Culture, Media and Sport Committee — Oral Evidence (HC 1764)
I think it is still there. Thank you for doing this meticulous piece of work. When are the new proposals going to be discussed? We have talked about funding innovation, but there are a lot of recommendations. You mentioned the controversial libraries one, the idea of commercialising has come up, a new funding model with a proposal to stretch from three years to five years, doubling gift aid, new tax incentives, and the French model exploring that—there is a lot going on there. If you were to choose one of those fiscal reform proposals, which do you think would have the most immediate impact on the financial sustainability of a sector that is still destabilised from covid? Baroness Hodge of Barking: I want them all; let me start with that.
Can you give us one? Baroness Hodge of Barking: The touring tax relief, because quite a lot of organisations cut touring when their money is cut. If we go back to my principle of access to excellence, touring is an absolutely key way of doing that. We were in Norfolk, which has little receiving theatres. It is about to close down a theatre in a rural area because nobody can afford to tour anymore as they cannot pay for Airbnb and transport. It is as simple as that. Another issue is orchestras. We are brilliant at music and Europe loves our music. Post Brexit, when you have to pay for visas, transport, and a whole lot of bureaucracy, orchestras are finding they cannot travel as much. The important thing is that they make money when they go abroad. It gives them money that they can reinvest in the activities of British people here at home. As it does not count as an expenditure item, it is a tax relief; it would be quite easy for the Treasury to do and would have the most immediate effect. On the other side, I would say capital because capital is always easier. There is an incredible backlog on capital; it is really difficult. Large national bodies are also in trouble on that. One suggestion questioned whether places such as the RSC and National Theatre should repay their covid loans. I was a bit cross about that. If you think about it, in the old days the British Council put money into the arts. Nesta was established by the Labour Government with 250 million quid, which was supposed to be entirely for arts and culture. Nesta has pulled out of arts and culture now and does other stuff so it does seem to me that, if you had a trading arm—going back to a change in the charter to the Arts Council—you could then give it that capital sum, which it can circulate over time. Dr Huq: Touring would be part of the EU reset, which is still going on. Baroness Hodge of Barking: It could be. That is probably the easiest and would not just have an impact on the organisations but an impact on what they offer. Q17            Dr Huq: We have seen DCMS-commissioned research from January 2026, which estimates that £2 billion in funding and a £3 billion cash injection is needed immediately to keep the buildings in operation: repair, maintenance, and the renewal of existing cultural venues. Do you think Arts Council England can play a meaningful role in addressing this crisis or does it need a different mindset from Government? Baroness Hodge of Barking: It needs more money. There are all sorts of issues, and the Southbank Centre is an interesting example. The Southbank Centre has massive capital. It was built over 75 years ago. The obvious thing for it to do would be to sell the asset and then use the money to improve it. It cannot sell the asset because of the way in which it was constructed. I am sure it is not beyond the wit of somebody to sort that out. You could say the same about London Coliseum. There are ways in which we could tackle that capital deficit in a more imaginative way by allowing different schemes that would help. It is all about the margin. You need more money, and capital is easier for the Government to access and is good for growth. If you put it in the context of growth, it is a good place to put capital, which is why we put in Nesta. Let us at least have the £250 million that Nesta had. You could do other things with the Southbank Centre; change its terms and it could fund it in a very different way. I think the same with London Coliseum. Q18            Dr Huq: We visited there. The thing I remember the most is that it has had to change the seating because of obesity. The 1950s dimension of a human is so different to now. We are talking about funding innovation, and with your proposals there are quite a lot of ideas to link fiscal reform with improved philanthropy. Could you say a bit more on that? Baroness Hodge of Barking: This is a guess. If I am absolutely honest, this is part of our trying to get more investment into the regions as well. If you look at philanthropy, two thirds of the philanthropic money comes into London and the south-east. The idea would be that you increase the gift aid rebate if you give outside the M25, or something like that. You would have to define it. You can double it or something, make it 50%. Would it work? I do not know, but it is a way of having a go at it that might help. If you look at French law, there is an amazing tax deduction. It is below the line so it does not increase the DCMS budget and is an easier way for Government to fund if you are looking for innovative ways of funding below the line. If you increase the tax take below the line it does not tell above the line. You could do that as well. I just wanted to say something that is important: we ought to look at the way corporates are now running away from funding for reputational reasons. They are running away from funding the arts and culture, which is a real problem. This is a really central role that the Arts Council should fulfil. It should negotiate and produce some guidance under which organisations can function. I put it in one sentence in the report, but it is an increasingly important break on philanthropy that we should be tackling. I do not know whether these ideas would work, but they are worth a try. If they do not work then we try again and do something else, but they are worth having a go with. Dr Huq: As an outer-London MP, I sometimes feel that because there are so many things of national significance in London, people assume that it goes to the centre. The Ealing Project closed in the last year—it was a venue where my 50th was. You are supposed to say, “You do not look 50!” It has closed its doors. I know that Pitzhanger Manor, our local stately home, is putting in a portfolio bid and would love to get some funding. You were an outer-London MP and have looked after Stratford East; it sometimes feels that it all goes to the very centre. Baroness Hodge of Barking: I realised that when I talked to large organisations in Birmingham, it was a deliberate decision under the Thatcher Government, I think, to fund those organisations in Birmingham and attract audiences from around the area into Birmingham to increase the activity. It was a deliberate economic decision. I know it was many years ago but, having taken that decision, we cannot suddenly abort it or say, “Birmingham has too much orchestra,” or “Birmingham has too much dance.” We have to stand by it. The same is probably true with quite a lot of London. I am totally against the postcode strategy that the Arts Council had in forcing local authorities to relocate their HQs. I was talking to an opera touring company which is now in Sheffield, but it was in London. Although 95% of its activity was outside London, three of its HQ people were in London so it was counted as a London organisation. There has to be some sensible thinking about how you define activity. It is the activity that matters, not the location of your HQ.
Your review highlighted the severe challenges facing touring, such as rising costs, reduced touring capacity, and tax relief structures that no longer reflect the reality of touring. What is the most important intervention needed to ensure that touring remains viable?
The tax relief. Full stop. Absolutely sure.
That was quick. Thank you. For those organisations that are already on the brink of stopping touring altogether, is there anything immediate that you think might—
It is money. You talk to a lot of organisations that, if they have to cut something, cut their touring. You somehow have to get a bit more money into it. It is more expensive. Goodness knows what is going to happen to travelling costs with the current crisis. Literally, it is about paying for that. It is such a silly little thing. Actually, as with touring, kids do not go to museums any more because the schools cannot afford to pay for the buses. There are all those sorts of little things.
It is the buses.
Is that wrong?
No, you are absolutely right, and it rarely gets talked about. The cost of coach travel has changed so much.
I might have followed up on the same point. It is the same reason I cannot get my schools to come here. It is the cost of coach travel.
In our education that is one of the key things that we want to raise money for because you can change the curriculum, but every child should be going to a theatre, a museum, or a concert. They all should experience all these things but you just have to get them there. It is ridiculous; it is crazy. What I am suggesting, knowing there is not much money—there is a lot of money in the trust and foundations, and there are a lot of philanthropists who would respond to educational and training initiatives. Corporations might too. If you get DfE and DCMS working more collaboratively with a big fund, you could do something around that too.
Yes, I would hope so. There is then the matter of touring in the EU. We recently had a session on performing arts touring in the EU. We heard that changes to orchestra tax relief now block orchestras from claiming key EU touring costs, causing losses of up to £400,000. You highlighted the same issue. What steps should be taken to stop those additional costs from permanently shrinking the UK’s international touring capacity?
They have to be allowed to claim tax relief on everything from visas to all the bureaucracy associated now with going to Europe, and the costs of moving instruments across Europe. They have to be eligible for tax relief. The only other thing I would say about the tax relief system is that it is HMRC-run and it is bad at paying. All these organisations really work on the margins. I am suggesting that it should do it like VAT. Some organisations borrow against their expected tax relief, which is crazy. It just needs more efficiency in the way HMRC gives them the money to which they are entitled.
Would you be in support of a customs union between the UK and the EU, or do you think there is another measure by which you might—
I am not going to get drawn into that. I would be in support of a much closer relationship with Europe for 1,001 reasons.
It is not today’s subject.
Good answer.
That was beautifully handled, if I may say so, Baroness Hodge.
On support for freelancers and individuals, we all know there is a challenge with more working-class people coming into creative industries. I know that you highlighted some ideas and challenges in terms of Arts Council England at the moment. Could you highlight some?
I was obsessed with this when I was Culture Minister; I bet you were too. Once you had come out of your conservatoire, or your drama school or whatever, you had to have money behind you to risk the first year or couple of years. I have a daughter who is a theatre director and we said to her that we could afford it. We said, “We’ll fund you for the first year.” In fact, she was lucky and got work but nevertheless she knew she had that security behind her. We thought and thought and thought. This idea was put to me by Antony Gormley, funnily enough. He does not actually come from the most poverty-stricken background but when he came out of art college, he got 500 quid a year and a mentor from the Arts Council, which helped him through the first couple of years. It was from building on that that we have come to this idea that from the existing fund there should be—I cannot remember the name of the fund that it would come from, so apologies—
Developing Your Creative Practice.
Thank you. If you gave people £25,000 and a mentor—so all the admin costs—you could do 500. If you gave them £30,000 and a mentor, you could do 425. You would focus that entirely on people from lower-income backgrounds. You could do all sorts of diversity around it and you could do underserved areas. You could do it in areas where there is no great culture, among disabled applicants, and so on. Finally, part of their contract would be that they would go into local schools. You would get a little bit of an artist in residence in the schools to help bring culture back into education because all those skills have gone from schools. I would call that a national programme for individuals. We would have a national programme for organisations and a national programme for individuals. We have been very conservative. I would love to see it grow beyond that but we looked at the existing budget and thought that within that we could do it every year.
I have to confess that I thought that was a really good proposal. Do you think that ACE—Arts Council England—could include freelance artists in its governance and decision-making without adding another layer of administrative burden?
Yes, in two ways. First, local boards should have artists on them. People from the art and cultural sector should be represented there, as they are the most important people. That is one way of doing it. Secondly, our suggestion—this again came from people who have been around for ages and it was really popular—is that if you are putting an application in, you should have art form panels that would form a view. It is back to what we mean by excellence. At least then you would be talking to people who know that art form. They would form a view on whether that is a worthwhile application to support. That would be another way. Everybody I talked to—well, it won’t be everybody, but I think people would give their time voluntarily to do that. It brings art form back into the thinking of the Arts Council. I can see its argument there, because what it argues is that art forms are becoming more fused with AI. Maybe it will be different in 10 years’ time, but for the moment we still should have art form professionalism in the decision-making. That would be another way I would bring them in, and they would love to do it.
Yes, definitely. How do you envisage the freelance champion working with ACE to support freelancers and increase the supply of talent—I know that there have been delays in terms of them being appointed, but when they are?
I was quite surprised to see there were 48 directors doing different things in the Arts Council; this will be another one. Maybe less is more. They should be able to really focus and do their development roles. They must be so inundated with reading these ruddy papers that I never read as a chair. We need to get them off that and get them back into fulfilling these key roles. Vicky, the bigger thing in all this is that they are all underpaid. I do not have the figures in front of me but the average wage is something like under £25,000 for 75% of these freelancers. It is massively poor. Tackling that at a time when resources are so limited is really tough. That is why, if you could extend the scheme beyond the 500, it would be a positive way to encourage people. So many people took the decision not to come back into the arts post covid, which is tragic.
The report is really quite measured, thoughtful, and sensible in terms of the recommendations. Is there any outside stuff that really struck you in terms of making sure that we encourage more working-class people in and support freelancers even further, which you did not write into the actual recommendations but was quite obvious but might be unachievable?
It is more money. I was really conscious of trying to write a report within the constraints of where I know the Chancellor is. For example, let me take this idea that in underserved areas you employ two arts workers. Instead of plonking an organisation down, you employ two arts workers—I got this from a thing we used to do called creative partnerships. I do not know if you remember them but they were so successful. They were a really good intervention. You have these two people employed by the Arts Council going around and finding art. Local authorities are saying they should be employed by them, but I would have them employed by the Arts Council because you really want them to do arts and culture. Every community has someone: we went to one rural area where a woman ran a dance studio from her kitchen; another ran a theatre group from her living room; another ran a writers’ room from a pub. They are all there. Bring them out. Link them into education and build bottom up a real cultural offer in that area. Doing that together with touring brings you access to excellence, rather than just plonking an organisation in.
We have heard that the VAT on school fees is having a cooling effect on the number of bursaries that some conservatoires, dance, and music colleges are able to give to really gifted students from lower-income backgrounds. I know it does not necessarily fall 100% within the remit of the Arts Council, but it is one of those unintended consequences where you would end up throwing money at a situation when actually a solution was there. The bursaries were flowing, and the Billy Elliots of this world were coming through the system. I met a charming lead dancer from the English National Ballet who had come through the system that way. It was incredible. To what extent have you heard that kind of evidence on your travels?
I have heard about that. The Education Minister is reviewing it to have a look at what is happening there. Getting culture back into our education system is a massive challenge, which is why I suggested setting up this fund. It could raise billions if we did it properly. That would help with the training. You could train people within schools. You would have to provide the instruments and the travel, again, to the museums or theatres. That very basic stuff has to come back. If there is not much money, you just have to raise it philanthropically—there is no other way of doing it. But if the two Departments were working together rather than somebody doing this, somebody doing that, and somebody doing the other, that would be a more powerful and effective intervention. I know that the Education Minister is reviewing an unintended consequence there. You could have her come in to talk to you. There is real enthusiasm, which is good to see. They are determined to bring culture back into the educational offer.
It just feels so heartbreaking if someone with such talent cannot afford to go to one of these elite schools—the bursaries that would have once been there have now been taken away because of the VAT.
I agree.
Margaret, for the avoidance of doubt, culture has never left the education system. You can have debates about aspects of it. As you say, let us get the Education Minister in, and we will hear about those plans. One of the themes in your report is for better data. It sounds as though there is pointless data collection going on from organisations that are busy trying to deliver actual art and culture, but instead in the stylised version they are filling in forms for somebody at the Arts Council who probably does not look at it. Is that fair to say? Can you maybe give us some examples to bring that to life?
I am not going to be good on examples, Damian, if I am honest but it is fair to say that that was the most ubiquitous comment. There was also anger.
Perhaps that is what happens when you have 48 directors. They all need some reading material. A spreadsheet is better than a—
There is good stuff there as well—somehow if it was better shared. This is not just the Arts Council, DCMS and probably Treasury are also asking for stuff. Remember, if you are an organisation, you might get funded by English Heritage, the lottery, or the Arts Council. Everybody has different forms; they all have different data requirements. Certainly, the DCMS organisations could all do one application and share data. There is too much data. I do not know if you sit on a board of a cultural organisation but it is crazy. You are sitting there as a volunteer with all the other things you are doing and you literally have a thing that thick.
In most sectors of business there are metrics that are commonly used. I worked in the travel trade and there are standard ways that you measure hotel occupancy, revenue per passenger kilometre on a plane, and this, that and the other. Are there common bits of data that you might expect Government Departments, the Arts Council and everybody else to standardise, so you are not having to reinvent stuff for everybody’s form?
I would have thought it would not take a terrific brain to sort those out. The other thing we heard a lot was that if you were an individual freelancer, you often had to fill in the same form as if you were—
A massive organisation.
All that was daft as well. I just need somebody to start again from scratch. Its system, Grantium, breaks down and the whole thing is an absolute disaster area. The other bit of money, Rupa, is that it has to have a system that works. It does not have that at the moment so it needs some IT investment. That would also be important. It will indirectly affect the organisations. I would just love to go through the whole lot and get rid of it.
A lot of us are probably struck by your 48 directors stat. At some point we will have the opportunity to go to the Arts Council directly and put some challenging questions to some of this stuff. Is it one of your recommendations that there just should not be anything like that number of senior management positions in the pyramid because there does not need to be? I wonder if you have looked at other equivalent cultural funding organisations in other countries, or if there is some way of benchmarking and saying what is a reasonable, efficient level of total spend on the administration, and in terms of what you need to have in senior management.
My understanding is that the percentage spent by the Arts Council is not disproportionate, so we are not bad on that. I would argue that it could use the money more effectively. Have I done the arithmetic and the detailed work on that? I have not. But if you were to reduce the bureaucratic tasks you could take people off doing that and they could be doing other jobs, or you could employ different people for different work. I do not know what the 48 directors all do, but undoubtedly some could fulfil that development role more effectively in convening, developing, promoting, advocating, and all that sort of stuff that the Arts Council should be doing. That is why I say that this is a radical programme of change. It is in the middle of appointing a new chair who will have to take that forward, but from the bottom of my heart I honestly just hope that they grasp it as an opportunity to undertake that change and do not think that they can fiddle at the edges.
In the process of appointing a new chair, what do you think would be the three most important characteristics that it should be looking for?
At this point in time in the organisation, it should be somebody who will be a change manager. It is important that the person can drive change and somebody who loves the arts. What else? They should also be a great advocate. That is off the top of my head, Caroline.
Sorry, it just came to me.
I say to them all that it will be a hard task to get to what I hope will be a better position. It will not deal with everything, but I hope it will be a better position.
One of the things you found in your report is that although the Arts Council has broadened the diversity of its funding, many stakeholders have still experienced its approach as inconsistent, tokenistic, and in some cases discriminatory. Does it need to start again and have a radical overhaul, or can this be fixed within the existing structure?
It has to change the way it funds. I have suggested a completely different way of doing the NPO application, which is much more built on the USP that an organisation thinks it has than on how it can contribute to the overarching thing. Let me just say this about diversity: in an odd way, the culture of every organisation you would look at in terms of whether to fund or support it should have financial resilience, environmental sustainability and diversity. It should be in the DNA of the organisation. That is how I view it. The Arts Council approach is a little bit of an ’80s approach where if you can tick the boxes and show the numbers, you are making a difference. You really have to get it into the DNA of the organisation. You are beginning to see that in the arts in some areas. Theatre is doing much, much better than music, and dance is beginning to catch up a tiny bit. It has to see it as embedded in the organisation. It is something you judge. Just as you would not give money to a financially ridiculous organisation, you do not give money to an organisation that does not have a very clear diversity infrastructure and culture. That is the right way forward. Saying “We’re funding diversity” does not give you access to excellence. It possibly gives you access to activity but not excellence.
Within the parameters that you have just mentioned, do you think that the current Arts Council criteria often privilege safe or less risky organisations, or larger organisations, over taking a bit of a punt on something that might be diverse or have fantastic artistic merit? Is there a risk aversion that you have found?
I have not found that. Over 70% of the money goes to existing organisations. It is very difficult to achieve change when money is tight because what are you going to kill off? That is a hard decision to take. But it takes risks. I want to bring the art form panels because you want the risk based on an understanding of what innovation and risk look like within that particular art form. That understanding is not necessarily embedded in the decision-making structures and people at the moment, which is why advice from the art panels would be helpful.
In terms of incentivising good behaviour, did you have any evidence to suggest that Arts Council does enough to ensure that the organisations it gives money to have policies in place to tackle things such as antisemitism?
That is a growing problem. The Arts Council should play a convening role on that. It is a growing problem. The whole Gaza-Palestine-antisemitism triangle is hugely, hugely challenging and very difficult for small organisations to deal with and respond to properly. That is a typical area where the Arts Council should be taking a leading role in helping write protocols and develop guidance and support. Should it be intervening? I don’t think so. I think that is asking it to be too directive in the management of the organisations.
So it should be supporting organisations to make sure that they have the right systems and processes in place to tackle things such as antisemitism, but not rewarding those that are not taking the right steps. Can I take you on a completely different track now? We have a series of inquiries that we do called State of Play, where we give any individual or organisation the opportunity to bid for a one-off session with us. They get to set out the obstacles and challenges that they are experiencing and what the solution is. In our very first year of doing this, we had 168 applications for our first five places.
Brilliant.
The very first one we did was with the live comedy sector. Its big ask is to be recognised as an art form. Baroness Hodge, your review did not mention live comedy.
No, it did not.
It cannot access Arts Council funding. If it is a comedy club, for example, it cannot access Arts Council funding unless it does something else as well, such as being a live music venue or something else. To what extent do you think that live comedy is a neglected art form? Should the Arts Council be considering it as an art form in its own right? What will you be doing to celebrate National Comedy Day on 1 April, Baroness Hodge?
My grandchildren will be taking the mickey out of me. I will be the butt of it. It is an interesting question. I was approached by choirs. I thought about choirs quite a lot, and it is too difficult to extend it. There are so many questions to do with how you would then define which choir could be subject to funding. What if it is just a community choir? It was just too difficult. I felt, “Oh God, we can’t do that at the moment.” There is a case for comedy. I have not thought about it in detail. There is a case for saying that it should be considered as an art form. You are doing that with resources being constrained, that is the only thing. If you fund it, you are funding it at the expense of something else. That is the difficulty. Chair: It just wants a level playing field, does it not?
I want to declare an interest: I was a recipient of Arts Council funding in between being elected. During that time we were identified as coming from an underserved area. I know you have mentioned in Vicky’s questions some local and regional boards. What further action should be taken to reduce regional disparities beyond the changes to the funding mechanisms and postcode-based redistribution?
Within the report, there are a whole lot of instruments that you can use to help the underserved areas, such as the programme for individuals and touring. Going through my head as I was thinking about all those things was whether this is another way of supporting philanthropy. All those ideas are about trying to support underserved areas. The key instrument is putting those two community arts workers in areas to build something bottom up. I saw it work so well. I do not know if you were around with the creative partnerships and whether you saw those at all. It really transformed things. It brought artists into schools; you can link that into the education. It really transformed the artistic ambition of children and young people. This would go beyond education into community groups as well. That is a powerful, proper bottom-up local intervention. I think The Britten Sinfonia is the one that went to Cambridge. Just shoving them nearer the postcodes does not make any difference. Again, if we had more money we could do it in more areas, but you could start that off in a few areas. If you look at the Arts Council funding at the moment—I recommend that it simplifies and reduces the systems—there are a lot of little pots of money here and there. If you focus it on bigger interventions, less money is spent on bureaucracy and looking at all these different forms, and you would impact more. At the moment as an individual, you can apply for a course. In a way that is great but is that the best use of Arts Council money? I have a recommendation in there—I do not know whether it will accept it—that all local authorities should do regular arts and cultural strategies. No doubt there will be an argument that it takes a load of officer time and it needs extra resources to do that. It is really important because local authorities have cut more than anybody else in the arts. That is really important and keeps them thinking about it.
Absolutely, I agree. I will have to put on record that I have a great local authority that is very engaged in our culture programme. I would just like to go back to that question because there is a huge gap. It is about getting community involved. Just for the record, I put out about entering the town for a UK Town of Culture bid. The negativity that came back from places like mine, which are underserved with cultural activity, is that they do not see what culture is. It could be your local am-dram, local theatre or comedy. It is about bringing people with us as well as just putting mechanisms in. We absolutely all agree on that bottom-up approach. We just need more on how we can reach out to people who do not feel that culture means anything to them. That is an important nut to crack.
People have talked about the tourism tax. I would love to see that in a way, but if you look at the moment at how that has been used by those authorities that have it under another name, they use it for street furniture and street cleaning. People and businesses care about that, but if you want it for culture and arts, you are going to have to specify that—otherwise it will not happen.
Another issue from my local area is culture being done to us. We get the big institutions coming in from Manchester city centre and taking over theatre space or art space that is populated by our local organisations. It does not go down well. On a larger scale, the English National Opera relocation obviously raised a few eyebrows and raised significant concerns about how ACE manages major strategic interventions. What lessons do you think ACE should take from that episode when designing future approaches to reducing regional disparities?
First, maintaining the arm’s length principle is the most important thing. Secondly, something I could never understand—I do not know if you felt the same—was that it cut the ENO, in essence, but at the same time it cut touring from the Welsh National Opera and Glyndebourne, both of which were bringing opera to underserved communities. I take your point about how there are ways of handling that. Remember my access to excellence: you want that as well. I could not understand how it took all those decisions together. It just did not make sense to me. I could not think of how rationally it could have happened. I never received a good answer to that, but there has to be some oversight to see the overall impact of your decisions. That was not there for that and I really do not know why. It was unable to answer it. I kept asking the question, “What made you take those decisions all at the same time?” Maybe you should ask it but I never received an answer. I could not understand it.
Not least because of all the remarkable work that the ENO, for example, was doing right across the country with the long covid sufferers, with its ENO Breathe programme. There were so many outreach programmes going on that it just felt like a really odd decision.
You mentioned the arm’s length principle. With blue-sky thinking, what do you think of the possibility of including culture and heritage in the English Devolution and Community Empowerment Bill? I know you said it is important to keep things arm’s length, but that way you would put a must on the strategic authorities to fund these kinds of things. It need not be a mutually exclusive either/or.
I would support that.
You would.
Yes. It is a recommendation that there should be a statutory duty to produce a cultural and art strategy every five years, or whatever. It is the only way to keep it alive. Local authorities used to put more money in than they do now. It is important for all sorts of things, not just heart of community. Again, when I was Culture Minister—I do not know if you did this—we used cultural interventions in those days in seaside towns as ways to start a regeneration of a run-down area. I remember we put money into the fairground in Margate to try to start the regeneration. In Blackpool we put it into the lights and what have you. It was all about using that as a stimulus for regeneration. Arts and culture can be the thing that unlocks regeneration.
Yes, that would be cultural devolution. I wonder if I can email it to you, but the think-tank Culture Commons has come up with a range of different amendments. I think Sadiq Khan is backing it on this.
I am not close enough to that.
It need not mean the end of the arm’s length principle. You can have both.
Levelling-up funding was also a good recognition of the power of our culture and arts to regenerate communities. It is a really interesting point. Baroness Hodge, we are nearly finished with you. You are the expert in sitting in this chair and asking the questions so is there anything we have forgotten to ask you? How have I failed in my chairing role today?
You have been brilliant. You have been very kind.
That is a failing.
Is there anything that you wish I had asked you?
You have been too kind. I think we have covered everything but I suppose education is the only thing. It is really important to get that back in. If it sets up this fund, that is absolutely critical. We must build the next generation and build the pipeline. Look at the decline in kids doing A-level cultural and arts subjects. Apart from that, I have covered everything. I have the one-and-only bound copy because it would not print it; it is only online. It gave me that as my prize.
Complete with your own annotations, I noticed.
It is the people who work with me.
Very good. Can I thank you very much on behalf of the Committee for your time today? Baroness Hodge of Barking: Thank you for asking me and being so kind.
Thank you for your report. We wait with bated breath to see the Government’s response. In the meantime, thank you for coming along and seeing us today.