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Written Question
Education: Culture
Thursday 26th October 2023

Asked by: Earl of Clancarty (Crossbench - Excepted Hereditary)

Question to the Department for Education:

To ask His Majesty's Government what is their definition of "cultural education" as referred to in the published terms of reference for the Cultural Education Plan Expert Advisory Panel.

Answered by Baroness Barran - Parliamentary Under-Secretary (Department for Education)

The published terms of reference for the cultural education plan expert advisory panel, sets out that cultural education sits at the heart of an enriching and fulfilling curriculum for pupils. A broad and balanced curriculum includes arts and heritage in the range of subjects taught, and in wider co and extracurricular activities.

The breadth and depth of cultural education is demonstrated by, but not exclusive to, the following: visual arts, music, craft, dance, design, digital arts and gaming, drama and theatre, film and cinema, galleries, heritage, libraries, literature and poetry, live performance, museums, and archaeology, architecture and the built environment, and archives.

This plan will focus on how the department can support access and participation in a wide range of arts subjects and activities, particularly for children and young people from disadvantaged backgrounds and in underrepresented groups. It will also further support young people who wish to pursue careers in our creative, cultural, and heritage industries.


Written Question
Vacancies
Tuesday 7th February 2023

Asked by: Toby Perkins (Labour - Chesterfield)

Question to the Department for Digital, Culture, Media & Sport:

To ask the Secretary of State for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport, if she will make an estimate of the (a) number of vacancies and (b) level of skill shortages in (i) broadcast and print media, (ii) theatres, (iii) graphic design, (iv) tourism and (v) sport and leisure.

Answered by Julia Lopez - Minister of State (Department for Science, Innovation and Technology)

While DCMS does not have any estimates on the number of vacancies, the Department has published Experimental Official Statistics for skills shortages (%) in DCMS sectors and sub-sectors. These are for the year 2019, using data from the Employer Skills Survey, carried out by the Department for Education that covers England, Wales and Northern Ireland. The ESS is a biennial survey, which was delayed by a further year during the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic, with 2022-23 data expected to be published later this year (also currently scheduled to include Scotland).

Skills shortage vacancies are defined as vacancies unfilled because applicants did not have the necessary skills. Two measures for skills shortages are published:

  • Percentage of vacancies that are unfilled due to skills shortages

  • Percentage of businesses with at least one skills shortage vacancy

The “Percentage of businesses with at least one skills shortage vacancy” estimates are impacted by the fact that some businesses will not have had a vacancy. Therefore the “% of businesses with at least one vacancy” figure was also published to help provide context.

Sector/subsector

% of vacancies unfilled due to skills shortages

% of businesses with at least one skills shortage vacancy

% of businesses with at least one vacancy

Audio Visual (i - Broadcast Media)

19.2

2.1

12.0

Publishing (excluding translation & interpretation activities) (i - Print Media)

10.9

3.2

11.4

Arts (ii)

10.1

2.3

12.7

Design and designer fashion (iii)

36.8

2.9

11.4

Tourism Industries (iv)

21.2

6.0

21.9

Sport (v)

30.1

4.4

17.2

Table 1 - Skills shortages in selected sectors. Estimates are not available directly measuring the areas requested. The sectors presented here have been provided as the closest to the requested sectors, for which DCMS have skills shortages data.

Source: DCMS Sectors Skills Shortages and Skills Gaps: 2019


Written Question
Museums and Galleries: Grants
Tuesday 1st November 2022

Asked by: Janet Daby (Labour - Lewisham East)

Question to the Department for Digital, Culture, Media & Sport:

To ask the Secretary of State for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport, how much funding her Department has provided through grants to art galleries in each financial year since 2017-18.

Answered by Stuart Andrew - Parliamentary Under Secretary of State (Department for Culture, Media and Sport)

The table below shows the amount of grant funding DCMS and its delivery body Arts Council England (ACE) are estimated to have awarded to art galleries in each financial year from Financial Year 2017-18 to 21-22. These figures include an estimate of grants provided to arts galleries via Arts Council England, and DCMS direct Grant in Aid provided to the National Gallery, National Portrait Gallery and the Tate. We have not included individual art galleries part of other DCMS sponsored Arm’s Length Bodies as it is not possible to break down costs at this level.

These figures include estimates produced by ACE that include both exchequer and lottery funds. ACE does not have a method of calculating funding spent on art galleries specifically (beyond Museums, and Visual Arts, as high-level classifiers), but can determine funding for projects taking place in galleries, and can identify some galleries funding through name-searching for galleries in funding databases. This provides an estimate for ACE funding support for galleries and activity in galleries, but is not precise.

TOTAL (£m)

2017/18

£69.29*

2018/19

£156.23

2019/20

£168.30

2020/21

£203.66

2021/22

£206.42

TOTAL

£803.90

*There is no comparable funding data available from ACE for 2017/18, this therefore includes only DCMS direct Grant in Aid provided to the National Gallery, National Portrait Gallery and the Tate Galleries.


Written Question
Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport: Consultants
Tuesday 19th July 2022

Asked by: Jon Trickett (Labour - Hemsworth)

Question to the Department for Digital, Culture, Media & Sport:

To ask the Secretary of State for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport, how much her Department has spent on consultancy fees in (a) 2020, (b) 2021 and (c) 2022; and what the name is of each consultancy contracted.

Answered by Matt Warman

The 21-22 Annual Report & Accounts figures are subject to audit and expected to be published in early November. We are unable to provide data on consultancy spend prior to the conclusion of the audit.

The 20-21 consultancy spend as per DCMS 20-21 published accounts (page 135) was £16.6m. The listing for the £16.6m is set out below and is net of a credit of £1.914m on reversed expenditure.

The 19-20 consultancy spend as per DCMS 19-20 published accounts (page 135) was £3.9m. The listing for the £3.9m is set out below including £0.164m relating to corrections to the data.

Details of all third-party government contracts, including the Supplier, are published on Contracts Finder above £10,000, for the core Department, and above £25,000, for the wider public sector.

20-21 Consultancy Supplier Listings

Supplier

Amount

346 Consultancy Limited

10,080.00

Anthony William Catt

1,000.00

ANUBHAV JAIN

5,000.00

Astarte Limited

1,800.00

Bain & Company Inc UK

906,100.00

BBC Accounts Receivable

13,000.00

BDO LLP

523,076.40

Beckford Executives

500.00

Behavioural Insights Ltd

9,570.00

Brick Court Chambers

5,250.00

Cabinet Office (Citi Tr)

126,718.18

Climate Associates

11,444.00

Contemporary Visual Arts Network

300.00

Cornerstone Barristers

- 270.00

Corporate Blue Consulting Ltd

5,700.00

David Fogel

1,500.00

DB Consulting Group Pty Ltd

6,600.00

Deloitte LLP

2,512,566.80

Dentons UKMEA LLP

660,208.30

Department of Education

50,400.00

Digirep Nigeria Ltd

12,384.25

DLA Piper (Liverpool)

330,557.49

DLA Piper UK LLP (Leeds Office Only)

201,473.12

DLA Piper UK LLP (London Office Only)

32,153.03

DLA Piper UK LLP (Sheffield Office Only)

146,966.20

Dona Haj Ltd

8,000.00

Economic Insight Limited

42,000.00

Enterprise Academy International Limited

19,999.00

Ernst & Young (EY)

2,499,356.70

ETSI (European Telecommunications Standa

123,880.66

Eversheds Sutherland (International) LLP

111,293.03

Faculty Science Limited

294,500.00

Faizal Asher Ismail

2,500.00

FarrPoint Ltd

10,212.50

Foreign Commonwealth & Development Off

5,443.09

Frontier Economics Ltd

221,719.00

Fujitsu Services Ltd

133,440.00

Georgina Ella Harding Limited

2,500.00

Government Actuary Department

41,451.17

GOVERNMENT COMMUNICATIONS HQ (GCHQ)

23,851.78

Government Legal Department

17,673.00

Hazel Bees Consulting Ltd

3,840.00

Historic England

- 2,058.34

Home Office

166,725.19

Infrastructure & Projects Authority

13,880.00

Intelligent Risks Limited

6,000.00

International Association

5,628.93

Kantar UK Ltd

23,902.20

Knight Frank LLP

45,000.00

KPMG LLP

159,285.00

Lakesmith Consulting Ltd

16,200.00

Linklaters LLP

136,000.00

lnclusion in Arts UK Ltd

150.00

Local Partnerships LLP

505,031.88

Mace Ltd

47,030.00

Modern Art Oxford

300.00

Mr Christopher Knight - 11KBW

4,301.67

Mr George Peretz

738.00

Mr K Latham

4,999.00

NESTA

26,000.00

Oliver Wyman Ltd

181,500.00

ON PURPOSE CAREERS LTD

30,768.62

PA CONSULTING GROUP

35,700.00

Pentara Consulting Services Ltd

30,000.00

Pinsent Masons LLP

613,539.58

Plum Consulting

43,250.00

PRICEWATERHOUSE COOPERS LLP

3,327,797.80

PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP

2,619,488.00

Quo Imus Ltd T/a QI Consulting

40,800.00

Ryan Turner

- 733.50

Sarah McFadden

2,305.20

Savills

4,677.00

Scottish Contemporary Art Network - SCAN

300.00

Scottish Courts and Tribunals Service

10,000.00

Slaughter and May

628,149.24

SOCIAL JUSTICE COLLECTIVE LTD

5,999.99

Softcat Plc

15,245.52

Spark Ninety Limited

45,330.00

Stance Global Ltd

35,412.00

Tech Grow Limited

2,500.00

The Indus Entrepreneurs Bangalore

324.08

The Royal Academy of Engineering

3,100.00

THEM Design Ltd

4,800.00

TLT LLP

153,119.12

University of Cambridge

4,800.00

Up Spring Ltd

1,000.00

VAGW (Visual Arts Group Wales)

300.00

Veran Performance Ltd

339,540.00

Visual Arts South West

150.00

Webb Search Limited

17,360.00

West Midlands Combined Authority

36,000.00

Wysing Arts Charity

300.00

Yorkshire & Humber Visual Arts

300.00

Young Samuel Chambers (YSC) Ltd

14,560.00

YunoJuno Ltd

8,736.00

- 1,941,548.06

Grand Total

16,609,721.82

19-20 Consultancy Supplier Listings

Supplier

Sum of Amount (Posted)

2T Security Ltd

72,300.00

3 Reasons Ltd

12,000.00

Alistair Lindsay

16,350.00

Annell Howard / Monckton Chambers

- 20.00

Anthony William Catt

8,800.00

Birmingham Organising Committee for the

21,600.00

Blackstone Chambers

1,610.00

Bloom Procurement Services Ltd

75,455.00

Bryan Cave Leighton Paisner LLP

14,252.80

Classical Numismatic Group LLC

50.00

Climate Associates

10,760.00

Curvestone Ltd

2,796.00

David Fogel

2,392.25

David Miller

150.00

DB Consulting Group Pty Ltd

11,000.00

Deloitte LLP

667,438.40

Digital Radio UK (DRUK)

1,200.00

DLA Piper UK LLP (Leeds Office Only)

- 570.32

Dona Haj Ltd

12,682.50

Enterprise Academy International Limited

5,000.00

ETSI (European Telecommunications Standa

127,406.10

Faculty Science Limited

281,400.00

Farrer & Co LLP

3,882.00

FarrPoint Ltd

5,700.00

Film London

19,900.00

Foreign Commonwealth & Development Off

73,783.14

Frontier Economics Ltd

99,325.00

Global Partners Digital Ltd

4,000.00

GOVERNMENT COMMUNICATIONS HQ (GCHQ)

100,000.00

Government Legal Department

3,347.50

Gowling WLG (UK) LLP

10,628.18

Hazel Bees Consulting Ltd

26,880.00

Historic England

4,935.47

HM Courts & Tribunals Service

113,850.00

HMRC (VAT payments)

9,200.00

Hogan Lovells International LLP

99,725.00

Home Office (Citi Trf)

50,000.00

ICF CONSULTING SERVICES

11,268.00

Infrastructure & Projects Authority

24,000.00

Ion Industries Ltd

900.00

Ipsos (Market Research) Ltd

94,898.53

Joanna van der Lande

273.10

KPMG LLP

198,000.00

Lakesmith Consulting Ltd

65,233.35

Martin Beisly Fine Art Ltd

791.44

Mass Inspire Limited

5,180.49

Matassa Toffolo Ltd

- 926.50

MHR International UK Ltd

2,595.04

Ministry of Defence

1,153.12

Miss Laura Smith

50.00

MKF Holdings Ltd t/a China Policy

62,750.00

Moorhouse Consulting Ltd

25,000.00

Morton & Eden Ltd

50.00

Mott MacDonald Ltd

- 0.50

Mr George Peretz

720.00

My CSP LTD

12,464.40

Ovum t/a Informa Telecoms & Media Ltd

21,060.00

PA CONSULTING GROUP

135,600.00

Pinsent Masons LLP

680,143.56

PRICEWATERHOUSE COOPERS LLP

119,232.00

QinetiQ Limited

- 16,632.00

Quo Imus Ltd T/a QI Consulting

19,200.00

Rochelais Limited T/a True & North

1,080.00

Ryan Turner

5,262.50

SALESFORCE COM EMEA LTD

2,311.51

Sally Osman

10,000.00

Savills

187,698.00

Social Innovation Camp Ltd

3,840.00

Sotheby's

150.00

Stance

5,184.00

Stance Global Ltd

27,648.00

Sundry Supplier - Non Staff Expenses

832.73

The Indus Entrepreneurs Bangalore

2,370.63

Thomas Upchurch

4,999.00

University of Cambridge

4,500.00

Up Spring Ltd

5,000.00

Venia Consulting Limited

- 1,281.60

Who Targets Me Ltd

1,500.00

Xansium Consulting Ltd

5,998.80

164,624.96

Grand Total

3,863,931.58


Written Question
Musicians
Monday 16th May 2022

Asked by: Kevin Brennan (Labour - Cardiff West)

Question to the Department for Digital, Culture, Media & Sport:

To ask the Secretary of State for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport, what recent assessment she has made of the (a) economic and (b) cultural impact of songwriters and composers in the UK.

Answered by Julia Lopez - Minister of State (Department for Science, Innovation and Technology)

The music industry is vital to the economy and culture of the UK. In 2019, the music, performing and visual arts sector contributed an estimated £10.5bn in GVA to the UK economy. PRS for Music, the organisation that pays royalties to over 160,000 songwriters, composers, and music publishers, saw overall revenues in 2021 reach £777.1m, a 22.4% increase on 2020.

The cultural impact of music is also invaluable. According to UK Music’s 2021 ‘This is Music’ Report, the UK public listens to an estimated 60 billion hours of music a year. Songwriters and composers form the bedrock on which the overall success of the music sector is built. Despite the challenges of Covid-19, songwriters and composers continued to have significant impact; UK Music’s 2021 ‘This is Music’ Report states that over 5 million songs and compositions were registered with PRS for Music, nearly one third more than in 2019. The Government wants to ensure this success continues.


Written Question
Arts: Self-employed
Wednesday 19th January 2022

Asked by: Caroline Lucas (Green Party - Brighton, Pavilion)

Question to the Department for Digital, Culture, Media & Sport:

To ask the Secretary of State for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport, with reference to the announcement of 23 December 2021 on £1.5million of additional funding for arts freelancers in England, what estimate the Government has made of the proportion of the arts freelance workforce that will benefit from that fund.

Answered by Nigel Huddleston - Financial Secretary (HM Treasury)

We recognise the significant challenge the pandemic poses to our arts and creative sectors and to the many individuals and freelancers working across these industries.

Government funding via Arts Council England will provide an immediate £1.5 million emergency support to support freelancers affected by the pandemic, alongside a further £1.35 million contribution from the theatre sector. This will provide grants of £650,000 each directly to the Theatre Artists Fund, Help Musicians, and £200,000 to a-n, the Artists Information Company, a charity for visual artists which will distribute cash to freelancers over the coming weeks. We are keeping the situation under review, and will consider further interventions as needed.

Freelancers are also supported through the unprecedented Culture Recovery Fund support package of almost £ 2 billion, which has helped ensure the venues and organisations which support and employ freelancers have survived the pandemic.

We will continue to work closely with freelancers and organisations across the sectors to see how we can best provide support to those affected.


Written Question
Self-employed: Government Assistance
Monday 17th January 2022

Asked by: Rupa Huq (Labour - Ealing Central and Acton)

Question to the HM Treasury:

To ask the Chancellor of the Exchequer, what recent assessment he has made of the potential merits of delivering targeted support for creative freelancers, via grant funding, to include (a) newly self-employed people, (b) people with less than 50 per cent of their income from self-employment, (c) PAYE freelancers and (d) limited company directors.

Answered by Helen Whately - Minister of State (Department of Health and Social Care)

The government has provided around £400 billion of direct support for the economy through the pandemic to date, which has helped to safeguard livelihoods and public services in every region and nation of the UK.

The government recognises the impact Omicron is having on businesses and individuals, which is why we announced £1 billion of targeted financial grant support for the hospitality, leisure and cultural sectors to protect jobs and businesses.

The package includes £30 million which will be made available through the Culture Recovery Fund (CRF), to support theatres, museums and other vital cultural institutions through the temporary disruption this winter, helping in turn to support the livelihoods of those working in this sector.

In addition to the CRF, government funding via Arts Council England will also provide an immediate £1.5 million to support freelancers affected by the pandemic, alongside a further £1.35 million contribution from the theatre sector. This will provide grants of £650,000 each directly to the Theatre Artists Fund, Help Musicians, and £200,000 to a-n the Artists Information Company, a charity for visual artists which will distribute cash to freelancers over the coming weeks.

The government is also waiving late filing and late payment penalties for Income Tax Self-Assessment (ITSA) taxpayers to support cashflow and ease administrative burdens. Self-Assessment taxpayers with up to £30,000 of tax debt can spread their tax payments online, through HMRC’s “time to pay” service, and all others can call HMRC to arrange a repayment plan. For those on low income whose earnings continue to be affected by Covid-19 restrictions, work coaches will continue to be able to suspend the Universal Credit Minimum Income Floor on an individual basis for up to six months.


Written Question
Culture Recovery Fund
Wednesday 12th January 2022

Asked by: Kate Osamor (Independent - Edmonton)

Question to the Department for Digital, Culture, Media & Sport:

To ask the Secretary of State for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport, whether the additional £30 million allocated to the Cultural Recovery Fund will be accessible to freelance creatives and other workers in the creative sector who are economically impacted by the covid-19 outbreak.

Answered by Nigel Huddleston - Financial Secretary (HM Treasury)

This £30m for the Culture Recovery Fund being made newly available for organisations will be used to increase the budget for the relaunched Emergency Resource Support strand of CRF in order to meet the demand from across the cultural sector.

Freelancers are supported through the Culture Recovery Fund by ensuring the venues and organisations which support them have survived the pandemic.

The Government announced on 23rd December that it has also provided an immediate £1.5 million to support freelancers affected by the pandemic, underpinning a further £1.35 million funding from the theatre sector. The Government, via Arts Council England, is providing grants of £650,000 each to charities Theatre Artists Fund and Help Musicians, and £200,000 to a-n, The Artist Information Company, a charity for visual artists, to give a much needed helping hand to freelancers over the coming weeks.


Written Question
Arts: Industry
Monday 8th November 2021

Asked by: Lord Storey (Liberal Democrat - Life peer)

Question to the Department for Digital, Culture, Media & Sport:

To ask Her Majesty's Government what assessment they have made of the value to the economy of the creative arts industry.

Answered by Lord Parkinson of Whitley Bay - Parliamentary Under Secretary of State (Department for Culture, Media and Sport)

The creative industries contributed approximately £116 billion to the economy in 2019, accounting for 5.9% of the UK’s GVA. They also employed 2.1 million people across the UK which accounts for 6.3% of the UK’s workforce. The music, performing and visual arts sub-sector of the creative industries contributed almost £11 billion in GVA and 315,000 jobs in 2019.

The creative sector’s value was recognised in the Government’s Plan for Growth, which highlighted the creative industries as key to the economic recovery and powering future growth, levelling up and exports. The Government has again recognised the importance of the creative industries to the economy at the Spending Review, with a further investment of £42 million to support growth across the country.


Written Question
Planning Permission: Visual Arts
Friday 23rd April 2021

Asked by: Andrew Rosindell (Conservative - Romford)

Question to the Department for Levelling Up, Housing & Communities:

To ask the Secretary of State for Housing, Communities and Local Government, whether he has made an assessment of the potential merits of requiring planning permission from local authorities before large public artwork can be installed.

Answered by Christopher Pincher

Any large outdoor public artwork, such as a sculpture or statue, which is installed on a permanent or long term temporary basis is likely to require planning permission. Public consultation will be required as part of the planning application process. Local planning authorities also have a range of enforcement powers available to them to address the instalment of public artworks which do not have planning permission.