Treasure hunter finds rare Carausius coins – Telegraph

March 17th, 2008 by daniel pett

The Telegraph ran this story on page 15 today – Treasure hunter finds rare Carausius coins – Telegraph. We broke news on this back in January this year.

House of Lords debate transcript

March 14th, 2008 by daniel pett

The transcript of yesterday’s debate in the House of Lords, featuring Colin Renfrew and Rupert Redesdale amongst others, is now online at the theyworkforyou website.

House of Lords debate

March 13th, 2008 by daniel pett

The House of Lords held a debate this morning, which includes Lord Renfrew asking a question about the future of the Scheme. This can be seen for 28 days on the Parliament TV website and you need to watch about from about 15 – 20 minutes in. The transcript of the debate will be on the Theyworkforyou website tomorrow.

New perspectives: British history

March 11th, 2008 by daniel pett

This came round in our office notices today, a lecture in the British Museum Clore Centre, entitled “New perspectives: British history” given by Barry Cunliffe and Bonnie Greer.
They will be using the Museum’s collection to talk with young people about how archaeology is relevant today. Which is essentially very topical given the recent debates in Parliament about Heritage funding and World Heritage (eg Stonehenge.)

The details are:
Thursday 13 March, 18.30
Stevenson Lecture Theatre
Admission free, booking required

Booking information: telephone the Box Office on +44 (0)20 7323 8181 or book tickets in person at the Box Office, open 10.00 to 16.45 every day

You can also get tickets online at the BM site.

THE BT @ THE BM: NEW RESEARCH ON THE BAYEUX TAPESTRY

March 11th, 2008 by daniel pett

My colleague would like to draw our readership’s attention to this conference that he is running; places going quickly now!

CONFERENCE ANNOUNCEMENT
An international conference on the Bayeux Tapestry at the British Museum

15 – 16 July 2008

The Bayeux Tapestry has attained near iconic status. Although extremely well known because it
depicts one of the most famous events in English history and is the subject of numerous studies,
many aspects of the Tapestry remain contentious – even enigmatic. In recent years there has been increased interest in the Bayeux Tapestry and further advances in our understanding of it, with scholars examining how, where and why it was made, questioning its reliability and value as a historical source, and excavating its hidden meanings.

This conference seeks to highlight recent and new research on the Tapestry, and to disseminate
those findings to a wider audience, in the hope of furthering discussion, debate and the sharing
of ideas about this unique textile.

SPEAKERS

David Bates, George Beech, Pierre Bouet, Shirley Ann Brown, Richard Burt, Michael R Davis, Martin Foys, Jill Frederick, Jane Geddes, Carola Hicks, David Hill, Liesbeth van Houts, Sylvette Lemagnen, Michael Lewis, John McSween, Gale Owen-Crocker, Linda Neagley, François Neveux,
Elizabeth Pastan, Derek Renn, David Spear, Patricia Stephenson, Dan Terkla, Hirokazu Tsurushima, Carol Neuman de Vegvar, Stephen White, Ann Williams, and Gareth Williams.

CONFERENCE FEE

The fees for this conference are £10 a day or £15 for both days.
Please send a cheque (payable to The British Museum),
together with your contact details, to

Dr Michael Lewis
Portable Antiquities and Treasure
British Museum
London WC1B 3DG
For further details, contact Michael Lewis:
mlewis@thebritishmuseum.ac.uk
Telephone +44 (0)20 7323 8611

Bayeux Conference flyer

Schedule of speakers

More Swivel stuff

March 11th, 2008 by daniel pett

Alun Salt picked up on the fact that I’ve been adding data tables to the Swivel website last week, and he mentioned that he couldn’t see a way of comparing different data sets. You can in fact do this as the graph below demonstrates.

Finds and Records vs. Number of Treasure cases in England and Wales Number of Treasure Cases vs. Number of Treasure cases in England and Wales Number of Treasure Cases

To create a comparison between two datasets is quite easy, follow these steps:

  1. Click on graphs
  2. Look for the legend – Create Graph by searching and comparing data
  3. Search for a dataset, in this case I retained number of finds found in England & Wales
  4. Click on the dataset and then this appears on the right hand screen
  5. Click on the search tab and search (I entered England) and look for a results set with a matching data column (in this case it will be temporal)
  6. I chose Treasure cases and then clicked on it
  7. This then produces the composite graph that is seen above and if you have an account you can save the result and play around with it.

Now this is not quite the scenario that Alun suggested, but it does show what you can do… As more data becomes available, and their community adds it, the more exciting it becomes. A couple of weeks ago, I had a telephone chat with their development team about their API that is under development. It looks as though it might have some good features that will allow the automatic adding of data to their website by scripts. Therefore, a live datafeed could be established that keeps the data we provide up to the minute.

I think that the Swivel tools are actually quite exciting and make statistical analysis alot easier for the less mathematically inclined, like our PhD student PJ Walton! Which reminds me, I need to make her write something more about her research as it is now getting far more interesting.

Sunday Times mentions the Scheme

March 9th, 2008 by daniel pett

A surprising place for the Scheme to be mentioned came up today in the Sunday Times ‘In Gear‘ section. The facts are slightly skewed regarding Treasure and I don’t think the author did his research in depth. But hey, at least it is publicity at a time when we need it!

Free publications/ Roman Rural Britain Atlas

March 6th, 2008 by daniel pett

Sally Worrell sent this to our staff today and some of our readers might be interested:

What a bargain – Wessex Archaeology are getting rid of some of their publications for free and you only have to pay £2.50 for p&p! Visit their website at: http://news.wessexarch.co.uk/2008/02/29/free-archaeological-publications/
Variationen von http://www.meinepoker.de/kein-runterladen-casino-poker-spiele.html.
Also, just to let you know that the long-awaited ‘An atlas of Roman rural settlement in England’ by Jeremy Taylor has just been published by the CBA and costs £14.95. It looks at the characterisation, mapping and assessment of later Iron Age and Roman rural settlement and uses data from all SMRs and publications etc (but not the PAS).
http://www.britarch.ac.uk/pubs/latest.html

Cautopates figurine

March 6th, 2008 by daniel pett

The figurine of CautopatesOne of the more interesting finds to come through the Scheme’s identification service this year is an intriguing figurine depicting the Mithraic attendant Cautopates. This was found by a metal detector user (November 2007) in North Yorkshire and reported to Amy Cooper, our local FLO for South and West Yorkshire. Amy was assisted with the identification by Dave Weldrake, and the description of this object is such:

A copper alloy figurine dating from the Roman period. It is 81.5mm long, 33.9mm wide and 11.2mm thick. It depicts Cautopates who is one of Mithras’s two attendants. The Cult of Mithras was popularly followed by the soldiers who were stationed in Britain, though it excluded women. Mithras and his companions are usually depicted in Persian dress, normally consisting of trousers and Phrygian caps. The companions, Cautes and Cautopates represent the opposing attributes of light and dark, or life and death, symbolised by the position of the torch they hold. Cautes holds his up, allowing it to burn, while Cautopates holds his down, extinguishing it. Mithraic temples had to be near water for purification purposes, and it is interesting that this figurine was found near both a Roman fort and a river (Henig 1984).

The figurine depicts Cautopates standing facing forwards with his head turned to his right. His legs are crossed at the ankles, his right hand holds his torch pointing downwards, and his left hand rests on his waist. He wears trousers, a tunic, a cloak and a Phrygian cap. There is no evidence for attachment to a larger object, but the figurine is not free standing. The back has detailed moulding as well as the front.

The Cult of Mithras was popular until the advent of Roman Christianity under Constantine. It is therefore likely that this figurine dates from between AD 43 and about AD 307. Another depiction of Mithras and his attendants can be seen on page 103 of ‘Religion in Roman Britain’ by Henig (1984).

You can see this example on our database as SWYOR-9FCBB3

Transcript of debate in Westminster Hall

March 6th, 2008 by daniel pett

The following comes from a DeHavilland Alert, and a public account of this will be available shortly at theyworkforyou.com. I have not corrected a couple of errors within the text; however please note the 690,000 should read as 190,000 and diary should read as dowry.

MPs debate Portable Antiquities Scheme
Wed, 5 March 2008 | Debate – Adjournment and General

Portable Antiquities Scheme
4.30 pm
Mark Fisher (Stoke-on-Trent, Central) (Lab):

I am grateful to you, Mr. Benton, and to Mr. Speaker for allowing me to address this issue in this short debate.

Over the past 10 years, the field of antiquities in England and Wales has been transformed-there is no other word for it-by the Treasure Act 1996 and by the portable antiquities scheme. After years of campaigning and lobbying, pressure and private Member’s Bills, led by number of people, particularly Lord Poole in the other place and Sir Anthony Grant in the House-and, in a small way, myself-the Treasure Act came into force in 1997. The portable antiquities scheme was started in the same year and it effectively animated and augmented the 1996 Act, which requires a small proportion of archaeological finds that qualify as treasure to be reported and offered to museums.

The portable antiquities scheme, which is a voluntary scheme, complements the 1996 Act by encouraging anyone who finds an archaeological object to report it to a finds liaison officer at a local museum. There are 49 such finds officers throughout England and Wales, from Cornwall to Durham and from Bristol to Suffolk. The scheme is administered by the British Museum on behalf of the Museums, Libraries, and Archive Council.

The effect of the scheme has been extraordinary. In 2007, 77,500 objects were recorded on the online database that now contains, after 10 years, 320,000 objects and 160,000 images. That is the largest database of its kind in the world, and it hugely extends our understanding of our post-iron age world. I say “post-iron age” because almost all the finds have been discovered by metal detectors, so we do not discover quite as many pre-iron age objects, which are discovered by chance or other means. In such areas of archaeology, which account for a great deal of our past, the effect has been extraordinary.

The centre for the scheme in Staffordshire, in and around my constituency, is the Potteries Museum in Stoke-on-Trent in the middle of my constituency. North Staffordshire is an interesting area, archaeologically. A gentleman called Mr. Tony Rhodes, a metal detectorist, found a bronze age sword that was 2,500 years old a couple of years before the scheme came into effect, unfortunately. However, that sword sits proudly in our local museum. Recently, a unique copper alloy Roman bowl, now known as the Staffordshire moorlands pan, was discovered. The names of four of the forts on Hadrian’s wall are written on it. It is of considerable archaeological importance and was acquired jointly by the Potteries Museum in Stoke-on-Trent, Tullie House, the excellent museum in Carlisle, and the British Museum. With such finds, the scheme is redrawing the archaeological map of England and Wales. In the last three years, its data has revealed 24 new Roman settlements in Wiltshire alone, which is an increase of 15 per cent. Suddenly, the Roman-Britannic map of Wiltshire is being changed because of finds under the scheme, so hon. Members can see how important the scheme is.

If the portable antiquities scheme is such a great success, why do we need this debate and what is the problem? This year, thanks to good lobbying by my hon. Friend the Minister and the then Secretary of State for Culture, Media and Sport, now the Secretary of State for Work and Pensions, there was a good comprehensive spending review settlement. Everybody who is interested in this area has probably already congratulated both my hon. Friend the Minister and my right hon. Friend the Secretary of State and, neatly, the subsequent Secretary of State for Culture, Media and Sport, his successor, who was at the time Chief Secretary to the Treasury and happened to provide this good settlement. Everybody was happy and all the national museums, including the British Museum, received inflation-proof increases. The important Renaissance programme in the regions, for example, was ring-fenced and was similarly well treated, but, bafflingly, the portable antiquities scheme was not.

The portable antiquities scheme is administered by the MLA and it was not ring-fenced. The core budget of the MLA will be cut by 25 per cent. over the next three years. The implication is that the scheme will suffer in the same way. The MLA has proposed that the scheme’s budget for 2008-09 be frozen at its present level of £1.3 million.

David Taylor (North-West Leicestershire) (Lab/Co-op):

Staffordshire is interesting in this sense and so is Leicestershire, which is why I tabled written questions in November, February and March and oral questions in January. My hon. Friend mentioned the £1.3 million, but does he think that the Minister should tell the House that, even at that level, redundancies are still likely to take place, including some valuable education officers who are crucial to the success of the scheme in future? That is why I am seeing the local finds liaison officer in my constituency office on Friday. The PAS may be secure in the short term, but it is still short of funds because of its success.

Mark Fisher:

My hon. Friend is right. If the budget is frozen at its present level of £1.3 million, that will in effect be a cut in real terms, because to stand still and not expand the scheme at all would require £1.49 million. If that £690,000 is not found, three posts in the PAS will be lost.


Mr. Michael Fallon
(Sevenoaks) (Con):

The hon. Gentleman has eloquently described how the scheme has transformed the archaeological map of Britain, nationally. Is not the real fear that, unless the scheme is properly funded, we will end up simply with a series of regional schemes that are not properly co-ordinated?

Mark Fisher:

Absolutely. The regional element is important and feeds into Renaissance in the regions. My hon. Friend the Member for North-West Leicestershire (David Taylor) will know about a wonderful museum in Leicester that is directed by a Mrs. Sarah Levitt, who, by a curious coincidence, is the sister of my hon. Friend the Member for High Peak (Tom Levitt). Mrs. Levitt does an extremely good job in a distinguished, important museum.

If the scheme’s budget is frozen at its present level, there would be a real cut. These are small sums in Government terms but big sums for the scheme. The hon. Member for Sevenoaks (Mr. Fallon) is right: a national scheme could be reduced to a local scheme. The local element is crucial in all of this, of course, but it needs context. The custodianship of the British Museum, under the directorship of Mr. Neil MacGregor, is crucial and gives credibility, stability and good international, scholarly expertise and contacts for the scheme to operate. We need both detailed local work on finds and the umbrella of the British Museum, with its scholars, to make sense of the individual finds and put them into a much wider archaeological map.

Already, even at the present time, we have too few finds liaison officers, although the scheme operates well. There is only one finds liaison officer for the whole of the north-east-from Teeside up to the Scottish border-which is an area of incredible archeological importance and includes Hadrian’s wall and many other important sites. There is just one officer for that whole area.

Mr. Edward Vaizey (Wantage) (Con) rose-

Mark Fisher:

The hon. Gentleman who wishes to intervene may talk about his own area, but in Berkshire and Oxfordshire-he will correct me in a moment if I am wrong-I do not think that there is anyone in post. Again, that is a most important archaeological area.

Mr. Vaizey:

I congratulate the hon. Gentleman on securing this important debate. He is correct: at the moment Oxfordshire does not have a finds liaison officer because of uncertainty over the budget. Is he also aware that even when a finds liaison officer is appointed, they will not be able to cover Berkshire anymore, so that area will also be without an officer?

Mark Fisher:

I did not know that. Berkshire is an extremely important area, which covers the Thames valley and a lot of settlements, so it should not have only one officer. We need to expand the scheme and it seems tragic not to do so when it is such a success. If the scheme is frozen and cut over the next year, it will be a tragedy.

Generally, there is much concern in the House about this matter. It is interesting to note that such a number of people have attended this debate as they are sometimes not very well attended occasions. That reflects the concern about this issue. Almost everybody in the Chamber has signed the early-day motion from last year, which now has almost 280 signatures. That is an extraordinarily large number of signatures for a matter of cultural significance. When the budget settlement for the scheme was mooted last year, I visited Mr. Roy Clare of the Museums, Libraries and Archives Council with a number of other former arts Ministers-Lord Inglewood, Baroness Morris, Lord Howarth and the hon. Member for Salisbury (Robert Key), who sadly is not here, but who takes a great interest in these matters. In addition, we all formally and informally talked to the Minister and received a sympathetic hearing on all sides-I hope that it will also be an effective hearing.

There is concern in the House about the matter and that is reflected by what has been taking place. It is a wonderful scheme and it would be terribly sad if it was cut and held back. The scheme needs to be sustained and to do so requires very modest sums of money. It also needs to have a secure future. We need to know that there will be a three-year settlement at the very least, so that the British Museum, the MLA and everybody else can plan for the future of the scheme.

The scheme is too good to be cut, and there are solutions to hand that I shall briefly mention. The British Museum has been responsible for administering the scheme and has done so very well and therefore understands the importance of the scheme. Unlike the MLA, the British Museum has scholars rooted in the scheme and therefore it seems to be the ideal repository for it. If responsibility for the scheme could be transferred from the MLA to the British Museum-I gather from Mr. MacGregor that the British Museum is happy for that to happen-a real understanding and ownership of the scheme could develop. That would not only give the scheme security and continuity, but would send out the message to professional people and, crucially, amateurs and metal detector users around the country that the scheme is safe, is in good hands and will be secure.

I hope that the Minister will say that things will be worked out and that the British Museum will either be responsible for the scheme in future or will be more involved. I also hope that she will inform us that the funding will be secure and inflation proof, particularly over the next few years. That is crucial. After the budget settlement, I know that it might be quite difficult for the Minister to do, but these are relatively small sums and I hope, with her great skill, she will find something in a side-drawer of her Department that will enable her to make up the balance. The scheme is of real importance and is admired throughout the world. I understand that somebody from the British Museum who is involved with the scheme talked to Congress in Washington last year because there is such widespread national interest. We are pioneering the world of archaeology with the scheme as it incorporates and involves non-professionals and professional scholars in a quite remarkable way. The scheme touches the bases of scholarship and of widening access. We, in the House of Commons, cannot afford to let the scheme stall or flounder.

4.44 pm
The Minister of State, Department for Culture, Media and Sport (Margaret Hodge):

I warmly congratulate my hon. Friend the Member for Stoke-on-Trent, Central (Mark Fisher) on securing the debate. I would like to acknowledge formally his huge contribution to getting us where we are today. We have a scheme of which everybody is rightly proud. The information he has given us supports the importance of the scheme in the ecology of what we have in relation to archaeology in this country. Congratulations to my hon. Friend on that. I also acknowledge that there has been considerable concern about the funding of the scheme from a number of hon. Members who are present.

For the record, I shall say a little about the scheme itself. My hon. Friend was right to say that the scheme was first set up as a pilot-probably when he was Minister with responsibilities for these matters-to complement the treasure system put in place to administer the Treasure Act 1996. The interesting thing about the 1996 Act is that it obliges those who find objects that fall under the definition of treasure to report them to their local coroner within 14 days so that we as a society can have the security of knowing that such objects will be held.

In a way, the scheme celebrates local history. What I have seen of the scheme during my time as Minister is that it is a powerful way in which to engage local people, particularly those who use metal detectors. It allows people to understand, celebrate and commemorate local history and it is great to see that happening. People do find some absolutely wonderful things. I have seen some really exciting and interesting objects. Those who use metal detectors are a bit like fishermen fishing on the land or on dry territory. It is a very lonely experience for those who use metal detectors, but it is incredibly rewarding to uncover something that helps us to better understand our past.

My hon. Friend was right to say that the scheme has been a huge success. The way in which we have run the scheme has been a win-win for everybody. The finder and the landowner are rewarded for their efforts in bringing the treasure into the public domain and the public benefit by being able to see and learn from the important relics of their community’s past. The other joy of the scheme is that it is pretty accessible. Everyone, whether a post-graduate researcher at one of our top universities or a young person entering secondary school, can access the information provided by the scheme on the website. Some 320,000 separate objects are catalogued on the website and are accessible to us all. In 2006, which is the last year for which we have figures, 250,000 individual users accessed the data, which are incredibly important for students and currently being used for a number of PhD theses and other dissertations.

On the funding of the scheme, which is what I think hon. Members want to discuss, although we had a good settlement-I am grateful for the kind comments of my hon. Friend-it was nevertheless a tight fiscal settlement. We have tried to ensure that the money went into priorities right across the Department for Culture, Media and Sport family. My hon. Friend will know that we ring-fenced some money for the renaissance programme. That was the right thing to do. The renaissance programme has been hugely effective in improving the quality and the environment of many of our regional museums. If we consider the figures on who accesses the treasures, as a result of the renaissance programme and regional infrastructure developments, people who in the past would probably never have gone into a museum now take the first step across the threshold and enjoy the benefits that that can bring them. That was a very good way of determining how to use a budget which, although better than many other budgets, was not as much as we would have needed to carry on all the programmes and expansions of programmes that we would have liked. We took a priority decision.

The portable antiquities scheme sits as part of the Museums, Libraries and Archives Council family. My hon. Friend is right to say that the MLA has had a considerable cut in its financial settlement and must look for considerable savings. Even with the best will in the world, we could not have protected entirely the portable antiquities scheme from the fiscal constraints that we all face. Getting a flat cash settlement for 2008-09, which is what it has, is not bad in relation to many other organisations that we fund, which are having to look to the future. Every organisation should constantly examine how it functions and how it can renew itself, to see whether it can eke out efficiencies. We should not protect any organisation from that endeavour.

Mark Fisher:

I think that hon. Members will have considerable sympathy with what the Minister is saying, but she knows very well, being extremely experienced, that a standstill budget is much easier for a large organisation to handle than it is for a small organisation, although it is difficult for anybody. There is no leeway in something tiny such as the portable antiquities scheme. As I said in my speech, a standstill budget for that scheme, stuck at £1.3 million, will mean a cut in real terms-a cut in field officers, who are already very thin on the ground.

Margaret Hodge:

I hear what my hon. Friend says, but I have to say that although some of our budgets may look larger in their totality, they are, of course, distributed to many relatively small organisations. We could say the same of the renaissance programme. We could have taken a bit more money off the renaissance programme and put a bit more money into the MLA, but the impact of that on a programme that is just beginning to blossom and yield results could have been deeply damaging. We could say the same of most of the non-departmental public bodies that are responsible for distributing the resources that we give them. I am not sure that the portable antiquities scheme can be protected any more than any of our other bodies.

However, I have listened very hard, as the MLA and others have, to the representations that we have had from all hon. Members here today and others who have written to me or made representations either to me or directly to the MLA. I am pleased to say that an agreement in principle has now been reached between the British Museum and the MLA to ensure that the British Museum takes the lead and controls and runs the scheme in the future.

However-there are always provisos and these things will have to be negotiated-the British Museum and the MLA will undertake jointly a review of the way in which the portable antiquities scheme is run. That is right and proper to ensure that we maximise value for money. Then a financial negotiation will have to take place between the two organisations to determine what the diary should be after the review has taken place, so that we are clearer as to where we are.

Tim Loughton (East Worthing and Shoreham) (Con):

I applaud the Minister’s enthusiasm for the scheme, which many of us feel very strongly about. I am delighted to hear the news and we have heard that things are going on in the background, but will she clarify a couple of matters? I understand that the transfer from the MLA to the British Museum may not happen until 2009-10, rather than this year, as had been anticipated. There is also a particular problem about the scheme issuing new three-year contracts to the 39 finance liaison officers, which it needs to do from 1 April, so it needs to have the security of the next three years, if it is to be run by the British Museum. Will she address that point? Also, in terms of it being right that there should be a review, will she acknowledge that the efficiencies in the scheme, which has produced, I think, a 73 per cent. increase in the finds recorded year on year, are absolutely phenomenal? In terms of bang for the taxpayer’s buck, this is an incredibly efficient scheme.

Margaret Hodge: May I deal with the first point first? The MLA, I and others have all stated that we want to secure the future of the scheme over this three-year period. The issue in question is the level of funding that goes with that. That must be subject to the review that is taking place to see whether there is an opportunity to eke out further efficiencies or different ways of doing things. Then it has to be subject to financial negotiations between the British Museum and the MLA. The agreement is there in principle, so on the assumption that the organisation does transfer to the British Museum, the British Museum may well be able to attract other resources for this purpose, with the freedoms that it has to raise finance externally.

I cannot in this Chamber today define the precise financial parameters of the budget in year 2 and year 3, because there will be a change. Were the organisation to stay with the MLA, that would be easier. Because there will be change, it has to be subject to the detailed negotiations for which we do not have responsibility, and then to any joy that Neil MacGregor has, if and when it transfers to the British Museum, in trying to raise additional resources. The MLA has been a much maligned partner in this endeavour over time. It recognises as much as everyone else how valued and valuable the scheme is, but it, too, must face financial constraints that we have imposed on it to ensure that we get best value for money from the resources available.

I know from discussions that I have had with both parent organisations-the MLA and the British Museum-that there really is a will now to undertake the review together. It will be jointly commissioned, jointly led and jointly supervised, which is an important step forward. There is an agreement in principle for the transfer, but we have to leave it to them, subject to the review, to sort out the details of the funding.

Mr. Vaizey:

I am grateful to the Minister for clarifying in effect that nothing is quite clear about the future of the portable antiquities scheme. People want the scheme to be transferred from 1 April. The portable antiquities scheme needs to know its budgets for the three years. Will she clarify one point? She said that renaissance funds were ring-fenced, but is it not the case that if there is some form of synergy between renaissance and the portable antiquities scheme, some renaissance funds could be used to subsidise the portable antiquities scheme?

Margaret Hodge:

The portable antiquities scheme is not under threat. Its future has been secured. I repeat that there is an agreement in principle for the scheme to be transferred to the British Museum. That must be subject, quite properly, to two things. The first is the review, which I think all hon. Members accept is a sensible way to go. Secondly, detailed-

Mr. Vaizey indicated dissent.

Margaret Hodge:

The hon. Gentleman may disagree. I think that every organisation should constantly-

Mr. Vaizey rose-

Margaret Hodge:

I am running out of time, but I will give way briefly.

Mr. Vaizey:

Just to make it clear, the review is driven by the cuts; there is no other reason for the review.

Margaret Hodge:

No, I disagree with that. Every organisation that enjoys any benefits in the form of resources from the public purse should be consistently reviewing its processes and how it operates, and can, every year, eke out some savings. Having been involved in the running of organisations over many years, I think that that is possible. Then there will have to be detailed negotiations. The hon. Gentleman raises the issue of whether some of the renaissance moneys could be used for that. They could. We have to ensure that that does not in any way undermine the renaissance programme, and that is the responsibility of the MLA. We have to see what the review brings out and whether, when the organisation is transferred to the British Museum, that does not facilitate and open up the opportunity for attracting resources from other sources and therefore providing greater stability.

The portable antiquities scheme is very highly valued, but it has to go through a process at a difficult time, as others do-

It being Five o’clock, the motion for the Adjournment of the sitting lapsed, without Question put.

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