2 minute read
Changes at Marlborough Museum hoped to meet ‘escalating’ costs
Staff at the Marlborough Museum and Edwin Fox will have to reapply for their jobs due to a new structure for heritage funding – should those jobs still exist.
The Marlborough District Council last week announced the Marlborough Heritage Trust is to be “wound up”, following a decision to restructure how heritage is funded in Marlborough during a public-excluded council meeting.
Advertisement
It came after a council review of the Marlborough Heritage Trust in 2021, after it was highlighted not a single dollar was put towards building or upgrading heritage assets in the council's long-term plan.
Marlborough District Council economic, community and support services manager Dean Heiford said while the council provided some funding to the trust, it had “struggled” over the years to get extra, meaningful funding from elsewhere – and its costs over the years had been “escalating”.
“The size of the investment there was getting quite big, and council was not willing, at this stage, to pour more and more money into that organisation and that heritage sector without a major review and understanding where those public funds were going,” Heiford said.
Job advertisements for a Marlborough Museum manager and Edwin Fox Maritime Museum manager were posted on February 16 – with the intention to fill these roles so the people hired could help develop “structures” and have input into further recruiting.
Heiford said given the overall structure was yet to be established, he could not confirm if or how many jobs would be impacted.
“Unfortunately it's all been in public excluded, because it's been talking about finances of an organisation and individual employment agreements,” he said.
While he wanted people to have “certainty” about their employment, they also needed to operate within existing budgets, he said.
“I feel for the staff because it's uncertain, but we can't just transfer those positions across. He said next year’s long-term plan would provide an opportunity to consider the “wider issues” surrounding the heritage sector.
“We've got Picton Museum as well, we've also got investment required for the Edwin Fox in terms of stabilisation and upgrades there.
“I know that Renwick Museum have got some aspirations, there’s Havelock Museum, and we’ve already put a whole lot of funding into the new Flaxbourne Museum.”
He said Brayshaw Heritage Park, next to the Marlborough Museum in Blenheim, also needed maintenance, including upgrades to water, power, sewage and new public toilets.
Marlborough mayor Nadine Taylor confirmed any funding that was signed off by councillors during last year’s annual plan remained in place despite the restructure. “Council absolutely acknowledge the need to fund some of those specific projects,” Taylor said.
“Trust spokesperson Cathie Bell said it would be sad to see the trust go, but there would be benefits from the council taking over operations.
“Marlborough is rich in heritage, and this move will give the museum and the Edwin Fox financial stability.”
Public Interest Journalism funded through NZ on Air.