Kemeel; Slater King’s On shift at the hospital, during the pandemic
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