COMMISSION ON THE POWERS AND ELECTORAL
ARRANGEMENTS OF THE NATIONAL ASSEMBLY FOR WALES
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MINUTES OF PROCEEDINGS
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of the
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EVIDENCE OF:
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NATIONAL MUSEUMS AND GALLERIES OF WALES
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held at
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Committee Rooms
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County Hall, Haverfordwest
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on
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11th April 2003
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LORD RICHARD: Good afternoon. Thank you
very much for coming and thank you for bringing it forward,
which is certainly a convenience for some travellers
today. What we have asked people to do is first of all
formally to identify themselves for the purposes of
the transcript and then to talk for five or ten minutes
to open up the subject as you see it, and then the Commission
could pursue the issues that it would like to, if that
is alright.
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MR LOVELUCK: I am Paul Loveluck, the
President of the National Museums and Galleries of Wales
and I have with me Dr Eurwyn Wiliam, who is currently
the acting Director-General of the National Museums
and Galleries of Wales. Let me explain that particular
circumstance. The previous Director left last October,
a new Director has been appointed who takes up post
on Monday, and Dr Wiliam has been acting very well in
that capacity for the last six months.
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Thank you for the opportunity to come
and talk to you. Just a bit of scene-setting background
first of all but not too much of it. The National Museums
and Galleries of Wales currently has eight locations
in Wales. In a couple of years there will be nine because
with Swansea City Council we are building a new Industrial
and Maritime Museum at Swansea and hopefully not too
long after that we will have some presence in this part
of Wales because we are working with Pembrokeshire National
Park to see whether we can establish some facility where
we can display on rotation the Graham Sutherland collection
which we hold. We are an organisation of some 630 staff
and last year we entertained almost 1.3 million visitors,
a figure which has increased quite remarkably in recent
years because of the introduction of the free entry
policy, which is something the Museum has aspired to
for many years and we are delighted that the Assembly
has brought it about at a very quick rate.
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH: What was the
resultant increase?
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MR LOVELUCK: It went up some 80 per cent.
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LORD RICHARD: Really?
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MR LOVELUCK: It was quite phenomenal.
What is encouraging, and we will come back to this later
perhaps, is that there has been quite a strong increase
in the C2 to D categories of the population and that
is encouraging because we aspire to support the Assembly
in their social inclusion policy. The National Museum
was established by Royal Charter almost 100 years ago
and it is also a registered charity, so we have to comply
with the terms of the statutes of the Charter and in
a sense we are responsible to the Privy Council for
that, and also with the provisions of the Charity Commissioners.
So those are requirements of governance which exist
alongside the obligations we have to the National Assembly
as an Assembly Sponsored Public Body. The management
of the Museum is vested in a Council of 16 people, four
officers and 12 members. As a registered charity, the
councillors are trustees and subject to charity law
and we have to be mindful that we fulfil our obligations
under charity law. Another element of the governance
of the National Museum is the Court to whom we must
present a report as Council members at least once a
year and the Court also has responsibility to appoint
some of the members of the Council. It is a typical
Edwardian organisation, and it is mirrored in the National
Library of course, which is a sister organisation, and
the University as well.
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I draw your attention to the responsibilities
of the Court. At one time it had a cast of thousands,
at least it appeared so, with150 on the Council, now
mainly reflecting the various reorganisations of local
government in the last 30 years, it is down to a more
manageable number, 40-odd?
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DR WILIAM: 50.
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH: What sort
of people are on the Court?
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MR LOVELUCK: It includes nominated representatives
of local authorities, of a good number of public bodies
in Wales, for example the Countryside Council for Wales,
the University ---
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TED ROWLANDS: Members of Parliament.
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MR LOVELUCK: There are four Members of
Parliament on it. It is supposed to represent a cross-section
of informed opinion in Wales.
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH: Thank you
very much.
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LORD RICHARD: Since you have been interrupted
can I interrupt you on another point, the ASPB point.
You are not a normal ASPB?
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MR LOVELUCK: No we are not and this is
where any question, to cut to the chase, of extending
the powers of the National Assembly vis-à-vis registered
charities has to take into account the wishes of the
Privy Council and the Charity Commissioners because
one thing we do not want to do is imperil our status
as a registered charity because that is very important
for us.
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LORD RICHARD: You behave as if you were
an ASPB?
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MR LOVELUCK: As we say in the paper,
this interface is not terribly well articulated and
it is one of the issues we do have to try and articulate
in the next session. The reason we have to articulate
it in the next session is because there has been a quinquennial
review of the National Museum at the instigation of
the Assembly and one of the recommendations of the review
is that the Court of Governors should be abolished,
and the Welsh Assembly Government has accepted that.
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH: Who carried
out the review?
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MR LOVELUCK: The review was carried out
by a team of people including people from Leicester
University.
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DR WILIAM: I understand that it was a
firm of consultants based in the University of Birmingham.
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH: What sort
of people - auditors or museum experts or art historians?
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DR WILIAM: They sub-contracted two museum
experts onto their team so it was a well-balanced team.
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH: It was generally
accepted from early on as the right way to conduct a
review?
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DR WILIAM: Yes, we felt it was a comprehensive
and positive review.
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LORD RICHARD: Is that the way the previous
reviews had been done on that sort of pattern?
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DR WILIAM: The pattern seems to vary.
Sometimes they are done in-house. The current review
of the Royal Commission on Ancient Monuments has been
done in-house by civil servants.
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PAUL VALEIRO: Who commissioned it?
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MR LOVELUCK: The Welsh Assembly government.
It was not exceptional. They have a policy of reviewing
all ASPBs every five years.
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LAURA McALLISTER: Just a point of clarification
about your status. You are not unique in having charitable
status, the Sports Council and Arts Council have, but
are you unique in having your own Charter and charitable
status?
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MR LOVELUCK: No, the National Library
has that status too.
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LAURA McALLISTER: Only those two?
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MR LOVELUCK: The Arts Council may have
it too but they may not be a registered charity, I am
not sure.
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LORD RICHARD: That makes the interface
blurred.
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MR LOVELUCK: It has not been articulated
and we do have to try to articulate it because of these
proposals coming out of the quinquennial review. There
are two of them. The first is to get rid of the Court,
and that of itself precipitates the need to consider
how the Council is composed. The issue which we have
consider is who holds the balance of appointments on
the Council? In the quinquennial review they did address
this issue and the reviewers thought it was important,
bearing in mind the importance from the Charity Commission
standpoint, that the trustees were clearly seen to be
independent and to exercise their judgement in the long
term interests of the charity. Thus the quinquennial
reviewers thought that the balance of appointments should
be with the Council itself seven to five with the Officers
also being appointed by Council. The Welsh Assembly
government takes the opposite view and argues that it
should be seven to five in their favour, plus all the
officers being appointed by the them, and that is an
issue that we have to consider.
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LORD RICHARD: Who will resolve that?
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MR LOVELUCK: It will have to be considered
in conjunction with the Charity Commissioners. Their
views will have to be taken into account as well as
the views of the Privy Council.
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH: We have one
Privy Councillor here and last time he was summonsed
to a Privy Council on which there was consideration
of such a matter would be a very long time ago.
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PETER PRICE: The office does the job.
They do a lot of the detailed work in looking at all
these sort of amendments.
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MR LOVELUCK: That is right and of course
if something were put to the Privy Council which was
a matter of contention they might well take a different
view of it.
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PETER PRICE: The office stops the thing
getting there.
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LORD RICHARD: I do not sit on that, I
promise you that. I have never seen any pieces of paper
like that. What I am interested in you say you have
got to articulate the relationship and presumably you
mean by that you have got to express it in clearer language.
What language do you want to use?
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MR LOVELUCK: We need to define and tease
out what the Assembly means by the "arm's length" relationship.
This is something that charitable bodies have always
attached a great deal of importance to a) because it
preserves their independence as Charity Commissioners
and b) because it preserves their independence of action
on cultural matters on which it is particularly important,
because arguably it would not be a desirable situation
if cultural organisations were subject to political
value judgements as to the sort of things they ought
to be doing. These two issues need to be teased out
and the reason they need to be teased out is because
we are uncertain at the moment of the way in which the
balance of appointments will go on the Council, so all
of those issues have got to be discussed.
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There is a degree of nervousness in the
Council about the proposals. It certainly does not show
from anything that the Welsh Assembly Government has
done to date. I have to say it has been extremely supportive
of the sort of things the Museum has wanted to do -
the new Swansea Museum is an example, free entry is
an example. Just looking to the future, those sort of
circumstances might not apply and in such cases it would
be quite useful to have this arcticulation of roles
and responsibilities.
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LORD RICHARD: Can you tell us a bit more
of the detail of the relationship with the Assembly
now? How often do you see them? Do you go to Committee?
Do they ask for reports from you? Do they communicate
regularly with you, or is it just cash?
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MR LOVELUCK: No, it is more than that.
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LORD RICHARD: What percentage of your
income comes from the National Assembly?
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MR LOVELUCK: 95 per cent of current expenditure.
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LORD RICHARD: Is that as a result of
abolishing admission charges?
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MR LOVELUCK: The percentage of grant
in aid was in excess of 90 per cent, even before charges
were abolished. I will ask Eurwyn to explain the official
connections but I meet officially with the Minister
once every six months. I also join with the other heads
of ASPBs in meeting with the First Secretary less frequently
than that. I have the sort of relationship with the
Minister which enables me to pick up the phone and speak
to her at very short notice. It is a very close relationship
in that sense and we can speak very frankly to each
other. For the formal connections, Eurwyn?
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DR WILIAM: That was the linkage at board
level. On the executive level then the Permanent Secretary
will hold a meeting two or three times a year of all
the heads of Assembly Sponsored Public Bodies, so that
happens at that level, but each ASPB then has a sponsor
division within the Assembly and it is with the sponsor
division the day-to-day business is done. There are
formal meetings at least quarterly where performance
indicators are discussed which are flagged up and made
as part of the corporate planning progress. Those targets
are monitored formally on a quarterly basis. In practice
we have contact almost daily. One interesting difference
between the Assembly and the pre-devolution days is
the number of Assembly questions that now come through.
Previously by definition the number of Parliamentary
questions which were related to us would have been very,
very small indeed but Assembly questions now happen
quite frequently, so there is quite a volume of business
dealing with that.
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LORD RICHARD: Can I just follow that
for a second. You say Assembly questions - about the
way the Museum is being run, something the Museum is
doing or why are you not doing something you should
be doing?
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DR WILIAM: It could be that.
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LORD RICHARD: They answer them?
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DR WILIAM: Yes and whereas the civil
servants will draft responses, in practice we draft
the responses for civil servants.
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LORD RICHARD: Of course but I am surprised
at Ministers being prepared to answer questions about
the way in which an ASPB is run.
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DR WILIAM: They may not be questions
of detail. They will be questions about museum policy
in the wider field and they may be about specific developments
such as the Swansea development we mentioned.
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH: I was interested
in the rationale of querying that at the very end of
the day there should be responsibility to the elected
body. I am thinking of what has happened in London in
the V&A and to the British Museum under the Thatcher
administration where, rightly or wrongly, an Act of
Parliament was passed, there was a new board of trustees
and from that stemmed large revolutions in the way these
bodies were run, new directors, major rows about those,
as we all know. Quite apart from the rights or wrongs
of that, do you accept that at the end of the day there
is proper political accountability?
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MR LOVELUCK: Yes.
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH: If you do
accept that, then what is to stop having nine to seven
or seven to nine?
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MR LOVELUCK: The Council has not taken
a view on the issue of where the balance of appointments
should lie. What it wants to do is to get behind that
and to try to tease out from the Welsh Assembly Government
the sort of issues over which they would like to have
influence because there may be some on which the Museum,
bearing in mind its other responsibilities, might wish
to take a different view. I doubt whether we would want
a situation where because some particular Minister was
very keen on Kevin Sinnott paintings, for example, the
Museum was told that Kevin Sinnott paintings must hang
there all the time, fine artist though he is. We need
to establish some parameters. I think if we did establish
those parameters, the degree of nervousness that exists
about where the balance of appointments should lie might
fall away. Quite rightly at the present point in time
until that articulation has been achieved the Council
is a bit nervous and is saying, "Lets have some
more talks please."
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TED ROWLANDS: Can I just clarify because
you rest a lot of your case on the charity status issue
and the Charity Commission, but there are other Royal
Charter bodies, sports and arts. Are they also covered
by the Charity Commission or are you and the National
Library separate in a sense from this?
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MR LOVELUCK: We are certainly distinctive.
We were set up at the same time by petition to the Privy
Council. We were not set up as the Sports Council was
at government behest and as the Arts Council was set
up. We were set up by petition to the Privy Council
so we are distinctive
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TED ROWLANDS: The charitable status issue,
if you have that in common with the Arts Council they
have already conceded the appointments system, have
they not? The appointments system is made by Government
Ministers.
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MR LOVELUCK: In those circumstances I
would assume that the then members of the Sports Council
and the Arts Council properly discharged their responsibilities
as trustees by making the sort of enquiries that we
are now making.
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TED ROWLANDS: The second point is we
are interested always in making the comparison with
Scotland. What has happened to your Scottish counterpart?
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MR LOVELUCK: We do the work of four museums
in Scotland. We cover the same ground as four separate
museums
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TED ROWLANDS: Is the Scottish National
Museum structure similar or identical to yours in the
sense of you are chartered and so forth? What is the
relationship?
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MR LOVELUCK: I can help you in terms
of appointments. In terms of appointments the appointments
there are made almost entirely by the Scottish Parliament
Ministers.
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LORD RICHARD: The Director of the National
Gallery of Scotland is appointed by the Parliament?
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MR LOVELUCK: No, the Director would be
appointed by the trustees. The trustees would be appointed
by ---
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TED ROWLANDS: So they have gone through
this barrier?
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MR LOVELUCK: They have and indeed we
may go through it but at the present point in time we
are doing what we should do as trustees to a charity,
which is being prudent.
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TOM JONES: Does charitable status in
Scotland make a difference?
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MR LOVELUCK: Yes it does.
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TED ROWLANDS: It is different.
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VIVIENNE SUGAR: I was going to ask about
the relationship with DCMS and Whitehall departments,
if you could explain that us.
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DR WILIAM: Yes, we have a note at the
end of our paper I think. Until the time of devolution,
the lead body for setting standards and looking after
in the wider sense museums in the United Kingdom was
the Museums and Galleries Commission which was effectively
a standing commission, indeed at one point it used to
be called the Standing Commission for Museums. It then
became the Museums and Galleries Commission. That was
in existence until three or four years ago. Whether
the DCMS was in existence then, I do not know, but the
government took the view it would be a good thing to
amalgamate that body with similar bodies for libraries
rows and archives so a new Commission was formed for
museums and galleries and archives, with the working
title Resource. Although in one sense Resource remains
a UK-wide body, nevertheless (and crucially for us)
its funding remit seems to be limited to England. This
does mean there are major initiatives in the museums
and allied fields in England. One that comes off the
top of my head is that there is a major initiative from
DCMS, funded through Resource, to improve educational
provision in museums and to that end DCMS are putting
in £10 million over the next three years. The Department
for Education and Training is putting in another £2.5
million. That is £12.5 million extra for museums over
the next few years for which we are not eligible. Not
only that but much of that money is potential match
funding for trusts and foundations and charities
and so on, so any bid that we might have made could
have been doubled but without that initial tranche from
Resource or the Welsh equivalent we have no potential
match funding for a bid and request, so it is hitting
us in two ways in essence.
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A comparable Welsh body has just been
established for Wales. It is comparable in that it will
carry out many of the functions of Resource but it is
different in one crucial area. Resource is effectively
an NDPB sponsored by DCMS but it is a free-standing
body and it is free within its funding parameters to
take strategic decisions. The comparable Welsh body
will be an in-house body, ie part of the Assembly Government
Office, and so therefore it differs in one sense from
Resource in that it will clearly not be able to carry
out the advocacy function that Resource is able to do
for the sector in England, so there is that difference.
That body is to be established the groundwork has been
done now, and the Chief Executive will shortly be advertised
and the body will come into existence on 1 April 2004,
so we are in a period of transition.
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH: What were
the arguments for keeping it in-house in Wales where
it was not in England?
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TED ROWLANDS: Another quango!
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH: I did not
hear. We have got enough quangos?
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DR WILIAM: It was that, yes.
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LORD RICHARD: If your relationship with
this Minister is good, it does not really matter.
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TOM JONES: Matched funding is the worry.
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MR LOVELUCK: We submitted evidence on
that and our argument was that it should have been a
stand-alone body. Where it is now, tucked away in the
National Assembly, it would be very hard for the body
to raise funds from HLF for example. It would find it
very difficult to carry out a full-blooded advocacy
role, it will have to pull its punches. Our preference
would have been for a stand-alone body. There it is.
The Welsh Assembly Government have made that decision
and we will do our best to work with it.
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH: If I can go
back to your long answer just now which was very interesting.
My impression in England is that the Royal Commission
on Historical Manuscripts led by the then Lord Justice,
Lord Bingham, managed to keep its independence of the
putting together of the other ones. Is that not right?
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DR WILIAM: The Royal Commission managed
to remain separate because it was the local archive
sector that was brought in but the Royal Commission
has itself been merged into the ---
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TED ROWLANDS: --- the National Advisory
Council for the Public Records Office. I serve on the
body and we have just been merged.
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TOM JONES: Do you sit on a quango?
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TED ROWLANDS: I sit on a quango, but
it is a UK one, out of the way.
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LORD RICHARD: I am very impressed.
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TED ROWLANDS: Flush me out! Yes, it has
been merged. The warrants have been appointed this week,
believe it or not. Can I ask a financial issue. You
were a part of the UK organisation called Resource which
had this funding and we were part of it, and UK Resource,
if there had not been devolution, would have funded
some of the things on the Welsh museums front. When
this devolution broke up, was any proportion of money
that UK Resource had apportioned across to you as a
part of the devolution settlement, so in other words
have you lost out entirely?
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MR LOVELUCK: To the Assembly?
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TED ROWLANDS: Yes, to the National Assembly.
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DR WILIAM: We are not aware that we have.
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TED ROWLANDS: In that case you would
not have lost out, you have got to get it from the Assembly.
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DR WILIAM: The sentence with the words
"Barnett Formula" would no doubt be bandied about.
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TED ROWLANDS: You do not believe it has
happened that, as it were, the Welsh dimension, the
Welsh part of the UK Resource was not transferred to
the National Assembly at devolution?
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MR LOVELUCK: We are not directly involved
in that. That is on the local authority/local museums
side. Where it is important is because the boundaries
between national and local museum activity are, and
this is very desirable, being broken down. We have a
number of joint initiatives with the local museum sector
to share the treasures around Wales and so on and in
that context I think the issue you are raising does
become important and relevant for us because if the
local museum side is not funded in a way to respond
to the sort of initiatives we want to undertake then
we will be the poorer.
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LAURA McALLISTER: Can I raise questions
of scrutiny and accountability because you say in your
paper that you feel post devolution has seen a greater
level of scrutiny of your organisation and that contrasts
directly with evidence that we had yesterday from another
ASPB where they claimed that actually scrutiny was not
always effective and was, if anything, far less rigorous
post-devolution. It may be a question of the nature
of the Committee that is dealing with the scrutiny and
so on or other issues. Could you explain how you feel
scrutiny of your own organisation has been more effective.
Secondly, if you could outline for us the accountability
loop you have with the Minister and the Subject Committee?
Do you have the remit letter we have discussed with
other people? What kind of input does the Committee
have to the remit letter or is it purely from the Minister?
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MR LOVELUCK: The degree of scrutiny on
our side has been greater for two reasons, firstly the
way in which the ministerial portfolios have been allocated,
which perhaps reflects the fact it is a coalition and
reflects the fact that a portfolio has been created
specifically for cultural matters. Some people would
say that the Culture Minister is relatively under-loaded
but it does mean that we have a ministerial politician
who has the time to take an interest and a supportive
Subject Committee in a sense to back her up. So my own
impression is, bearing in mind I have only been doing
the job for six months, that the degree of scrutiny
is greater and certainly there is more time than would
ever have been spent in the Welsh Affairs Committee
on museum matters. The fact we have had a quinquennial
review which has gone through the Committee two or three
times is a reflection of that.
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LAURA McALLISTER: Are you fortunate though
in that the Committee that deals with your scrutiny
is made up of people who have a degree of expertise
about your subject area? Does it depend purely on the
experience of the AMs?
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MR LOVELUCK: It is a question of time
rather than expertise. They simply have more time to
devote to it.
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LAURA McALLISTER: It is a less loaded
Committee.
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MR LOVELUCK: That is the point I am making.
That is what we said about the allocation of portfolios.
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LAURA McALLISTER: The Culture Minister
does not support the Welsh language but one would say
overall ---
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MR LOVELUCK: But she does not have the
huge executive responsibility that many of the other
Members have.
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LORD RICHARD: How often do you see the
Committee or does the Committee see you?
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DR WILIAM: We were to have seen the Committee
a month or so ago but we were bumped out in favour of
something else. I guess over the last two or three years
we have appeared before the Committee twice so it would
have been approximately once a year.
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MR LOVELUCK: Shall I take the accountability
point?
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH: My question
is related.
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MR LOVELUCK: On the accountability loop
we get a remit letter. It is very much a Welsh Assembly
Government remit letter but I have no doubt that it
is informed by the sort of things that the Committee
have been saying about the Museum and so on and if the
sort of things that the Museum have been saying accord
with the priorities of the Welsh Assembly government
then that will find its way into the remit letter. It
is essentially the accountability loop to the Assembly
government and not to the Committee directly. The Committee
will certainly see a copy of the letter but after it
has been sent.
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DR WILIAM: And the letter will include
all the Assembly cross-cutting issues like the Welsh
language and all those issues. Those will be written
into the remit letter as well.
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH: Do you see
the remit letter before it is sent with a chance to
comment on it?
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DR WILIAM: We get it in draft. We usually
get two drafts. We make our points. Sometimes they are
listened to and sometimes they are not. That is fine,
we are happy with the process.
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MR LOVELUCK: The Minister will listen
as well. If there are key issues there which we are
very unhappy about then I will speak to the Minister,
as I did in the context of this remit letter we have
now had, and as a result one of the crucial points on
it was changed, so that system works.
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH: Going back
to the point that was just raised, does the existence
of the Committee and indeed of a Minister who is so
much concerned with your kind of work in fact provide
a practical alternative, to serve as any crusader, so
to speak, for your objectives and indeed for money that
might be more effective than the sort of arm's length
arrangements which have been made in England?
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MR LOVELUCK: You need both really, do
you not? You need a crusader but a crusading Minister
one day may be replaced by one who is not so hot the
next day. You do need both. I come back to the point
that we have to have regard for the well-being of the
Museum in the long term. That is our responsibility
and, as you know too well, political decisions sometimes
do not reflect the long term.
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TOM JONES: I have two questions. I have
one question regarding staffing. Your staff are not
civil servants, as I understand it, therefore what is
their status? There is also some evidence, it came to
us in the public meeting last night, regarding this
idea of creating some kind of Welsh civil service. Would
your staff be interested in that? Would it be of advantage
to them to be part of such a system or would you prefer
to keep your staff independent of the civil service?
That is the first question. The second question is we
are looking as to where primary legislative powers are
required and one way of proving the demand is whether
there is a long wish-list that public bodies in Wales
would wish to see being developed. Is there any legislative
matter which you would like to see developed?
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DR WILIAM: I will attempt to answer the
first question. No, our staff are not civil servants.
I am not sure technically what their status is but most
certainly they are not civil servants; they are accountable
to the Court and the Council. As an organisation we
have not discussed the idea of a Welsh civil service.
I have no idea how the staff would respond to that.
There are advantages and disadvantages I would think.
I think the advantages would be from what we have talked
about already, this arm's length principle, that we
are responsible for safeguarding the nation's assets
in the long term and therefore we do not want to come
under short-term political pressure, and I think the
staff would be very supportive of such a viewpoint but,
on the other hand, I do not think that they would be
violently opposed to the idea. I am sure that they would
be interested in such a question, but I am afraid I
cannot tell you any more than that at the present.
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TOM JONES: The second point regarding
legislative powers ---
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MR LOVELUCK: Just a comment on the first
issue. I speak as a former trade union official in the
public sector. The things which public sector servants
are concerned about are things like parity of treatment,
fairness of promotion systems, and that sort of thing.
I think most trade unions would be prepared to sit down
and consider the issue of a Welsh civil service but
would require some safeguards on that sort of issue.
The issue of regional pay has just been put on the agenda
by the Chancellor and I suspect that that would be a
pretty emotive issue and would be one of the things
that would be much discussed in the context of a Welsh
public service.
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Primary legislation - at the moment we
cannot see any major things which the Assembly might
wish to do to support the Museum's work which are impeded
by legislation. Indeed, you will notice that in paragraph
26 of the paper we put in some cautionary words about
the complexity of the areas of legislation which govern
us and we suggest that if there are further areas where
the Assembly's powers are to be extended, they ought
to be elsewhere in the first instance because of the
complexity involved. There is an another issue and that
results again from our position as a charity. We are
in the fund-raising business and we would have to be
extremely careful that any separate legislation for
Wales did not impede the fund-raising process, and that
is particularly important. So the whole area is one
which would have to be looked at very carefully before
decisions are taken on the matter. Certainly we will
not advance the case that this was an area where as
of now the Assembly should be looking to extend its
primary legislative powers.
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TED ROWLANDS: Could I follow the public
service point that Tom is raising. In a way, if you
do not mind me saying so, you are uniquely qualified
because you started in the mainstream Welsh Office civil
service.
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MR LOVELUCK: I started at the Board of
Trade.
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TED ROWLANDS: Board of Trade, Welsh Office,
then through tourism and so forth, you have been through
a gamut of public bodies originally as a civil servant.
Some witnesses have given us evidence that there would
be a case for trying to create a Welsh public civil
service to allow interchange, it happened to you personally,
to become almost a new career route as opposed to remaining
within the UK civil service structure. Purely personally
and given your background and knowledge, how attractive
or how meaningful would that be as a concept?
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MR LOVELUCK: Within the confines of the
present powers of the Assembly I think it would stack
up in the short term. If you were to contemplate a very
marked and rapid increase in the primary legislative
powers of the Assembly, it would not stack up at all
because there is not a corpus of expertise amongst the
officials within the Assembly that could run any sizeable
legislative programme. If you were to do a survey of
how many people in the Assembly had been involved in
primary legislation it would not reveal a huge resource
there. In my six years at the Board of Trade I did one
Act from top to bottom, the Import Deposits Act of 1967
or 1968. In my 14 years in the Welsh Office I think
there was only one complete Act which was specifically
down to the Welsh Office and that was the Conwy Tunnel
Supplementary Provisions Act. The other involvement
was contributing to legislation being run by other Departments.
There is not a huge well of experience there. I bring
this back to your original point. If you were to try
to set up a civil service at the same time as you were
giving it those huge responsibilities I would not like
to vouch for the consequences.
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TED ROWLANDS: You would need to go and
recruit people who have legislative skills?
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MR LOVELUCK: In those circumstances.
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TED ROWLANDS: People who have legislative
preparation skills.
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MR LOVELUCK: That is right, people who
know how to write instructions to counsel and so on,
and you have not got that.
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TED ROWLANDS: What about all the statutory
instruments, we have got officials involved in that?
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MR LOVELUCK: Yes, but that is secondary
legislation. It used to be a joke when I joined the
civil service in 1963 that whenever you popped your
head into Parliament there was always a Scottish White
Fish Bill going through. The Scots cut their teeth over
many decades by putting their legislation through Whitehall.
We have not done the same thing in Wales and therefore
in my view any increase in primary legislative powers
has got to be gradual in the same way as the increase
in administrative powers has been gradual. From the
time the Welsh Office was set up it took 15 years or
so, but it made for a sensible development. If you do
it too quickly here you will not have the staff resource
to back it up without bringing people in. So I link
the two issues together. I hope that has not obfuscated
it.
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LORD RICHARD: It is a very interesting
thought.
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PETER PRICE: If one can follow through
on the distinction between primary and secondary legislation
you made in civil service terms, what is that distinction
in the nature of the work?
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MR LOVELUCK: It is drafting ab initio
a piece of legislation, articulating for counsel what
it is you want to achieve. The secondary legislation
is the filling in once the general thrust has been established.
I do not reckon it is of the same order.
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PETER PRICE: I understand.
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH: We have been
hearing evidence previously in the National Museum in
Cardiff and it has been very agreeable, a beautiful
place to do so. One sees the head of Cyril Fox when
you take the lift up, a very distinguished Director
of the Museum. When you come to appoint a new Director,
would it be done on the Nolan principles of it could
be somebody from America or elsewhere?
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MR LOVELUCK: Our new Director-General
is currently until 4 o'clock today the Chief Executive
of Museums and Galleries in Northern Ireland. His appointment
was by the Nolan process, which involved an independent
assessor appointed by the Welsh Assembly and an independent
expert. Mark Jones, the Director of the V&A, sat
as our independent expert.
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LORD RICHARD: Can I thank you very much
indeed for coming. It was enjoyable and refreshing.
I think your last set of thoughts about the capacity
of the Assembly to prepare primary legislation is certainly
one which we will have to work at, but thank you very
much.
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