Tag: Department for Culture and Media

  • PRESS RELEASE : Seven sites confirmed in the running for UNESCO World Heritage Status [April 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Seven sites confirmed in the running for UNESCO World Heritage Status [April 2023]

    The press release issued by the Department for Culture, Media and Sport on 10 April 2023.

    The Government has revealed the seven places it is backing to win UNESCO World Heritage Status.

    • York city centre, Birkenhead Park and an iron age settlement in Shetland could join prestigious list
    • The sites are added to the Government’s ‘Tentative List’ with the aim of joining global landmarks such as the Taj Mahal and the Galápagos Islands

    Cultural and natural heritage sites including York’s historic city centre are a step closer to becoming UNESCO World Heritage Sites after gaining Government backing for their bids.

    Five new sites from across the UK and Overseas Territories have been added to the Tentative List meaning they are now part of a seven site list to be put forward by the Government for inscription on the illustrious list.

    The Tentative List is published around every ten years by the UK Government. It sets out the sites it feels have the best chance of succeeding and will now work with local authorities and devolved administrations to develop their bids.

    Cultural sites on the list include York which has fantastic civic and religious buildings including its Minster as well as a rich history left behind by its Anglo-Saxon, Viking and Norman inhabitants.

    Birkenhead Park, which opened in 1847, was a pioneering project to bring greenery to urban environments and provided a blueprint for municipal planning that has influenced town and city parks across the world, including New York’s Central Park.

    UNESCO also awards World Heritage Site status to the most extraordinary natural places on the planet.

    The East Atlantic Flyway, a migratory bird route over western parts of Europe including Yorkshire, Lincolnshire, Norfolk, Suffolk, Essex and Kent, joins the UK’s list in recognition of its vital importance to bird populations and wildlife. The area sees huge transient bird populations pass through every year as the seasons change.

    The Little Cayman Marine Parks and Protected Areas, situated in the UK Overseas Territory of the Cayman Islands, have been put forward for their exceptional importance to marine biodiversity and their incredible natural beauty.

    Also on the list today is the Zenith of Iron Age Shetland, a collection of three ancient settlements dating back thousands of years.

    Heritage Minister Lord Parkinson of Whitley Bay said:

    Today we are confirming our support for some of the most enchanting heritage sites and breathtaking landscapes in the UK and its Overseas Territories as they bid for UNESCO World Heritage Site status.

    All the locations being put forward would be worthy recipients of this accolade – and we will give them our full backing so they can benefit from the international recognition it can bring.

    Laura Davies, HM Ambassador to UNESCO, said:

    It is great that the UK is contributing to making World Heritage more representative.

    These five sites brilliantly reflect the diversity and beauty of the UK and its Overseas Territories’ natural and cultural heritage, and I look forward to working with them towards World Heritage listing.

    Michael Copleston, RSPB England Director, said:

    We are absolutely thrilled that the global importance of the English east coast has been recognised by the independent panel and that the east coast wetlands will now be part of the UK’s Tentative List of World Heritage sites.

    The east coast is an essential refuge for over 155 bird species as well as a world-leading example of how we can manage our coastlines in the face of a changing climate, with true value for nature and people.

    We’re really looking forward to working with partners and communities up and down the coast to develop a bid for UNESCO in the coming years.

    UNESCO’s World Heritage Site system offers a fantastic opportunity for cultural and natural heritage sites to gain international recognition and promote themselves on a global stage.

    If successful, the seven sites would join the 33 other World Heritage Sites already based in the UK including Stonehenge and Hadrian’s Wall.

    Two sites which submitted their full nominations to UNESCO earlier this year also remain on the Government’s Tentative List. One is The Flow Country, a large area of peatland across Caithness and Sutherland in the north of Scotland which plays a crucial role in supporting biodiversity.

    The Gracehill Moravian Church Settlement in Northern Ireland is part of a joint bid alongside other Moravian religious sites in Denmark, the United States and Germany. The bid aims to recognise the church’s work in setting up an international religious community.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Five appointments made to the National Museums Liverpool Board [March 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Five appointments made to the National Museums Liverpool Board [March 2023]

    The press release issued by the Department for Culture, Media and Sport on 30 March 2023.

    The Secretary of State for Culture, Media and Sport has appointed John Belchem, Dinah Birch, Lynn Collins, Anna Farthing and Philip Lloyd as Trustees of National Museums Liverpool for terms of four years.

    John Belchem

    Appointed from 1st March 2023 until 28th February 2027

    After completing his doctorate at the University of Sussex, John emigrated to New Zealand to lecture in history at Massey University. In January 1980. He took up a lectureship at the University of Liverpool, remaining for 33 years, serving as Head of History, Dean of the Faculty of Arts and finally as Pro-Vice Chancellor. John edited Liverpool 800: culture, character and history, commissioned to mark the 800th anniversary in 2007. In extensive publications and broadcasting, John continues to explore Liverpool’s complex history, purported ‘otherness’ and exceptionalism, external misperception and misrepresentation. Working at the interface of academic history, public history and heritage, he has become acutely aware of the richness and fragility of the city’s remarkable urban historical framework. Alongside my involvement in securing the inscription of the World Heritage Site, now alas lost, he has assisted in various conservation and repurposing projects. In a recent publication, he traced the complex but ultimately successful process of conservation and cultural regeneration of the Bluecoat, the city centre’s oldest building. Presently, he is Emeritus Professor of History, Vice-President of the Historic Society of Lancashire and Cheshire, a Trustee of the Merseyside Buildings Preservation Trust and Chair of Merseyside Civic Society.

    Dinah Birch

    Appointed from 1st March 2023 until 28th February 2027

    Dinah Birch is Emeritus Professor of English Literature at the University of Liverpool. As Pro-Vice-Chancellor for Cultural Engagement at the University she was responsible for the wide-ranging programme of cultural activities developed in association with the University’s first Heritage Strategy, in local regional and national contexts. She has published widely on Victorian fiction and poetry, and on the work of the artist and critic John Ruskin. Her books include Ruskin’s Myths (1988) and Our Victorian Education (2008), and she is the General Editor of the Oxford Companion to English Literature (2009). She has published editions of Elizabeth Gaskell’s Cranford (2011), Anthony

    Trollope’s Can You Forgive Her? (2012) and The Small House at Allington (2014) with Oxford University Press, together with recent essays on George Eliot, Anthony Trollope, and John Ruskin. She writes regularly for the Times Literary Supplement, contributes to Melvyn Bragg’s In Our Time and Sky Arts documentary broadcasts, and has served as a judge on the Booker Prize panel.

    Lynn Collins

    Appointed from 1st March 2023 until 28th February 2027

    Lynn Collins is currently Director of Field Services at the Royal College of Midwives. Lynn took up post in March 2022 having served as TUC Regional Secretary North West for the past 9 years. In her TUC role Lynn established a North West Labour History group and in 2018 organised the events programme to commemorate 150 years of the TUC. She also worked with women in Liverpool to commemorate the role that women have played in the city’s labour history including installing a blue plaque to Jeannie Mole a woman union organiser. She has been active in trades unions, social justice and equality movements all her working life and has held public office as a School Governor, an Employment Tribunal member and as Chair of HealthWatch Liverpool until 2023

    In 2017 Lynn was appointed by Steve Rotheram, the Metro Mayor of Liverpool City Region, as Mayoral Advisor on Equalities, and as Chair of his Fairness and Social Justice Advisory Board, a position she held until 2021. Lynn is a trustee at the Working-Class Movement Library in Salford, and is a member of the ‘Hall of Fame’ of the Anti Racism Charity Show Racism the Red Card.

    Anna Farthing

    Appointed from 1st March 2023 until 28th February 2027

    Anna Farthing is a creative producer and cultural consultant working across programming and strategy. She frequently works on launch and regeneration projects. Her doctoral research at Manchester University explored creative public engagement with challenging subjects. It has since been applied to histories of conflict and slavery, climate change, public health and placemaking. Anna is currently Director of Civic and Cultural Engagement at Arts University Bournemouth with responsibility for cultural assets, research, and innovation. She was previously Arts Programme Director for University Hospitals Bristol and Weston NHS Foundation Trust, where she founded a systemic arts and culture programme for ten hospitals, and the Weston Arts and Health Festival. As a creative director, Anna led the Philip Larkin programme for Hull UK City of Culture and the International Agatha Christie Festival in Torquay. Heritage clients include National Maritime Museum, National Museum of the Royal Navy, International Slavery Museum, British Empire and Commonwealth Museum, Bristol Museums, Thackray Medical Museum, Manx National Heritage, English Heritage, Chatsworth and the National Trust. Having begun her career as a director of theatre and opera, she continues to support young artists and the development of new work. Anna is currently a trustee of St George’s Music Trust.

    Philip Lloyd

    Appointed from 1st March 2023 until 28th February 2027

    Phil has worked with schools in Liverpool since 2013 having relocated from the West Midlands. He has a wealth of knowledge and experience from a 30-year career in the education sector in schools, local authorities and colleges. He currently works as an Executive Principal and Ofsted Inspector. He graduated as an engineer from the University of Nottingham before embarking on a career as a science teacher, becoming a Master of Education (Leadership) and Fellow of the Chartered College of Teaching. With a passion for education as an important vehicle supporting social mobility and an absolute commitment to world-class education for all pupils regardless of background he is enthusiastic about the role of the cultural sector in equipping young people with a wider knowledge and understanding of the world encouraging them to be curious, innovative, inventive and well-informed. Phil has demonstrable success in leadings teams and challenging underperformance in different settings, effectively translating national policy frameworks to meet local needs. As a board member in different organisations over the last 15 years he has developed an excellent understanding of business functions, including finance, human resources, marketing and recruitment.

    Remuneration and Governance Code

    Trustees of  National Museums Liverpool are not remunerated. This appointment has been made in accordance with the Cabinet Office’s Governance Code on Public Appointments. The appointments process is regulated by the Commissioner for Public Appointments. Under the Code, any significant political activity undertaken by an appointee in the last five years must be declared. This is defined as including holding office, public speaking, making a recordable donation, or candidature for election. John Belchem, Dinah Birch, Lynn Collins, Anna Farthing and Philip Lloyd have not declared any significant political activity.

  • PRESS RELEASE : New laws to help bring more great shows to British screens and airwaves [March 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : New laws to help bring more great shows to British screens and airwaves [March 2023]

    The press release issued by the Department for Culture, Media and Sport on 28 March 2023.

    Draft Media Bill published to help public service broadcasters better compete with streaming giants.

    • Confirms plans to bring Netflix, Amazon Prime Video, Disney+ under new Ofcom rules and ensure public service broadcasters’ on-demand services are easy to discover on smart TVs and streaming sticks
    • New reforms to guarantee access to UK radio on smart speakers and cut red tape on commercial stations
    • Streaming services will be required to provide subtitles, audio description and signing to support people with disabilities

    Britain’s biggest broadcasters will get new privileges and freedoms to make more hit shows and better compete with global streaming giants under new draft legislation published today.

    The draft Media Bill will enable public service broadcasters (PSBs) – the BBC, ITV, Channel 4, Channel 5, STV and S4C – to unleash their potential to grow, produce more top quality British content and invest in new technologies to keep viewers tuning in amid fierce competition from subscription-based online platforms.

    It marks the next step in the government’s plan to modernise decades-old broadcasting legislation outlined in a white paper last year. In addition, new reforms have been added to protect the position of UK radio on smart speakers as listeners increasingly move away from AM and FM stations in favour of internet-based services.

    Smart speaker platforms – such as Google and Amazon – will be required by law to ensure access to all licenced UK radio stations, from major national stations to the smallest community stations. Platforms will be banned from charging stations for being hosted on their services or overlaying their own adverts over the top of those stations’ programmes.

    The Bill will also reduce regulatory burdens on commercial radio stations, relaxing content and format requirements developed in the 1980s which tie them to commitments to broadcast particular genres of music or to particular age groups. The new regime will give stations more flexibility to update or adapt their services without needing consent from Ofcom. The reduced bureaucracy these changes will deliver could save the radio industry up to £1 million per year.

    TV-focused measures include bringing mainstream video-on-demand (VoD) services consumed in the UK – such as Netflix and Disney+ – under a new Ofcom content code, to protect audiences from a wider range of harmful material – such as misleading health claims. The latest research from Ofcom indicates that traditional ‘linear’ TV viewing – where viewers watch programmes broadcast at a scheduled time usually via terrestrial or satellite – is down more than 25 per cent since 2011, and 68 per cent among 16-24s.

    The draft Bill includes action to ensure video on demand viewers can more easily discover public service broadcast services such as BBC iPlayer and ITVX on smart TVs, set-top boxes and streaming sticks. It also includes new rules to make video on demand content more accessible to those with seeing and hearing impairments.

    The new laws will introduce simpler, more flexible rules on what TV programmes public service broadcasters are required to show, meaning these broadcasters – who commission around £1.2 billion in programming each year, with almost all of it spent in the UK – will be better equipped to adapt to changing viewer habits as people increasingly watch TV on digital devices instead of traditional ‘linear’ TV.

    Culture Secretary Lucy Frazer said:

    Technology has revolutionised the way people enjoy TV and radio. The battle to attract and retain audiences has never been more fierce. British content and production is world leading but changes to viewing habits have put traditional broadcasters under unprecedented pressure.

    These new laws will level the playing field with global streaming giants, ensuring they meet the same high standards we expect from public service broadcasters and that services like iPlayer and ITVX are easy to find however you watch TV.

    Our Bill will give these brilliant broadcasters and our legendary radio industry the tools to keep doing what they do best – nurturing the creative talent and skills that fuel the UK’s booming production industry, whilst making outstanding shows that we can all enjoy.

    Dame Carolyn McCall, Chief Executive, ITV plc said:

    We welcome the publication of the Media Bill today as a decisive staging post on the journey to a modern and flexible regulatory regime for TV and media in the UK. This Bill will modernise the framework for a Public Service Broadcasting system that is the cornerstone of the £116bn creative economy.

    The UK is a global leader in the creative industries and this legislation will help to maintain and strengthen that position. Given the profound and dynamic changes in the global media ecology the need is urgent and we would encourage the Government to ensure the Bill becomes law as soon as possible.

    Maria Kyriacou, Paramount Global’s President for Broadcast & Studios, International Markets, said:

    We welcome the publication of the draft Media Bill.  This is vitally important new legislation to ensure that prominence for Public Service Broadcasters is maintained in the age of the smart TV.

    We hope that Parliament supports and recognises the urgency of implementing this to underpin the health and vitality of our world-leading British broadcasting and creative sector – and protect it for the future.

    It’s particularly pleasing that Channel 5’s PSB licence has also been renewed, which is great recognition of the ongoing success of the channel and its important role in the public service ecology of the UK.

    The Media Bill will level the playing field between public service broadcasters and video-on-demand services. For the first time, UK-focused mainstream VoD services will be brought under rules similar to those that already apply to linear TV. It will mean that UK audiences, especially children, are better and more consistently protected from harmful material.

    For the first time, VoDs will have to provide subtitles on 80 per cent of their programmes, while 10 per cent must have audio description and 5 per cent signed interpretation. Subtitles are carried on the majority of VoD programming, but this can be inconsistent across services and audio description and signing are rarer, so the Bill will help ensure those with disabilities can enjoy more of their favourite shows.

    VoD viewers will now be able to formally complain to Ofcom, and the Bill will strengthen Ofcom’s duty to assess audience protection measures on VoDs such as age ratings and viewer guidance. Ofcom will have more robust powers to investigate and take action to enforce standards if they consider it appropriate, including issuing fines of up to £250,000 and – in the most serious and repeated cases – restricting a service’s availability in the UK.

    Channel 4 will no longer be barred from producing its own content, if it chooses to do so, and will get a new legal duty to consider its long-term sustainability alongside the delivery of its public service remit, which will ensure this globally renowned broadcaster can continue to produce high impact, distinctive shows long into the future.

    The draft Bill will boost S4C, the Welsh language broadcaster, by removing geographic restrictions – confirming it can broaden its reach in the UK and beyond and offer its content on a range of new digital services, and will ensure major TV sporting events like the Olympics and World Cup remain free to watch by as many people as possible.

    It also delivers on the government’s commitment to repeal section 40 of the Crime and Courts Act 2013, which is not in force, but would require news publishers to pay both sides’ costs in any legal proceedings if not a member of an approved regulator.

    Matt Payton, CEO of Radiocentre, said:

    With more radio listening than ever now taking place online and on smart speakers, it’s only sensible that the Government introduces safeguards for the future that will guarantee consumer choice and support the public value provided by UK radio services.

    The commercial radio sector welcomes this important recognition of the vital role that it plays in the media landscape. We’re also pleased to see legislation that will finalise commercial radio deregulation, enabling stations to focus on producing great content that listeners want to hear.

    The publication of the Bill in draft will allow for further engagement with the industry to ensure these major reforms deliver for broadcasters and viewers. The government remains fully committed to introducing the Bill as soon as Parliamentary time allows.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Hundreds of youth facilities in deprived areas to be transformed with new investment [March 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Hundreds of youth facilities in deprived areas to be transformed with new investment [March 2023]

    The press release issued by the Department of Culture, Media and Sport on 27 March 2023.

    First major tranche from the Government’s Youth Investment Fund allocated to beneficiaries for rebuilding and renovating youth centres in some of the country’s most disadvantaged areas.

    • 43 youth centres to receive a slice of over £90 million to build or renovate facilities as part of life-changing Youth Investment Fund
    • Through the Youth Investment Fund, 45,000 more young people will have access to facilities, the positive activities they provide and the opportunities they open up
    • One million extra hours of youth services to be provided in anti-social behaviour hotspots across the country, through £11 million investment as part of Anti-Social Behaviour Action Plan announced today
    • 20,000 new places to be created at youth groups including The Scouts and Girl Guides through allocation of £16.9 million Uniformed Youth fund

    Young people are to benefit from the rebuilding and renovation of youth centres in some of the country’s most disadvantaged areas, as beneficiaries of the first major tranche from the Government’s Youth Investment Fund have been announced today.

    Over £90 million has been allocated to 43 organisations from the Fund’s overall total of over £300 million. This will pave the way for 300 youth facilities to be built or refurbished over the next three years in areas where need is high and existing youth provision is low.

    Facilities set to benefit include community youth spaces and youth centres large and small, aiming to help 45,000 more young people access regular, positive activities every year. This will support their wellbeing, give them opportunities to develop vital skills for life and empower them to be active members of their local community.

    Culture Secretary Lucy Frazer said:

    I want every young person to have the opportunity to access the kinds of life-changing activities which expand their horizons and allow them to develop vital life skills.

    The National Youth Guarantee will provide these opportunities and support young people with access to regular club activities, adventures away from home and volunteering opportunities.

    We are supporting this today with an investment to create or renovate spaces for youth clubs and activities to support opportunities for thousands of young people across the country who would otherwise miss out.

    Examples of those receiving grants in this tranche of funding include:

    • Edinburgh House – This organisation in Stoke-on-Trent will use its grant of nearly £2 million for a renovation and extension project to support an additional 150 young people per week. Working closely with young people to develop the project plans, funding will allow the project to extend their offering of workshops, which range from art sessions, photography, drama, music and dance, to mindfulness, cooking, nutritional education, sports and outdoor activities.
    • Lambton Street – A youth project based in Sunderland that aims to help young people develop the skills to transition into adulthood in a safe and caring environment. Allocated a £785,000 grant, it will undergo a redesign and upgrade to extend its reach to an additional 120 young people a week, make the building accessible to disabled young people and to radically improve its sustainability.
    • Brighton Youth Centre – Allocated a £4.3 million grant, this project will be transformed into a state-of-the-art facility accessible for all young people across Brighton, aiming to reach 3,000 young people a week. All activities are free to young people, offering a range of activities from arts and music to safe spaces for counselling.
    • The Alt Valley Skills Centre – A hub for all young people, they provide social care, life skills, education, training, social and wellbeing activities for people with special needs. The Youth Investment Fund grant of £2.5 million will transform the building, enabling it to support over 200 more young people per week with additional activities, including horticulture, cooking, games nights, disco nights, fitness, drama and movie nights.
    • Nottingham Mencap – A charity that gives people living with learning disabilities or autism choice and independence. Through a grant of £445,400 the project will be refurbished to offer a music and drama room, an IT suite and a gymnasium, as well as allowing a lift to be installed to improve accessibility. Once complete, the site will cater up to 100 young people at a time.

    This funding follows an initial £12 million being fast-tracked to more than 400 local youth services between January and March 2022 to expand the reach and range of services they offer and to cover small-scale capital improvements. This included providing new laptops to youth groups, small redevelopments of buildings and facilities, and improving access to transport.

    As the lead delivery partner, this phase of the fund will be coordinated and managed by Social Investment Business, who support charities and social enterprises to build stronger and fairer communities.

    Nick Temple, CEO of Social Investment Business said:

    Every young person deserves access to high quality activities and facilities, providing the opportunities to help them thrive. The Youth Investment Fund is helping make that vision a reality, supporting organisations and projects in the areas of England that need it most.

    It’s been amazing to see the wide range of projects applying to the Fund, and especially how young people have played a meaningful role in shaping those plans. There is a real appetite to develop inclusive, accessible and sustainable facilities that will be there for future generations – and that is reflected in the first set of grants announced today.

    Alongside the latest beneficiaries of the Youth Investment Fund, the Government has announced it will support an additional one million hours of youth services over the coming two years, through an initial £11 million investment, enabling the equivalent of 200 youth clubs to open their doors for an extra night a week.

    The funding will be targeted at youth clubs in areas with the highest rates of anti-social behaviour to get young people on the right track through positive activities and role models. This forms part of the government’s Anti-Social Behaviour Action Plan announced today, aiming to eradicate antisocial behaviour from our communities.

    In a further move, the Government has also approved £16.9 million of funding to expand access to uniformed youth groups, aiming to create 20,000 new places for young people aged between 10-18 across the country.

    The groups to benefit are:

    • The Scout Association
    • Girlguiding
    • Jewish Lads’ and Girls’ Brigade
    • Girls’ Brigade
    • Boys’ Brigade
    • Marine Society & Sea Cadets
    • Volunteer Police Cadets
    • St John Ambulance

    To date £1.5 million has been allocated to eight uniformed youth groups via the fund, with over 1,200 of a total 2,000 places already created in areas with no existing provision.

    Matt Hyde, Chief Executive of Scouts said:

    Every week, Scouts gives almost half a million young people the skills they need for the job interview, the important speech, the tricky challenge and the big dreams: the skills they need for life. We are really grateful to the Government for committing this new funding so that we can help even more young people learn these through Scouts. It means we can work to make sure more young people in areas of deprivation have adventures away from home, learn outside school and get the chance to volunteer.

    Today’s announcements form the latest part of the Government’s ‘National Youth Guarantee’, that will ensure every young person aged 11-18 in England has access to regular clubs and activities, adventures away from home, and volunteering opportunities by 2025, backed by an investment of over £500 million investment.

    The National Youth Guarantee will provide greater access to activities such as The Duke of Edinburgh’s Award Scheme and the National Citizen Service, and uniformed youth groups such as Scouts, Girlguiding, and Cadets.