85/98 MOD Policy
Statement for the Principal Service Museums(U)
[D/DS Sec/1106/6: 89640MB]
Background
1. The
Quinquennial Review of the Principal Service Museums recommended that DS
Sec(Sec) drew up a Departmental policy statement for the museums, since none
currently existed. This task has been carried out by the Museum Working Party
and the statement at the ANNEX has been discussed with the Museums &
Galleries Commission.
2.
Following approval by the Service Personnel Policy Board, the Departmental
policy statement has been cleared by 2nd PUS. It will be reviewed every five
years at the time of the Quinquennial Review.
ANNEX
Ministry
Of Defence Policy Statement The Principal Service Museums
1. The
Department for Culture, Media and Sport is the lead Government department for
museum policy, the most recent statement of which, Treasures in Trust,
was published in July 1996. The Ministry of Defence, which sponsors the
principal Service museums, welcomed this statement and noted that the Service
museums have an important role on behalf of the nation as repositories of the
history and heritage of the three Armed Services. While not providing a direct
contribution to the ‘front line’, they have an influential part to play in
support of Defence Policy through the contribution to recruiting, the education
of Servicemen and in expressing the institutional persona of the Armed Forces;
in addition, they assist in raising public awareness of the role and
achievements of the Services.
2. The
principal Service museums are: the Royal Naval Museum, the Royal Marines
Museum, the Royal Navy Submarine Museum, the Fleet Air Arm Museum, the National Army Museum and the Royal Air
Force Museum.
3. All of
the principal Service museums are registered with the Charity Commission and
should aim to be registered with the Museums & Galleries Commission. The
museums should set themselves to achieve best practice in the relevant sectoral
standards for collections care e.g. Code of Practice on Archives and the
Museums & Galleries Commission Care of Collections series.
4. The purposes of the museums are to.
a. Collect, preserve and exhibit articles
and records relating to the history and traditions of their respective Armed
Service.
b. Collect, collate and publish
information relating to the history and traditions of their respective Armed
Service.
c. Encourage and carry out scholarship
and research into the history and traditions of their respective Armed Service
and make the product of this scholarship available through publications and
lectures as a means of nurturing the ethos of that Service.
d. Provide an educational resource for
the community with particular reference to children in relation to the National
Curriculum.
e. Raise public awareness of (ie role
and achievements of the United Kingdom's Armed Forces.
These will
be more specifically defined tor each museum in its Deed of Trust or Royal
Charter as applicable.
The
Principal Personnel Officer (PPO) of each Service is responsible for the
implementation of Ministry of Defence policy in respect of his Service
museum(s); PPO interests will be
handled by a nominated sponsor branch within his Top Level Budget area. Tri Service
museum policy is developed and co ordinated by the Defence Services
Secretary (DS Sec) in conjunction with advice provided by the following Central
divisions:
a. DOMD Policy on
machinery of government issues pertaining to Non Departmental Public Bodies and
the implementation of that policy by the Service museums.
b. RP(Fin)
Advice on Financial Memoranda and liaison with the Treasury and
National Audit Office.
c. GF Advice on Accounting Officer
responsibilities and gifting policy.
DS Sec is
also responsible for liaison with the Department for Culture, Media and Sport
and the Museums & Galleries Commission.
6. The museums are sponsored by the
Ministry of Defence as Non Departmental Public Bodies. The focus of the
Department's relationship with the Service museums is the corporate planning
process, which, together with the Financial Memorandum governing the management
of the Grant in Aid, forms the key element of the framework, within
which the museums run their own affairs.
7. The Ministry of Defence will provide an
annual Grant in Aid to each Service museum towards its maintenance,
staffing, operating and acquisition costs. The museum's Corporate Plan, which
will show all sources of income, including trading income and funding to be
raised by appeal, will form the basis of the museum's annual submission to its
sponsor branch for the Grant in Aid. This will be considered within
the normal annual LTC process. Museums are to be encouraged to become
financially more self reliant and to apply for development money through
the National Heritage Lottery Fund and European Commission funding; they should
in addition explore the applicability of funding through the Private Finance Initiative.
8. The precise terms and conditions, under
which the Grant in Aid and other assistance will be provided, will
be set out in a Financial Memorandum agreed between each museum and its sponsor
branch. The Financial Memorandum will be reviewed every 3 years, although
amendments may be made with the agreement of both parties as and when required.
9. The Ministry of Defence will consider
requests to gift to the museums, or transfer on the best
possible terms, artefacts, items of obsolete equipment and documents of agreed
historical significance within the constraints of Government Accounting
regulations and current Ministry of Defence policy.
10. The
Ministry of Defence will offer advice and, where practicable, training to
museum staff, where such training is agreed by the museum and the sponsor
branch to be relevant to the requirements of the Ministry of Defence.
11. Each
sponsor branch will produce a policy statement applicable to its Service in
respect of its principal museum(s).
12. Both
the Ministry of Defence and the sponsor branch policy statements will be
reviewed every 5 years at the time of the Quinquennial Review.