Opportunities for Federally Associated Collections
June 5-7, 1996
Berkeley, CA

Session 1: Foundations for Partnerships
Moderator, Ann Hitchcock, Chief Curator, Museum Management Program, NPS

Welcome and Opening Remarks
Ann Hitchcock, Chief Curator, Museum Management Program, NPS

To our knowledge this is the first conference to focus solely on managing the entire range of Federally associated collections---from collections of art, to archeology, archives, history, and ethnography, to biology, geology and paleontology.

What is meant by Federally associated collections? These are collections that may be:

Who are we who are gathered for this conference to discuss our concerns, experience, plans, and desires for these Federally associated collections?

Thanks to those who made the conference possible:


Background on the Conference
Ann Hitchcock, Chief Curator, Museum Management Program, NPS

The following is a brief background on how the Department of the Interior came to establish the Interagency Federal Collections Working Group and undertake the 1994 survey of Federally associated collections housed in non-Federal institutions which led to this conference.


Ian Carmichael, Associate Dean for Research and Professor of Geology and Geophysics, University of California, Berkeley


Kent Lightfoot: Phoebe Hearst Museum of Anthropology


Paul Denett, Director, Office of Acquisition and Property Management, Office of the Secretary, U.S. Department of the Interior


Ann Hitchcock, Chief Curator, Museum Management Program, NPS


What We Learned From the 1994 Survey of Federally Associated Collections Housed in Non-Federal Institutions
Ronald C. Wilson, Staff Curator, Interior Museum Property Program

The Interagency Federal Collections Working Group worked over a year to develop the Survey of Federally Associated Collections Housed in Non-Federal Institutions. The American Association of Museums and Association of Systematic Collections advised us early on in the process. In 1994, the survey was distributed to 12,000 institutions including all museums on the Institute of Museum Services mailing list and selected academic departments. Nearly 3,000 institutions responded.

A random sample of the non-responding institutions were asked why they did not respond. Most stated that they felt like it didn't apply to them. A few stated that it was an impossible task given the available resources.

Interns entered the survey information into a database developed by the Department of Agriculture. The data was sorted by individual agencies and provided to agency representatives on the Interagency Federal Collections Working Group. It was up to each agency to decide how to use the information for follow-up. General Services Administration is the best example of how the survey results were used; GSA produced an inventory of its 1933-1943 Works Progress Administration art collections.

The survey resulted in:

There is no plan to repeat the survey.

Summary of Data. The following tables reflect the total number of responses as of May 9, 1996.

Table 1: Answer to Question C, "Does the institution house collections associated with Federal lands and/or Federally funded projects on a more than temporary basis?"

Total # of Responses% of Responses
Yes62922
No2,12076
Unknown552
Total2,804100

Table 2: Total number of objects reported for each collection type. Note: Table 2 is for the total number of objects reported only, collections reported according to "lot size" are not included.

Collections TypeTotal # of Objects% of Objects
Archaeology 18,783,95373.0
Ethnography7,606 0.03
Art 46,1910.18
Historical and/or
Scientific Doc.
4,028,783 16.0
History468,885 1.8
Vertebrate
Paleontology
311,2901.2
Other547,9512.0
Unknown30,4910.12
Botany1,193,7085.0
Geology22,6300.09
Paleobotany1,3250.01
Invertebrate
Paleontology
8,070 0.03
Zoology328,983 1.3
Total25,779,866 100.0



Significant Museum-Federal Government Partnerships
Jason Y. Hall, Director, Government Affairs Program, American Association of Museums


Funding Collections Care
Diane B. Frankel, Director, Institute of Museum Services

In 1989 the Institute of Museum Services (IMS) performed the National Museum Survey. The following information was reported:

The IMS is an independent Federal agency, therefore, it cannot fund Federal institutions. Non-Federal institutions holding Federal collections are eligible for funding.

Federal institutions may obtain IMS services by paying a fee for the services.

IMS encourages museums to plan for collections conservation. Three grant programs IMS provides:

IMS tries to communicate across disciplines in order to increase awareness, activity and conservation. Funding is down in conservation programs from $3.5 million to $2.7 million.

IMS phone number (202) 606-8536

Answers to Questions:

NEH Funding for Collections Care and Management
Laura Word, Senior Program Officer, Division of Preservation and Access, National Endowment for the Humanities

1. History of NEH's support for preservation:

2. NEH cannot make grants to other Federal agencies for preservation and access activities.

3. The staff of other Federal agencies responsible for the care of collections may, however, benefit from projects supported by NEH. Workshops, technical information, and preservation surveys are offered by four regional preservation field services supported by NEH (SOLINET in Atlanta, AMIGOS in Dallas, CENTER for Art and Historic Artifacts in Philadelphia and Northeast Document Conservation CENTER in Andover, Massachusetts). Services are offered on a fee basis. Collections care training opportunities are available on the same basis at three programs currently funded by NEH: Campbell CENTER in Mt. Carroll, IL; Mid-Atlantic Association of Museums in Newark; and the Heritage League of Greater Kansas City. Research and demonstration grants supported by NEH also benefit everyone interested in preservation by increasing our understanding of preservation issues and best practices.

4. For more information about the Endowment's support for preservation and access projects, call the division at 202-606-8570 or E-mail to preservation@neh.fed.us


Beyond the 1994 Survey--What We Learned from Six Case Study Institutions
Ronald C. Wilson, Staff Curator, Interior Museum Property Program

Specific issues were examined at six case study institutions as a follow-up to the 1994 Survey of Federally associated collections housed in non-Federal institutions. The institutions were selected for diversity among the following:

- geographic distribution
- governance
- size
- discipline
- multiple agencies represented

The six case study institutions were:

1. University of Kentucky Art Museum, Lexington, KY
2. William S. Webb Museum of Anthropology, Lexington, KY
3. University of Denver Anthropology Department, Denver, CO
4. Denver Museum of Natural History, Denver, CO
5. Museum of Northern Arizona, Flagstaff, AZ
6. Newark Museum, Newark, NJ

The following things were found:

1. Discipline
- Art is the best documented discipline due to the relatively low number of objects.
- Archeology is the largest component and had the strongest legal foundation for Federal involvement and acquisition.
- Natural History has the least consensus regarding the role of Federal involvement and also the least accessible data.

2. Size
There was no strong pattern regarding large and small institutions except that large institutions have more diverse sources of funding.

3. Governance
Museums governed by parent institutions with broader or unrelated missions often do not receive strong support.

4. Geographic
- Issues are very similar throughout the country
- The individual players change

Issues:

1. Who owns what?
There is no simple answer.
Reasons:
- changing land status and boundaries
- origin of collections is often not precisely recorded
- multiple agency associations
- permit granting agency
- funding agency
- land managing agency
- agency doing the work
- multiple funding sources

Who owns the collection if 80% is Federally funded and 20% is non-Federally funded?

The focus needs to be on access and stewardship of the collection rather than determining who owns what. We need to share resources rather than fight over ownership.

2. Communication between agencies and non-Federal institutions varies from good to poor to no relations at all; agencies are sometimes not aware that collections exist.

Some relationships are clearly defined, some are vaguely defined, and some are not defined at all.

It is important to encourage formal cooperative agreements that clearly define the responsibilities of the institutions and of the agencies.

3. Regulatory impacts
-Fish and Wildlife Service regulations govern management of migratory birds, eagles, and endangered species.
-Do guidelines of funding agencies define responsibilities for curating objects generated by particular projects?

4. Whose standards are we trying to meet?
- American Association of Museums?
- Federal (36CFR79)?
- Individual agencies?
- Institutions?

Can we define common standards for inventory requirements or data processing?

Are there common elements for authority granting access to collections?

Who is responsible for approving loans and destructive sampling analysis?

These things are often undefined.

5. What qualifies as a Federal repository?
- Formal designations of Federal repositories seen as threatening by smaller museums - "Regional" focus is not practical if "regions" are too large; arbitrary transfers may take collections far from their place of origin.

6. What is meant by "in perpetuity"?

7. Do agencies and institution boards understand ongoing maintenance?

What We Learned:

  1. Most institutions are doing a good job within the context of available resources.
  2. Most institutions could do a better job if additional resources were available.
  3. Many different kinds of "Federal associations" exist
  4. Response of Federal agencies toward curatorial care of their associated collections ranges from excellent to non-existent.
  5. We need to avoid mutually contradictory agency policies and to work toward common standards.
  6. Simple single-source solutions probably will not succeed. Solutions need to exist at a local and regional level with the national level as the umbrella of support and guidance.
  7. Issues vary among the disciplines
  8. Responsibilities of agencies and institutions are often not well defined
  9. Attitude is the most important factor: Those with a "can-do attitude" will find a way, find resources, initiate partnerships, and get the job done.
  10. "Partnership" is a two-way street:
    - Neither partner has absolute authority
    - Each partner needs freedom to act within defined parameters

Redline

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