APPENDIX 25
Memorandum submitted by the Library Association
The Library Association is pleased to provide
a few points for the Culture, Media and Sport Committee to consider
in their enquiry into the Heritage Lottery Fund.
THE LIBRARY
ASSOCIATION
1. The Library Association is the professional
body for library and information specialists working in all sectors
of the UK economy. We have 26,000 members, including many who
manage special collections of heritage value. Under the terms
of our Royal Charter we have a duty to promote the improvement
of skills and qualifications of librarians and information personnel;
to promote the better management of library and information services;
to encourage the maintenance of appropriate levels of library
and information services throughout the UK; and to scrutinise
legislation affecting library and information services.
APPLICATIONS TO
HERITAGE LOTTERY
FUND
2. First we would like to acknowledge the
undoubted benefits that a number of Heritage Lottery funded projects
have brought to libraries and the nation. Recent examples include
the National Library of Women to be developed at the Guildhall
University in London (based on the Fawcett Collection); the Surrey
History Centre; and the grant to put the catalogue of the Working
Class Movement Library in Salford onto the World Wide Web. These,
and many other projects, will help to preserve the documentary
evidence of our rich heritage and make it more accessible to the
public.
3. We note that the Library and Information
sector has been slow, in comparison with other sectors, to take
advantage of the Heritage Lottery Fund and submit bids. We will
do all we can to encourage more applications from the sector and
welcome the increased efforts of the Heritage Lottery Fund itself
to engage with the Library and Information Community and encourage
the submission of bids. However there are still concerns voiced
by our members, particularly in private and learned societies,
about eligibility criteria and the processing of bids. In particular
they are concerned about:
The definition of "public good"precisely
what is required of libraries in private and learned societies
to satisfy this requirement? Although it is right that improved
public access should be granted in return for the investment of
public money, many have concerns as to the extent of public access
required (internet access?; prior appointment only?) to satisfy
the Heritage Lottery Fund and how this will impact on their service
to their primary client groups.
StandardsWhat professional
standards are used when assessing bids? It would be helpful for
applicants to know which standards they should adhere to prior
to submitting bids.
Retrospective CataloguingMany
have expressed concerns that retrospective cataloguing projects
appear not to be eligible for HLF grants as they are regarded
as part of the "normal" work of the library. In practice
most libraries regard extensive retrospective cataloguing as discrete
projects which are additional to normal activity. In the case
of "historic" libraries the additional work may be substantial
and involve integrating collections which have been catalogued
and classified to a variety of schemes and standards over the
years, as well as parts of collections that remain to be properly
organised. The creation of an integrated catalogue is, in itself,
a major contribution to improved access.
FeedbackThere is also concern
that projects which might fail in one round of bids (because of
the competition) could well have succeeded in another round. Feedback
on projects, and on whether to resubmit would be useful.
"AT RISK"
COLLECTIONS
4. One major area of concern we have relates
to "at risk" collections. Many of the special collections
that contribute to our nation's heritage are not held in major
institutions with extensive resources of expertise to manage and
conserve special collections, but are held by individuals, or
small voluntary societies such as Parish Councils or private and
learned societies. Although often local or regional in content
these collections are of national importance. Unlike the university
sector (where top-sliced funding from the Higher Education Funding
Councils has been made available for major research collections)
there are no national schemes for the upkeep of such collections,
and therefore the Heritage Lottery Fund assumes a greater importance
to them. In many cases the library has outstripped the resources
of the parent body to properly maintain it; in others the library
may not be seen as central to the concerns of the organisation
(this can even be the case with special collections in public
libraries where funding constraints may mean that other more heavily
used services are given priority); in a few cases the collection
may even be seen as an asset that can be realised to help a parent
body through bad financial times. Often it is only a small investment
that is required to conserve and develop a collection and make
it more accessible to the public. However even at this level the
requirement for "matching" funding can be a problem
and greater leeway needs to given for "in kind" contributions.
We believe that a more pro-active and interventionist policy needs
to be adopted by the Heritage Lottery Fund (and others) to address
this constituencyotherwise valuable collections are likely
to deteriorate further and may even be dispersed and lost to the
nation.
5. It is important that the Heritage Lottery
Fund should actively invite bids from this constituency. Some
work has already been done in identifying such collections. Library
Association Publishing has recently published a revised version
of A Directory of Rare Book and Special Collections in the
United Kingdom and the Republic of Ireland edited by B C Bloomfield;
Michael Perkin is compiling a register of Parish Libraries; and
other research is being undertaken specifically to identify collections
at risk (with funding from the Heritage Lottery Fund as well as
the Library Association). However such an approach should include
more than simply inviting these organisations to apply for a grant.
The Heritage Lottery Fund will need to be assured that the organisation
concerned has the necessary expertise to manage the collection
effectively. In some cases the organisation itself will require
professional advice before it can put in an application. An infrastructure
needs to be put in place to enable this to happen. The Library
Association would be happy to work with the Heritage Lottery Fund
and others to investigate how this could be done.
PUBLIC LIBRARIES
6. A further concern is more general. It
relates to the totality of Lottery money available through the
five "good causes" (soon to be six with the New Opportunities
Fund) for public libraries. At the moment, unlike sports halls,
museums, theatres or arts centres, public libraries as public
libraries are ineligible for lottery money for building refurbishment
or new complexes. The Heritage Lottery Fund will only fund such
work where a library is in a listed building. The outcome is that
public libraries are doubly disadvantaged: through the rules of
additionality they are excluded, in most cases, from Lottery grants
in the first place, but as local authorities are seeking to gain
as much benefit as possible from the limited capital funds (such
as match funding from the Lottery) they also lose out in capital
financing from local authorities. In 1996 the Society of Chief
Librarians undertook a capital needs audit of public library services
in England and Wales. It showed that over £612 million of
capital expenditure would be required over a five year period
to bring the public library infrastructure up to an acceptable
standard. There has been no evidence of an improvement in capital
investment since 1996 and, if anything, the situation is now likely
to be worse. We believe that this issue needs to be addressed
urgently and that some form of "Carnegie Mark 2" campaign
is needed to undertake essential capital work on library buildings
to ensure that they provide an attractive environment for users
(which includes 60 per cent of the population of the UK).
I hope these comments will prove useful to the
Select Committee.
June 1998
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