Why is the U.S. punishing foreign musicians with higher visa fees? This is going to hurt – National | 24CA News

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Published 16.04.2023
Why is the U.S. punishing foreign musicians with higher visa fees? This is going to hurt – National | 24CA News

Back within the fall of 2020, when COVID-19 shut down the stay music business, the United States Department of Homeland Security quietly proposed will increase in the price of visas mandatory for overseas musicians who need to tour America.

The new asking worth of a “P-3″ visa, the one needed by musicians who want to play live in America, would rise to US$690 from US$460, a jump of 67 per cent. Another document, the four flavours of the “O” visa (required by folks with “extraordinary ability or achievement” or accompanying folks/family of such folks) additionally had a proposed improve.

These proposals landed at a time when nobody was on the street, so the timing means that the U.S. wished the brand new charges to slide underneath the radar. Those who seen expressed concern in regards to the elevated monetary burden on any non-American act. There was some preliminary chatter in regards to the scenario, however with months of COVID lockdowns forward, nobody paid an excessive amount of consideration and the will increase had been by no means put into place.

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But then earlier this 12 months, the U.S. Citizen and Immigration Services (USIC) tried once more. This time, the all-important “P” visa would leap to US$1,615 from US$460. That’s a bump of 250 per cent. Let’s break this down:

  • US$1,615 for a solo artist or a band (P visa)
  • US$1,615 for the street crew (P by way of)
  • US$190 (at minimal) per relative/accompanying particular person)

Assuming a four-piece band, their street crew, a supervisor, and one boyfriend/girlfriend/partner, that’s US$3,420 (practically $4,600 Canadian) earlier than you even get to the border — really, it’s a must to apply at the least three months earlier than you permit dwelling. Sure, you’ll be able to have your petition expedited and pushed by inside 5 days or so, however that’s one other US$1,440 (or roughly C$1,935). That means a grand whole of C$6,535 earlier than the band sees a dime from the tour. This, after all, is along with transportation, gasoline, salaries, resort rooms, and meals.

Those prices have additionally gone up, after all. With a lot touring exercise occurring the price of renting gear, vans, and buses has skyrocketed. And as a result of so many roadies left the business throughout COVID-19, their sort of labour and experience is in brief provide and prices extra.

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Homeland Security/USIC say that the will increase in visa charges are mandatory as a result of they haven’t elevated since 2016 when P visas went as much as the present US$460 from round US$275, a bump of 42 per cent. That raised some pink flags on the time, however for probably the most half, this grew to become a traditional price of doing business.

So why only a hike now? The income from new ultra-high charges will probably be utilized (at the least partly) to hiring extra folks to take care of the post-COVID backlog of requests for visas. Some of the cash may even assist pay for some U.S. asylum applications. In different phrases, the U.S. authorities is making overseas acts pay for its lack of ability to get its bureaucratic act collectively with regards to its borders.

If you’re an act of a sure dimension, any new price is simply one other annoying line merchandise within the touring finances spreadsheet. But in case you’re an rising artist, an artist from a marginalized group, or perhaps a stable medium-sized group, this sort of cash doom any chance of touring the most important music market on the planet.

This is a catastrophe as a result of staying dwelling and touring by simply Canada may be very costly. I’ve heard from some acts who’ve returned from a Canadian tour in debt. And if it turns into too costly to tour the U.S. — nicely, you see the issue. More Canadian artists wanting towards Europe as an alternative, however that options its personal monetary hassles.

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Let’s say you’re in a stable middle-class band that usually geese south to play a few border cities on brief regional excursions. Cities like Buffalo and Detroit get loads of these exhibits. But in case you’re within the gap by $4,600 to start with, it’s simply not attainable. And think about the panic of Mexican bands who need to head north for a tour.

Fine. So let’s retaliate by mountain climbing our visa charges for American bands who need to play exhibits up right here. The loopy factor is that there’s nothing reciprocal about this. Depending on what number of dates an American artist needs to play in Canada, the visa prices could also be — anticipate it — zero.

And simply in case you suppose that solely Canadian musicians are being requested to pay for U.S. bureaucratic bungling, these proposed new charges will have an effect on all touring acts from wherever on the planet. There’s a U.Ok. marketing campaign launched by the Featured Artists Coalition known as Let the Music Move. Its aim is to ask folks “to call on the U.K. government to do more to support the future of the music industry, and to raise awareness of proposals in the U.S. to significantly increase the costs for performers seeking visas to perform in the country.”

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There have additionally been calls by the Music Managers Forum for one thing to be carried out. It says that 84 per cent of the acts underneath the care of its member managers need to tour the U.S. however 70 per cent of them say they’ll abandon these plans if the charges kick in.

(Britain must be cautious about pointing fingers. Since Brexit, it’s been very troublesome for British bands to tour the continent and vice-versa. The latest plight of a German band known as Trigger Happy is a living proof; they’d a U.Ok. tour scuppered due to border paperwork. Meanwhile, it’s estimated that the post-Brexit price of a U.Ok. band to tour the continent has elevated by at the least 40 per cent.)

Even greater acts are taking discover of the prices and hassles. Roger Daltrey of The Who not too long ago advised USA Today that it’s uncertain the band will ever tour America once more. “[T]ouring has become very difficult since COVID. We cannot get insured and most of the big bands doing arena shows, by the time they do their first show and rehearsals and get the staging and crew together, all the buses and hotels, you’re upwards $600,000 to a million in the hole. To earn that back, if you’re doing a 12-show run, you don’t start to earn it back until the seventh or eighth show. That’s just how the business works.”

The U.S. ought to tread rigorously with this money seize. Andrew Cash, the president and CEO of the Canadian Independent Music Association penned an op-ed for The Globe and Mail:

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In the U.S., every $1 spent on a concert ticket has a ripple effect of $3.30 in the local economy, according to a study by Oxford Economics Group,” Cash wrote.

“That multiplier includes concertgoer spending on things such as transportation, band merch, meals and drinks, lodging, retail, and recreation. And by some estimates, musicians touring the U.S. spend an average of US$3,000 a week on food, gas and lodging. In total, the Canadian Independent Music Association estimates that Canadian touring contributes more than $2 billion annually to the U.S. economy. Now include artists from the U.K., Europe and Asia to this list — not to mention Mexico and South America — and you’d think even the biggest music market in the world would want a piece of this action.”

It’s madness, actually. How is that this a win for anybody aside from the USIC and Homeland Security?

Entire careers are using on the result. Ottawa must do one thing.

Alan Cross is a broadcaster with Q107 and 102.1 the Edge and a commentator for Global News.

Subscribe to Alan’s Ongoing History of New Music Podcast now on Apple Podcast or Google Play