The Scotsman

Fringe organisers hit out after bid for funding is rejected

◆ The Fringe Society says festival is being left to ‘fall between the cracks’ after failing to secure Creative Scotland support

- Brian Ferguson Arts & Culture Correspond­ent

Organisers of the Edinburgh Festival Fringe have demanded “urgent clarity” on how £100 million in promised new Scottish Government arts funding is to be allocated after losing out in a bid for crucial long-term support.

The Fringe Society has hit out after being rejected months after First Minister Humza Yousaf pledged to “more than double” arts spending in Scotland. The charity, which has overseen the event since 1958, was one of 66 out of 351 eligible applicants to fail to make the second round of an “extremely competitiv­e” bidding process for Creative Scotland funding.

The Government’s arts agency is facing a potential funding gap of nearly £50m for its new three-year programme, which is due to run from 2025-28.

The Government said it expected the £87.4 mask from the cultural sector to “reduce” by the time the applicatio­n processwas completed by creative Scotland. Its arts agency has suggested final decisions will be taken based on indicative future budgets from the Government, but is still in the dark over how much will be available for the three-year programme as a result of the First Minister’s promise of an add it i on al£100m a year for culture by 2028.

Creative Scotland is due to make final decisions in october on the remaining 285 applicatio­ns, which are worth £87.4m.

Fringe Society chief executive Shona Mccarthy said the festival was being left to “fall between the cracks” of support for the the arts in Scotland. The festival, which featured around 3,550 shows and sold more than 2.4 million tickets last year, has been valued at more than £200m to the city’s economy.

Around £1 min Government investment funds work across the festival. however, the fringe Society has not had core funding from Creative Scotland since it lost its long-term support in 2018.

Creative scotland has pointed out that it has committed more than £2.85m to the Fringe over the past five years through alternativ­e funding programmes.

Ms Mccarthy said: “The Fringe Society has sought to be reinstated as a regularly funded organisati­on since before the pandemic. We are naturally disappoint­ed that we continue to fall between the cracks for funding support from our national cultural agencies.

“The cultural sector is facing significan­t funding challenges and we need urgent clarity on how the scottish government' s recently announced £100m will be distribute­d. As we reflect on Creative Scotland's decision, our role in advocating for the Fringe will continue, by exploring every avenue possible to support artists, venues and those working across the festival ecology.”

Lori Anderson, director of Scottish arts industry network Culture Counts, said: “The news that 66 applicatio­ns to Creative Scotland’s multi-year funding programme 2025 have been unsuccessf­ul at stage one will cause concern for those involved. We call upon Creative Scotland to work with those organisati­ons to support them to identify other sources of funding. For those who will now apply to the second stage, there remains a big hill to climb.

“Whilst the programme has

There is still time for the Government to boost the budget available to Creative Scotland Lori Anderson

lost 20 per cent of applicatio­ns, the total ask in terms of demand for the programme budget has reduced by only 9 percent, leavingit massively over subscribed and significan­tly under funded. Transparen­cy on how second stage decisions will be made is now vital.

“There is still time for the Scottish Government to act and boost the budget available to Creative Scotland. We welcomedth­e first minister’ s commitment in October to provide an additional £100m to culture by 2028/29, and a further £25m in 2025/26. However, the sector needs clarity on what funding will be available to support the programme. We call upon the Scottish Government to make as much of this funding availablen­ow, when it is most ur gently needed .”

Jack Gamble, director of the Uk-wide Campaign for the Arts, said: “Although the Scottish Government has made a welcome commitment to increase annual investment in culture by £100 mover the next five years, Creative Scotland’s current budget is in fact 13 per cent smaller in real terms than the last time they confirmed regular funding for organisati­ons in 2018.”

Creative Scotland had a 10 per cent budget cut re-imposed by the government in the autumn, just weeks before the deadline for long-term funding applicatio­ns.

Last month the arts body warned the Scottish Parliament that if it was still facing a “flat line” funding outlook when final decisions had to be made in October, they could end up leading to widespread “collapse” across the industry.

Creative Scotland chief executive Iain Munro said: “The range and breadth of applicatio­ns received are testament to the ambition and potential that exists across scotland’ s culture and creative sector. This remains a live and extremely competitiv­e process, and not every stage two applicatio­n is likely to be successful.”

A Government spokesman said: “We provide significan­t funding to Creative Scotland and will continue to work with the sector to support its long term recovery from the impacts of the pandemic.

“We expect the £87.4 m indicative request figure for Creative Scotland’s multi-year funding programme to reduce once it completes the stage two applicatio­n process.

“The Fringe Society is not a current regularly-funded organisati­on, but will continue to be eligible to apply to creative Scotland for funding through other sources.”

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 ?? ?? Main picture: Edinburgh’s Royal Mile during the Fringe. The festival featured around 3,550 shows last year and has been valued at more than £200m to the city’s economy. Top, Creative Scotland chief executive Iain Munro said the bidding process for funding was ‘extremely competitiv­e’
Main picture: Edinburgh’s Royal Mile during the Fringe. The festival featured around 3,550 shows last year and has been valued at more than £200m to the city’s economy. Top, Creative Scotland chief executive Iain Munro said the bidding process for funding was ‘extremely competitiv­e’
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