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The Canadian Region of SFWA
Copyright © 1992-1995 by
Robert J. Sawyer
All Rights Reserved
What follows is a collection of articles about the founding
and early history of the Canadian Region of the Science Fiction
and Fantasy Writers of America. Robert J.
Sawyer spearheaded the creation of this, the first new
region in SFWA's history, and he served as the first ever
Canadian Regional Director from 1992 to 1995.
The Original Proposal |
SFWA Unanimously Approves Canadian Region |
A Vote for Canada? |
A Vote for Canada! |
Outgoing Canadian Regional Director's Report
All 11 issues of Alouette: The Newsletter of the Canadian Region of SFWA
The Original Proposal
Robert J. Sawyer sent the following letter to SFWA President
Ben Bova on Monday, August 5, 1991:
Ben Bova, President
Science Fiction Writers of America
Dear Ben:
At the SFWA business meeting held during the 1991 Nebula
Weekend, Robin Bailey, South-Central Regional Director, pointed
out that he was ill-equipped to handle the concerns of Canadian
members. He proposed the establishment of a Canadian Region, and
his proposal was seconded by Nina Kiriki Hoffman.
Robin approached me unofficially immediately following that
meeting and asked if I'd be interested in serving as Canadian
Regional Director, should such a region be established. I said
yes then, and am still willing to do so.
There are several issues SFWA could be exploring that are
primarily of benefit to Canadian writers. Rather than have the
organization's general energies taken up by these, it makes sense
to me that there be a separate Canadian region. Among these
issues:
- Separation of Canadian and American rights.
Considering Canada part of the U.S. domestic market is a holdover
from days long gone when Canada had little publishing of its own.
Many Canadian SF writers are keenly interested in unbundling
these territories, and some, including Guy Gavriel Kay and
Garfield Reeves-Stevens,
are already having success in getting
separate advances for Canadian and American rights from major
publishers. Other writers, including SFWAn
Terence M. Green, are
finding Canada more lucrative than the U.S. as an initial market.
- Government support of the Arts. As recently
reported in Locus, Spider Robinson has just received a
grant from the British Columbia government to support his fiction
writing, and Judith Merril is a multiple
recipient of Canada Council grants. The Ontario Arts Council recently made a grant
to Terence M. Green so that he could expand to novel-length his
short story "Ashland, Kentucky," originally published in
Asimov's. Though the concept is foreign (pun intended) to
most American writers, government grants to authors are
prestigious and reasonably common here. However,
SF tends not to be considered a legitimate form of literature
for the granting process.
- Public Lending Right. As in Britain, Canada
has "Public Lending Right" payments,
compensating authors for
lost royalties on books borrowed from libraries. However, the
method used for calculating who gets paid, and how much,
discriminates against paperback publication, the form in which
most genre fiction appears.
- Writing in French and English. There's a
booming Québécois SF marketplace. Opportunities are increasing
for French writers to be published in English translation, and
vice versa. Indeed, recently, Élisabeth Vonarburg of Chicoutimi
sold two French novels to Bantam Spectra.
- Tax issues. Canadian taxes are different from
and generally more onerous than U.S. taxes. For instance, many
Canadian writers' groups have been lobbying Ottawa for the
removal of the new Goods and Services Tax
from books, but SF writers in this country have lacked a credible
collective voice to join in the protest.
- Bringing more Canadians into SFWA. According
to a database I've complied, there are 105 Canadians eligible for
active or affiliate membership in SFWA. I've been working
informally for years with Peter Pautz, trying to bring more of
these people into the fold. We've had some success, but many
bona fide Canadian SF professionals -- including Judith
Merril, William Gibson, Guy Gavriel Kay, Baen author Shirley
Meier, DAW author Tanya Huff, and Bantam author Michelle Sagara,
just to name a few -- have decided to pass on joining SFWA.
SFWA's strength is directly proportional to the percentage of SF
writers it represents. Bringing in the Canadians -- especially
the many non-member Canadians working for U.S. publishers -- will
increase the association's clout (and, of course, increase our
revenue base, as well).
- Conferences in Canada. Next year's Science
Fiction Research Association annual meeting will be in Montréal,
the Bouchercon mystery convention will be in Toronto, and
Winnipeg is one of two bidders for the 1994 WorldCon. Further,
each year "Canvention," the Canadian National SF Convention,
takes place in a different city. All SFWAns wishing to attend
these conferences would benefit if there was an official Canadian
presence for our organization and a designated domestic liaison.
Ben, I urge you to proceed with Robin Bailey's proposal and
establish a Canadian Region of SFWA. I volunteer to serve as the
first Regional Director.
I have been a SFWA member since 1983; make 100% of my living as a
freelance writer; have corresponded with every Canadian SFWA
member; run Toronto Hydra,
an organization for SF professionals
founded by Judith Merril; write a
column about Canadian SF for
the newsletter of the Friends of the Merril Collection of Science
Fiction, Speculation and Fantasy (formerly the Spaced Out
Library); and am The Canadian Encyclopedia's authority on
SF. The enclosed material gives more background about me.
Thank you for your consideration, Ben. I hope to see you at the
WorldCon in Chicago later this month.
Sincerely,
Robert J. Sawyer
SFWA Unanimously Approves Canadian Region
Region Established Effective Immediately
All Canadian SFWAns Automatically Part of it
First published in the May 1992 issue of Alouette: The
Newsletter of the Canadian Region of SFWA
At the Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America
business meeting held on April 26, 1992, in Atlanta, Georgia, a
formal motion to create a separate Canadian region of SFWA was
carried unanimously. A secondary proposal, that the Canadian
Regional Director should have a full vote on the SFWA Board of
Directors, was also overwhelmingly approved. However, actually
giving the Canadian Director a vote has been deferred to the
business meeting at the WorldCon in September.
In alphabetical order, the Regions of SFWA are now:
- Canada
- Eastern United States
- Overseas
- South/Central United States
- Western United States
The five regional directors, plus the four SFWA officers
(president, vice-president, secretary, and treasurer) comprise
the corporation's Board of Directors.
All Canadian-resident SFWAns are now automatically members
of the Canadian Region. Special thanks go to Robin Bailey,
South/Central Regional Director, for first proposing the Canadian
Region a year ago and for making the motion in Atlanta to create
it. Also a tip of the hat to Eastern Regional Director Ann
Crispin, who seconded the motion in Atlanta.
At the request of Directors Bailey and Crispin, I have
agreed to be a candidate for Canadian Regional Director. SFWA
elections chair T. Jackson King did not seek other candidates for
the Canadian directorships. However, there is a provision for a
write-in candidate on the ballot. You should have received your
ballot by now; please mail it in time to arrive by May 27.
I know almost all Canadian SFWAns are delighted with the
creation of our new region. On Monday, April 13, 1992, SFWA
President Ben Bova asked me to conduct a survey of opinions of
Canadian Active Members who had not yet declared a stance on the
issue of a Canadian Region.
In calling coast-to-coast, it was great getting to talk to
so many of you (although I wish Ben had volunteered to have SFWA
cover the expenses for the survey!). The responses below were
gathered from letters to Forum or myself, declarations at
the December 1991 Ontario SFWA or April 1992
Ontario Hydra meetings,
or from phone calls made by me on April 13 and 14, 1992:
IN FAVOR OF A CANADIAN REGION (26):
- Colleen Anderson (Vancouver, B.C.)
- Lynne Armstrong-Jones (London, Ontario)
- Mary E. Choo (Richmond, B.C.)
- J. Brian Clarke (Calgary, Alberta)
- Don H. De Brandt (Vancouver, B.C.)
- Barbara Delaplace (Vancouver, B.C.)
- Charles de Lint (Ottawa, Ontario)
- James Alan Gardner (Waterloo, Ontario)
- Phyllis Gotlieb (Toronto, Ontario)
- Terence M. Green (Toronto, Ontario)
- Sansoucy Kathenor (Greely, Ontario)
- Eileen Kernaghan (Burnaby, B.C.)
- Donald Kingsbury (Montreal, Quebec)
- Shirley Meier (Huntsville, Ontario)
- John Park (Ottawa, Ontario)
- Teresa Plowright (Bowen Island, B.C.)
- Spider Robinson (Vancouver, B.C.)
- Robin Rowland (Toronto, Ontario)
- Michelle Sagara (Toronto, Ontario)
- Robert J. Sawyer (North York, Ontario)
- Kathryn A. Sinclair (Edmonton, Alberta)
- S.M. Stirling (Toronto, Ontario)
- Edo van Belkom (Brampton, Ontario)
- Karen Wehrstein (Huntsville, Ontario)
- Andrew Weiner (Toronto, Ontario)
- Robert Charles Wilson (Nanaimo, B.C.)
AGAINST (2):
- Dave Duncan (Calgary, Alberta)
- Leslie Gadallah (Winterburn, Alberta)
I'm delighted that the proposal had such overwhelming
backing from all regions of Canada. And now, to work!
A Vote for Canada?
The following was published in the June 1992 issue of
Forum, the
private newsletter of the Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of
America
The April 1992 SFWA business meeting in Atlanta
overwhelmingly approved as separate items both the creation of a
Canadian Region and the empowering of the Canadian Regional
Director with a full vote on SFWA's Board of Directors.
A Canadian Region has indeed now been created, and I'm
delighted. However, despite the strong support for it in
Atlanta, President Bova has deferred until the SFWA September
meeting in Orlando the empowering of the Canadian Regional
Director with a vote (although the Canadian Director nonetheless
is to be fully involved in Board deliberations as soon as he or
she is elected).
Presumably this decision arises from the concern, first
voiced by Jerry Pournelle at the SFWA business meeting last year
in Chicago, that the Canadian Region, smallest in population of
all SFWA regions, should possibly not have a voice equal to that
of the Western Region, which is the largest. But comparing those
two regions is silly. The appropriate comparison is not between
smallest and largest, but between smallest and next-smallest.
The next-smallest region is the Overseas, which consists of 57
members (of which 44 are active). The Canadian Region, which
suffered three resignations last year over the membership-reform
debate, currently stands at 35 members (of which 28 are active).
If 57 members is big enough to warrant a vote on the Board
of Directors but 35 is not, what, one must ask, is the magic
cut-off number? And once that number is set, is SFWA prepared to
remove the Overseas Regional Director's vote should his
constituency fall below it? That region, too, was hit by
resignations over the reform debate, including Harry Harrison's.
Meanwhile, despite the recent resignations, the Canadian Region
is still the fastest-growing one in SFWA, and is bigger now than
the Overseas Region was when it got the vote. Note, too, that
the largest SFWA regions in geographic area are the Overseas and
the Canadian. The three American regions are all tiny in
comparison.
But the key point being missed in this discussion is that it's
not just regional directors who have votes. SFWA officers
are voting members of the Board, as well. Prior to the creation
of the Canadian Region, there were eight members of the SFWA
Board of Directors, each of which had one vote: President,
Vice-President, Secretary, Treasurer, and the Western,
South/Central, Eastern, and Overseas Regional Directors.
In all of SFWA's history, seven of those eight seats have
always been occupied by Americans, making the ratio of American
to non-American votes on the Board 7 to 1. The addition of a
voting Canadian Director would make that 7 to 2 hardly enough
power for the damn foreigners to overthrow the government.
If one wants to question the weighting of votes on the SFWA
Board, perhaps one could begin by asking why, for instance, the
secretary has a full vote. Yes, in other organizations, the
secretary is responsible for recruitment and keeping the
membership rolls but not in SFWA, where those jobs are taken
care of by our one employee, Peter Pautz. No, our elected
secretary is just one of many volunteers doing work for the
organization. His or her job amounts to little more than
printing out in booklet form an already-computerized database and
recording minutes at those meetings he or she happens to attend.
Surely any Regional Director, by virtue of being responsible to a
specific constituency (regardless of its size), is at least as
deserving of a vote.
More: Regional Directors have a history of long-term
service on the Board, while officers do not. Pierre Barbet, for
instance, has been Overseas Regional Director for as long as I
can remember. Surely SFWA benefits from having voting Directors
who can bring continuity to the organization's policies.
I'm sure it was inadvertent, but by denying even until
September a vote for the Canadian Regional Director, Ben has made
second-class members out of the Canadians, for we are now the
only ones in all of SFWA to not be represented on the Board by a
voting Director. Robin Bailey's original motion to establish a
Canadian Region was designed to recognize the significance of the
Canadian members of SFWA. By creating a Canadian Region with no
vote on the Board of Directors, exactly the opposite has
occurred: we Canadians have been stripped of any power in
running the organization. I protest this in the strongest
possible terms, and trust this injustice will be rectified in
Orlando.
A Vote for Canada!
First published in the March 1993 issue of Alouette: The
Newsletter of the Canadian Region of SFWA
Twenty-three months after a Canadian Region of SFWA was
first proposed, that region is now fully equal in standing with
the other four SFWA regions. By a ballot that went to all active
members, SFWA has overwhelmingly approved a full vote on the
corporation's Board of Directors for the Canadian Regional
Director: 475 ballots were cast in favor of giving the Canadian
Director a vote, while only 40 opposed the idea. That's 12-to-1
in favor, and not only represents a majority of those who
returned ballots but also an absolute majority of all
Active members. Rarely in the corporation's history has any
motion passed so overwhelmingly; even the vote to accept fantasy
writing as a valid membership credential passed by a narrower
margin. Robert J. Sawyer began a three-year term as Canadian
Regional Director on July 1, 1992.
Outgoing Canadian Regional Director's Report
by Robert J. Sawyer
Published in the August 1995 issue of Forum, the private
newsletter of the Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America.
At the end of my term of office, I wish to congratulate
Edo van Belkom on becoming the
second-ever Canadian Regional Director of SFWA. Edo ran for the
job at my request and with my full support, and I know he will be
terrific at it.
Since SFWA is famous for its lack of institutional memory, I
thought I'd begin this final report with a quick history of the
creation of the Canadian Region, including citations of where the
relevant documentation can be found.
The idea of a Canadian Region was first proposed by Robin W.
Bailey, who, then and now, was South/Central Regional Director of
SFWA. He made his proposal on Saturday, April 27, 1991, at
SFWA's Annual General Meeting held as part of that year's Nebula
weekend in New York City. Nina Kiriki Hoffman seconded the
proposal (minutes, Forum 121, June 1991, page 4). Robin
suggested that I spearhead the creation of the new region, and I
agreed.
I spent the next year consulting with Canadian SFWAns about
what they wanted. In April 1992, at the request of
then-president Ben Bova, I conducted a survey of all Canadian
Active members. Twenty-six were in favor of the creation of a
Canadian Region; two opposed the idea (minutes, Forum 126,
June 1992, page 4).
At the 1992 SFWA Annual General Meeting, held April 25 in
Atlanta, Georgia, South/West Regional Director Robin W. Bailey
moved for the formal creation of the Canadian Region; Eastern
Regional Director Ann C. Cripsin seconded the motion. The motion
passed unanimously, and President Ben Bova declared the region
officially created (minutes, Forum 126, June 1992, page
5).
During the 1992 SFWA elections, I was elected first Director
of the Canadian Region, and began a three-year term of office on
July 1, 1992. However, actually giving the Canadian Regional
Director a vote on SFWA's Board of Directors (something all other
Regional Directors had) required a bylaw change.
In March 1993, a by-mail referendum of the full SFWA
membership was conducted by then-secretary Dafydd ab Hugh. Four
hundred and seventy-five members voted in favor of giving the
Canadian Regional Director a vote; only 40 voted against. Not
only was that 12-to-1 in favor by those who returned ballots, but
the 475 yes votes represented an absolute majority of all active
SFWA members (Forum 132, August 1993, page 14). The
bylaws were changed, and, at last, the founding of the Canadian
Region was complete.
All well and good. But what else has been accomplished
during this time? Well, I edited, photocopied, and mailed (at my
own expense, totaling over US$400) ten issues of Alouette,
a newsletter for members of the Canadian Region. Included were
market reports, articles on the business and craft of writing,
reports on lobbying issues, and member profiles, interviews, and
newsnotes totaling 125,000 words. A
complete archival set will be donated to The Merril Collection of
Science Fiction, Speculation, and Fantasy, which is the special
science-fiction collection of the Toronto Public Library Board.
I also negotiated 20% discounts for Active Canadian SFWA
members at both Canada's oldest science-fiction specialty store (Bakka) and
its largest one (Sci-Fi World). I arranged for a blanket recall
of an offensive anthology contract from a Canadian publisher,
affecting 22 writers (the publisher issued a revised contract),
and I provided consulting services on contracts and standard
business practices to River Bend Press, a new Canadian SF book
publisher in Calgary. In addition, I got a couple of Canadian
conventions to offer free memberships to the spouses of SFWA
members who were appearing on programming, got one convention to
cough up a belated Guest-of-Honor expense reimbursement, and
another to fire its GoH liaison after an embarrassing screw-up
involving an American SFWAn. I also provided liaison services
with Conadian, the Winnipeg Worldcon, until Joel Rosenberg took
over as SFWA's official liaison (and I provided additional
services during the con itself, as Joel did not attend it).
I wrote a successful dunning notice for a member who had
been stiffed on a speaker's fee; wrote letters of recommendation
for members seeking residencies or applying for grants; helped
members deal with registration for Canada's new Goods and
Services Tax; prepared five editions of the brochure
"Award Winning Canadian Science Fiction and Fantasy,"
of which thousands of copies were distributed by Bakka;
wrote dozens of letters lobbying various government departments
for better treatment of writers and booksellers in Canada;
interceded in several SFWA membership-qualification and
membership-categorization problems; and brought several new
members into the association.
Of benefit to all SFWAns is the Canadian Region's continued
lobbying over the unreasonably low royalty rates paid by American
publishers on books sold in Canada (there's no reason why the
royalty rate should be any lower than the U.S. rate). I spoke
frequently on this topic with SFWA's agent Richard Curtis, and
our lobbying resulted in a front-page story called "The Great
Canadian Royalty Rip-off" by agent Donald Maass in the newsletter
of the Association of Authors Representatives (Spring 1994).
Some Canadian members are now achieving better Canadian royalty
rates, and I urge all SFWAns everywhere to push for them in their
future contract negotiations.
Beyond Canada's borders, I proposed what became SFWA's
random audit program (which is largely modeled on the program of
The Writers' Union of Canada) (letters, Forum 123, October
1991 [during the Bova administration] and Forum 127,
August 1992 [at the beginning of the Haldeman administration]),
and consulted with then-treasurer Michael Capobianco on the
mechanics of such a program.
While on the Board of Directors, I proposed and was
delighted to see pass legislation that put an end to the practice
of selling lifetime associate (that is, beginner) SFWA
memberships and that eliminated the dues disparity between
associate and active members, which, after Forum began
going to both classes, amounted to nothing more than charging a
fee for the right to actually vote (President's Message, Forum
133, October 1993, page 1).
I also was the first director (but by no means the last)
during the Haldeman administration to raise substantial concerns
about the performance of our incumbent Executive Secretary, and,
with Chuq von Rospach, proposed publicly what has become the
de facto outline for the proposed new office of SFWA
Executive Director, now being reviewed by a special committee
(letter, Forum 134, December 1993, page 6). (And, to
answer Jerry Pournelle's question in Forum 140, I voted
against the ratification of the incumbent Executive Secretary's
contract.)
The one achievement of mine that I hope does not get lost in
the shuffle is the SFWA Senior Membership Benefit, which I
proposed in Forum: "After thirty years of continuous
membership in the association, at least 25 of which have been as
an active member, every SFWAn automatically becomes entitled to
free associate membership for the remainder of his or her life."
(Forum 132, August 1993, page 16). This motion was
presented in my absence by then-president Joe Haldeman at the
SFWA business meeting in San Francisco, September 4, 1993, and
was formally moved by Jerry Pournelle (with the amendment that
the free membership be at the active level), seconded by Jonathan
Post, and passed overwhelmingly (minutes, Forum 133,
October 1993, page 7; also, "President's Message," same issue,
page 1). The Board of Directors subsequently enacted this as a
working procedure. Since 1995 marks the beginning of our
association's thirtieth year of existence, we now have our first
group of senior members entitled to take advantage of this
benefit.
It's been a long four years and two months since I became
involved in the politics of SFWA . . . but, looking back, I'm
glad I did. The Canadian Region is now firmly and permanently
established, and, as I hope the above illustrates, its existence
has been and I'm sure will continue to be of real benefit
not just to SFWA members living in Canada, but to the
organization as a whole.
Alouette: The Newsletter of the Canadian Region of SFWA
Between 1992 and 1997, Robert J. Sawyer edited and published at his own expense
eleven issues of Alouette, a newsletter for members of the
Canadian Region of SFWA. Named for Canada's first satellite, Alouette
was nominated for the Canadian Science Fiction and Fantasy Association's
Aurora Award for Best Fanzine of 1993.
Alouette contained interviews with and articles by many Canadian
SF&F writers, short stories by some of Canada's best writers, and
publishing newsnotes, career tips, and more, providing a valuable historical snapshot
of the most significant decade in the rise of Canadian science fiction and fantasy.
All issues of Alouette in one PDF file
More Good Reading
More about Canadian Science Fiction
Rob Sawyer's SFWA presidential platform
"The Sawyer Referendum" a new SFWA for the new millennium
My Very Occasional Newsletter
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