Sudbury·Audio

Sudbury downtown indie cinema gets $55K from city — if feds, province buy in too

The City of Greater Sudbury has committed $55,000 to help the city's indie cinema project get off the ground — but the offer is only good if the provincial and federal governments agree to come on board.

Project manager Beth Mairs says the project needs about $500,000 to open the doors

Sudbury city council has made the old St-Louis-de-Gonzague school a registered heritage building, meaning any major changes need to get the OK of council. (Megan Thomas/CBC)

The City of Greater Sudbury has committed $55,000 to help Sudbury's indie cinema project get off the ground — but the offer is only good if the provincial and federal governments agree to come on board. 

This, according to indie cinema project manager Beth Mairs. 
Beth Mairs is the project manager of the Sudbury Downtown Indie Cinema Co-op. (Hugo Duchaine/Radio-Canada)

"We're in a bit of a holding pattern," she acknowledged. "We need all three levels in terms of the city, the province and the federal government in order to ... take a gym, what is now a defunct school gym, and transform that into a state-of-the-art cinema." 

To open, Mairs said her group needs about $500,000 to cover site renovations plus a digital projector and sound system. 

Best case scenario, Mairs said about $380,000 will come from government investment, and the other $120,000 will come from the public. 

For its part, Mairs said the City of Greater Sudbury has committed to $55,000 for cinema seating — provided that the provincial and federal governments also chip in. 

"We know now that we're on the agenda for Northern Ontario Heritage Fund, sometime early-October," said Mairs. 

"[And] with FedNOR ... unfortunately FedNOR's hands are tied right now because we're in a federal election."

Mairs said despite the uncertainty, the Sudbury Downtown Independent Cinema Co-operative will be showing films at other venues in the city starting Halloween weekend. 

Listen to the complete interview with Beth Mairs here