Recipient Survey (Wave Two) – Recovery Fund for Arts, Culture, Heritage and Sport Sectors and Reopening Fund

This survey was conducted by Canadian Heritage, in collaboration with the Canada Council for the Arts, Telefilm Canada, the Canada Media Fund, Canadian Association of Broadcasters and the Community Radio Fund of Canada to help determine whether the Recovery Fund for Arts, Culture, Heritage and Sport Sectors and the Reopening Fund achieved their main objectives in:

The design of the Recovery and Reopening Funds (RRF) recipient survey was based on the Emergency Support Fund (ESF) recipient survey conducted between September 2020 and April 2021. The RRF recipient survey was administered in two waves:

The second wave of the survey was sent to 3,008 RRF recipients between August 2023 and September 2023, and used mixed methods to gather quantitative and qualitative information. The key findings from the survey are presented below.

On this page

With a 42% response rate, the survey had 1,266 responses from recipients across multiple sectors

Description of the infographic: RRF Survey Responses

A pie chart containing the sentence “Wave two of the R&R recipient survey was completed by 1,266 recipient organizations” surrounded by four snapshots of the four sectors the funding supported, with a breakdown of involved programs in each sector and the total number of responses from that sector.

Sector and respondents Programs included
Heritage and Communities – 333 respondents
  • Development of Official Language Communities Program
  • Building Communities through Arts and Heritage
  • Celebration and Commemoration Program
Sport – 37 respondents
  • Sport Support Program
  • Sport Hosting Program
Arts – 633 respondents
  • Canada Arts Training Fund
  • Canada Arts Presentation Fund
  • Canada Cultural Investment Fund
  • Canada Cultural Spaces Fund
  • Canada Council for the Arts
    • Arts Across Canada
    • Creating, Knowing and Sharing
    • Engage and Sustain
    • Explore and Create
    • Supporting Artistic Practice
  • Harbourfront Centre Funding Program
Cultural Industries and Trade – 263 respondents
  • Canada Book Fund
  • Creative Export Canada
  • Canada Media Fund
    • Third-Language Community Productions
  • Canada Music Fund
  • Telefilm Canada
    • Promotion Program
    • Theatrical Exhibition Program

Impacts of the RRF on business continuity, jobs and organizations

Responses show that the RRF met their intended objectives of supporting business continuity and maintaining jobs

Description of the infographic: Ways in which the Fund helped respondents
Table showing the following results:
Recovery I To pay for operating costs other than labour costs 54%
To pay the wages of employees in the organization 46%
To pay self-employed workers/freelancers 44%
To adapt business model 37%
To pay for increased travel costs 35%
To implement new required public health safety measures 32%
To complete a planned infrastructure project 17%
other 16%
Partnership initiatives (business improvement, revenue diversification) 10%
Recovery II Create employment opportunities 54%
Adapt/strengthen business model 54%
Implement marketing and/or outreach activities 48%
Advance equity, diversity, accessibility, and inclusion efforts 44%
Undertake strategic planning activities 34%
Cover increased travel costs 22%
Address public health safety measures 19%
Supports exports-related activities (incl. training) 17%
Advance environmental sustainability efforts 12%
other 9%
Reopening Deliver programing in-person 82%
Implement marketing and/or outreach activities 67%
Support operating costs 59%
Advance equity, diversity, accessibility, and inclusion efforts 39%
Create new employment opportunities 30%
Address public health safety measures 26%
other 6%

Reopening Fund helped attract local community members to events

94% of Reopening Fund respondents reported that funding helped them attract local tourists/visitors to a large or moderate extent.

Description of the infographic: Extent to which Reopening Fund helped respondents attract visitors
Bar graph showing the following results:
Visitors Extent Percentage
Community members and/or local tourists/visitors Large extent / Moderate extent 94%
Small extent 5%
Not at all 0%
National tourists/visitors Large extent / Moderate extent 47%
Small extent 40%
Not at all 13%
International tourists/visitors Large extent / Moderate extent 21%
Small extent 13%
Not at all 36%

How organizations recovered from pandemic’s impacts - Organizational health

Most organizations remain in operations and have largely recovered from pandemic’s impacts…

Description of the infographic: Extent to which respondents have recovered from the pandemic’s impacts
Pie chart showing the following results:
Large or moderate extent 83%
Small extent 13%
Not at all 4%

Definitions:

  • Large or moderate extent: Employment and/or revenue have improved from their lowest point in 2020 to within 50% or greater of pre-pandemic levels.
  • Small extent: Employment and/or revenue have improved from their lowest point in 2020 but are less than 50% of their pre-pandemic levels.
  • Not at all: Employment and/or revenue have not improved from their lowest point in 2020 or have continued to decline.

…but new challenges are emerging

Qualitative responses from the survey highlight that supply chain issues, record levels of inflation, labour shortages, and anxiety with respect to large or in-person activities have been and will likely continue to challenge the sector's post-pandemic recovery. Recipients also noted that more federal funding is needed. In addition, respondents’ organizations are facing workforce-related challenges as a result of the pandemic. 54% of respondents indicated that 50% of their workforce or more has been impacted by burnout.

Description of the infographic: Extent to which respondents faced the following workforce challenges as a result of the pandemic
Bar graph showing the following results:
Workforce challenges Extent Percentage
Employee retention 75% or more of workforce impacted 20%
50% to 74% of workforce impacted 21%
25% to 49% of workforce impacted 19%
Less than 25% of workforce impacted 21%
None of workforce impacted 20%
Burnout 75% or more of workforce impacted 33%
50% to 74% of workforce impacted 22%
25% to 49% of workforce impacted 16%
Less than 25% of workforce impacted 17%
None of workforce impacted 12%
Mental Health 75% or more of workforce impacted 30%
50% to 74% of workforce impacted 23%
25% to 49% of workforce impacted 17%
Less than 25% of workforce impacted 18%
None of workforce impacted 12%

How organizations adapted, and complementary supports

Respondents used complementary support measures to weather the effects of the pandemic

71% of respondents indicated that they had received other emergency or recovery funding to support their operations since the onset of the pandemic, aside from the Recovery and Reopening Funds. Among those respondents who received additional funding, most of this support came from either the Federal Government (e.g., Canada Emergency Wage Subsidy, Canada Emergency Business Account) or provincial and territorial governments.

Description of the infographic: Source of Other Emergency or Recovery Funding
Table showing the following results:
Provincial/Territorial government 74%
Federal government 59%
Municipal government 22%
Other 10%
Not-for-profit 6%
Business 4%
Indigenous government/ governing… 1%

Recipient satisfaction with the RRF delivery process

Overall, respondents demonstrated strong levels of satisfaction with the funding process.

Strongest levels of satisfaction were with the overall attestation/application submission process (93%) and the interaction with the program officer assigned to their organization (85%).

Description of the infographic: Satisfaction with the process of receiving the Fund

List showing the following results:

Satisfaction with…

  • The attestation/application submission process - 93%
  • The interaction with the program officer assigned to your organization - 85%
  • The accessibility of the application and reporting process - 84%
  • The portal used to submit the application - 82%
  • The information received throughout the process - 82%
  • The timeliness at which funds were received following the submission of the attestation/application - 80%
  • The amount your organization received - 79%

Qualitative data shows that organizations had a positive experience accessing the RRF

Almost all respondents noted that the process was fast, efficient, easy and smooth; this was particularly valued at a time when everything else was entirely unsettled by the pandemic. Program officers were generally considered to have been useful, helpful and available.

When respondents expressed concerns or areas for future improvement, feedback was frequently related to the need for more funding and improved eligibility for government programming.

Impacts of the RRF on the sector overall

The RRF supported every part of the culture value chain

In general, responses show that the RRF provided good coverage of the entire range of the culture value chain.

Description of the infographic: The RRF supported every part of the culture value chain
A table representing the culture value chain with percentage of responses.
Culture value chain section Percentage of respondents
Creation 56%
Production 45%
Dissemination 56%
Exhibition/Reception/Transmission (includes training) 62%
Consumption/Participation 52%

Definitions:

  • Creation: the originating and authoring of ideas and content (e.g. writers) and the making of one-off production (e.g. fine arts).
  • Production: the reproducible cultural forms (e.g. TV programs), as well as the specialist tools, infrastructure and processes used in their realization (e.g. the production of musical instruments, the printing of newspapers).
  • Dissemination: the bringing of cultural products to consumers and exhibitors (e.g. the wholesale, retail, rental and digital distribution of recorded music and computer games, film distribution).
  • Exhibition/Reception/Transmission (includes training): the place of consumption and the provision of live and/or unmediated cultural experiences to audiences by granting or selling access to consume/ participate in time-based cultural activities (e.g. festival organization and production, opera houses, theatres, museums). Transmission relates to the transfer of knowledge and skills (including training) that may not involve any commercial transaction. It includes the transmitting of intangible cultural heritage from generation to generation.
  • Consumption/Participation: the activities of audiences and participants in consuming cultural products and taking part in cultural activities and experiences (e.g. book reading, dancing, participating in carnivals, listening to radio, visiting galleries).

Impacts of the RRF on diverse communities/groups/Peoples

More than one third of respondents indicated funding had a direct impact on equity-deserving communities

54% of respondents responded that funding had a direct impact on equity-deserving communities.

Description of infographic: Equity-deserving communities impacted by the Fund
Table showing the following results:
Indigenous peoples 28%
Ethno-Cultural communities 28%
Women 27%
LGBTQ2+ communities 26%
Gender diverse communities 25%
Racialized communities 24%
Youth 22%
Those with low income 21%
Immigrants and Refugees 17%
Seniors 16%
Persons with disabilities 14%
Official language minority communities 14%
Rural communities 13%
Remote and Northern communities 6%
Deaf communities 5%
Religious minorities 3%
other 1%

Definitions:

  • Ethno-cultural communities – Communities with a shared sense of group belonging based on common characteristics such as language, geographic origin, nationality, cultural traditions, ancestry and migration history, among others.
  • Gender diverse communities – a widely inclusive category that captures non-binary, gender-fluid and transgender people. Members of this community may face challenges that are distinct from other equity-deserving communities (e.g., women, LGBTQ2+).
  • LGBTQ2+ – Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, Queer, Two-Spirit and other sexual and gender minorities.
  • Official Language Minority Communities – groups of people whose maternal or chosen official language is not the majority language in their province or territory – in other words, Anglophones in Quebec and Francophones outside of Quebec.
  • Racialized communities – groups that have come to be socially constructed as belonging to a particular race, based on perceived differences in physical appearance. Historically referred to as “visible minorities”, the term racialized communities generally encompasses all groups that are non-white in colour or non-European in descent.

Funds impacted equity-deserving communities mainly in the form of employment and enhanced partnerships

Funds impacting equity-deserving communities predominantly went towards hiring or contracting members of equity-deserving communities, either as talent (71%) or staff (55%) as well as enhanced partnerships and collaboration (63%).

Description of infographic: Ways in which equity-deserving communities were impacted by the Fund
Table showing the following results:
Hired or contracted as talent 71%
Enhanced partnerships and collaboration 63%
Hired or contracted as staff 55%
Sustained diversity as part of mandate 52%
Extended reach of activities 51%
Involved as volunteers 48%
Created an inclusive work environment 39%
Undertook promotion activities 38%
Improved accessibility 36%
Implemented education activities 30%
Provided mentorships 29%
Developed protocols and policies to support diverse communities 19%
Passed funding directly to community 15%
Implemented income equity strategies 11%
other 2%

Organizations have strategies in place to support Inclusion, Diversity, Equity, and Accessibility (IDEA), Reconciliation with Indigenous Peoples, and Environmental Sustainability

Most respondents reported undertaking various strategies to support Inclusion, Diversity, Equity, and Accessibility (IDEA), Reconciliation with Indigenous Peoples, and Environmental Sustainability

Future directions

Respondents indicated needing more government funding, broadened eligibility/flexibility, digitization supports

Respondents most frequently cited a need for more funding (85%) and improved eligibility (55%) for government programming. This was followed by opportunities to leverage private sources of funding (24%).

Description of infographic: Organizational needs to become more sustainable, adaptable and resilient through future shocks
Table showing the following results:
Increased or improved access to government funding 85%
Broadened eligibility or flexibility for government programs 55%
Opportunities to leverage private sources of funding 24%
Initiatives to leverage funding from and/or build closer relationships with provincial, territorial, and municipal governments 22%
Improvements in physical infrastructure 21%
Support for increasing digital presence 19%
Promotional support to improve the accessibility and visibility of content 17%
Capacity-building and professional development (e.g., tools, resources, reference material, training) 17%
More opportunities for federal government engagement 8%
Support to advance environmental sustainability initiatives 6%
Legislative, regulatory or policy changes 6%
Other 6%
Funding and support for new health and safety protocols 2%

Conclusion

At the Department of Canadian Heritage, data has been central in informing decision-making throughout the pandemic. The second wave of results from the Recovery Fund and Reopening Fund recipient survey showed notable improvements in the perceived success of and satisfaction with the Fund, and overall recovery of organizations, however, there remains some challenges related to the workforce and funding needs.

This wave concludes the Recovery and Reopening Fund recipient survey. The Department will continue to monitor arts, culture, heritage, and sports industries in a post-pandemic environment and will continue to work with the sectors in addressing ongoing issues.

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2025-06-04