'Incredibly nervous': Sask. festivals consider future amid COVID-19 concerns - Action News
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Saskatchewan

'Incredibly nervous': Sask. festivals consider future amid COVID-19 concerns

The Mosaic Festival in Regina has been postponed, while the Ness Creek Music Festival is still planned to go ahead as scheduled.

The Mosaic Festival in Regina postponed, Ness Creek Music Festival still planned to go ahead

The Ness Creek Music Festival is in its 30th year in 2020. (Nathan Jones/Ness Creek Music Festival/Facebook)

Saskatchewan music festivals are adaptingamid concerns about the coronavirus.

Some, like the Ness Creek Music Festival and Country Thunder, aren't yet looking to postpone. Others, like the Mosaic Festival of Cultures in Regina, have already decided to not go as scheduled.

Nish Prasard, chair of the 2020 Mosaic Festival and vice-president of the Regina Multicultural Council, said no one envisioned something like COVID-19.

"It's a totally different world right now and it has impacted everybody across the world,"Prasard said.

"We were really looking forward to hosting but we have just adjusted given the circumstances where we are in today," he said.

Dancers perform the Giddha dance during Reginas Mosaic festival at the Punjab Pavilion. (Evan Radford)

The festival was supposed to begin on May 30, 2020. Prasard said it is tentatively planned for mid to late-August, but that may change. Prasard said that if itwould need to be pushed back further,it would be cancelled and the council would focus on 2021.

"It's a very disappointing situation to be in but the health and safety of the people comes first," he said. "There's a lot of planning coordination that goes into putting an event of this scale. Sowe'll keep monitoring the situation and we will have to make a call at an appropriate time."

Children sitting in suits and dresses and clapping.
Le Campagnole Italian Dancers at the Mosaic Festival in Regina. (Regina Multicultural Council)

Carlie Letts said Ness Creek Music Festival organizers are working as though the event will happen, but monitoring the situation closely.

Letts is one of three festival managers for the Ness Creek Music Festival. The event is held each year near Big River, Sask., north of Saskatoon.

"I'm from Saskatchewan, we consider ourselves to be tough and able to handle any adversary that comes our way," Letts said. "But obviously we're incredibly nervous."

The Classy Chassys on stage at the Ness Creek Music Festival in 2016. (The Classy Chassys/Facebook)

Letts said they haven't set a date yet for when they will decide if the festival goes ahead or not.

"Really, this is a lot of monitoring the situation and hoping to see some positive results from the initiatives and rules and regulations that the government has passed down over the course of the past week to 10 days," she said.

The 2020 Festival was also supposed to be the 30th anniversary of the event. Letts said this makes the situation even more heartbreaking.

The next board meeting is mid to late-April, Letts said. By then, organizers hope to have a better idea of how everything is going. Letts said they have backup dates later in the summer or early fall, but they are not considering thoseoptions yet.

The festival has created an online open mic page called 'The Beat Goes On(line).' It's a place for artists of years past and this year to share recordings and more.

"We can at least try to keep people feeling a little bit uplifted, positive and connected," she said.

Cathedral Village Arts Festival Street Fair is usually held each year in May. (Bryan Eneas/CBC News)

The Cathedral Village Arts Festival said it isgoing to move to an entirely online format.

"Despite the current situation we are maintaining our commitment to inspiring and bringing joy to our community and the citizens of Regina," the festival said in a release.

The festival organizers said vendors will be included.

Country Thunder is normally held each year in July at Craven, Sask. Some earlier Country Thunder festivals in the U.S. have already been postponed.

"[Things are] hectic for all the wrong reasons right now," Gerry Krochak, the general manager at Country Thunder, said.

Country Thunder hasn't decided to postponeSaskatchewan's festival yet. The next festival for the travelling group is Iowa. Krochak said they are working on that one next.

Country Thunder is held each year in Craven, Sask. (Cory Coleman/CBC)

Country Thunder owns the festival landand Krochak they are hearing artists want to play.

"That's how they get paid. So we're all in the same boat," he said.

With files from Fiona Odlum