Arts Council England must change or face ‘disaster’, culture department is told

A picture


Arts Council England requires a “radical” overhaul so it can to respond to the challenges of the culture sector, according to Margaret Hodge, who said it would be a “disaster” if ACE leaders did not heed her warnings.The Labour peer, who led a wide-ranging and critical report into ACE, made the comments at a Department for Culture, Media and Sport (DCMS) select committee, where she reiterated her calls for the organisation to embrace change.Lady Hodge said: “I think there has to be a radical review in the way that the Arts Council works; how they use the money, their role in relation to the organisations that they support, and also their role in the wider arts landscape.”She said a significant shift in approach was needed because of the “loss of confidence in how ACE serves its own communities”, caused in part by the perception of political interference in decision-making.The decision to force the English National Opera to move from London to Manchester was a “raw experience” for some of the 700 people she spoke to as part of her review, she said.

“I hope the ACE takes on board [my recommendations] and don’t just pay lip service to what we’re doing,” Hodge added.“It will be a disaster if ACE just pays lip service.”She said ACE was perceived by the culture sector as “incredibly bureaucratic”, an organisation whose processes were “time consuming” and “stifle creativity”, and that does not provide enough support for institutions.In order to restore trust between ACE and the organisations it served, Hodge called for greater transparency between the secretary of state for culture and ACE, with all letters being made public.Other recommendations included that publicly funded theatre shows that go on to commercial success, such as the National Theatre’s War Horse, should give money back to ACE, although this would need a change of the royal charter to enable ACE to set up a commercial arm.

There was also a call for touring tax relief to support orchestras, especially those operating in Europe where costs have soared since Brexit,Hodge’s investigation into the national body for arts funding, which was released in December, found there had been a “loss of respect and trust” for ACE among those it backed, in part because of perceived political interference,At the time of the report’s release, Hodge said: “There have been attempts to exert more political control over ACE decisions in recent years and this has to stop,The Arts Council must remain free from political interference,”ACE is a non-departmental public body of the DCMS that distributes public funds to arts organisations ranging from national institutions to community-based ventures.

A strain in relations between ACE and the bodies it gives money to was a theme throughout Hodge’s report.“People viewed ACE as a command-and-control funding body, rather than a leader and facilitator in the cultural landscape,” it said.One of the key missions highlighted in the review was the need to reduce bureaucracy, including by “radically” changing ACE’s application and reporting requirements.It said ACE should reduce the number of its funding streams.It also recommended lengthening the national portfolio organisations (NPO) cycle from three to five years, having a rolling programme of applications, and assuring certain organisations that they would receive at least 80% of their funding in the next round.

ACE is recruiting a new chair to replace Nicholas Serota,When asked what three qualities his replacement needed, Hodge said they’d need to be a “change manager”, someone who “loved the arts” and a “great advocate” for the sector,
recentSee all
A picture

Oil price falls after Iraq ‘signs deal’ to resume exports via Turkey – business live

The Iraqi state news agency is reporting that Kirkuk has resumed pumping oil via Turkey’s Ceyhan port at a rate of 250,000 barrels.That would only be a fraction of the country’s normal output. Before the Iranian war began, Iraq was producing 4.5 million barrels of crude oil per day. But it was forced to slash output once tankers couldn’t travel safely through the strait of Hormuz

A picture

US postal service will run out of money by February 2027, says agency chief

The US Postal Service will run out of funds within a year, unless lawmakers lift a cap on how much money the agency can borrow, according to the postmaster general.In an interview with the Associated Press, David Steiner warned that the postal service – which relies on stamps and service fees rather than tax dollars to deliver mail six days a week to every address in the country – would run out of cash for employees and vendors by February next year.The agency has operated with a financial shortfall almost every fiscal year since 2007, as people and businesses have moved toward paperless billing and digital communication, forgoing first-class mail. But mail deliveries have continued, with USPS borrowing money from the US treasury to compensate for losses.Steiner, who is scheduled to testify before Congress this month, has called for changes to a federal law that caps the agency’s borrowing at $15bn

A picture

Instagram to remove end-to-end encryption for private messages in May

Instagram will stop encrypting private messages between users from May, after enduring years of criticism from law enforcement and child safety groups over the feature.Meta quietly announced this month on its help page for Instagram and in an updated 2022 news post that end-to-end encryption would no longer be available on direct messages between users on Instagram from 8 May 2026.It means Meta will be able to see the contents of messages between all users – which so far it only could for those who did not enable encryption.The feature already appeared deactivated for Australian users, when Guardian Australia tested on Wednesday.A spokesperson for Meta said the decision to abandon encryption was due to low uptake

A picture

Subnautica 2 publisher’s CEO used ChatGPT in failed bid to avoid paying US$250m bonus to own studio head, court hears

A South Korean gaming publisher who hatched a plan using ChatGPT to remove the heads of one of its own game studios in a bid to avoid paying US$250m has been ordered by a US court to reverse the removal.The dispute stems from South Korean game developer Krafton’s acquisition of Unknown Worlds Entertainment, makers of the Subnautica video game, for $500m in 2021.Krafton agreed the studio would remain independent and that its leadership would retain operational control and could only be fired for cause, according to the ruling by vice-chancellor Lori Will of the court of chancery in Delaware.If Unknown Worlds met certain targets, Krafton would pay the studio what is known as an earnout worth up to $250m.As the studio was last year ramping up to release Subnautica 2, internal projections showed it would trigger the earnout, according to the ruling

A picture

From the Pocket: Andrew Dillon needs authenticity and nuance, not AFL talking points

In 2023, the late Sam Landsberger wrote a piece in the Herald Sun recalling how Andrew Dillon came to work at the AFL. Dillon was driving down Punt Road in the early 2000s after playing a game for amateur club Old Xaverians. Senior AFL administrator Ben Buckley, who was recruiting for an in-house counsel, was in the next lane and spotted his former Xavs teammate. “Hey Dills,” he shouted across traffic, “you’re a lawyer, aren’t you?”A quarter of a century later, a line from North Melbourne coach Alastair Clarkson in an interview with Jay Clark jumped off the page on Sunday. “I spoke to Gil [McLachlan] on Tuesday night and he says: ‘This will all be resolved by the end of next week,’” Clarkson said

A picture

Venezuela 3-2 United States: World Baseball Classic final – as it happened

The USMark DeRosa does not deliver. His team barely squeaks by the DR in the semis and then falls short v Team Venezuela, with their team of studs unable to capitalize on Bryce Harper’s dramatic, eighth inning, two-run shot that tied the game. They never really hit in this tournament, despite the laundry list of talent up and down the lineup. Aaron Judge is once agains the poster boy for failing to come up with the big hits in big spots – he was hit-less tonight with three strikeouts. For all of Team USA, heading back to Spring Training, that is one bad way to start a very long season