City of Culture to be loaned £1m in public cash by council in move that's 'not without risk'

Local, national, international and oddball news stories

Re: City of Culture to be loaned £1m in public cash by council in move that's 'not without risk'

Postby dutchman » Sun Jun 11, 2023 10:01 pm

Parliament to hold debate on Coventry City of Culture Trust

Image

Parliament will hold a debate on the collapsed Coventry City of Culture Trust after a local MP called for answers.

The trust called in administrators in February following weeks of financial challenges.

Coventry North West MP, Taiwo Owatemi, is set to raise an adjournment debate on Wednesday.

In March, Labour MP Ms Owatemi called for a debate on the the trust, "to ensure that there is proper oversight".

She was advised by House of Commons Leader Penny Mordaunt that it would be a topic for an adjournment debate, given it was a "highly local issue".

This type of debate takes place at the end of the day's sitting, allowing a backbench MP to raise an issue and get a response from a government minister.

Ms Owatemi said she was "pleased" to get the debate and called for people who oversaw the mistakes to be held to account.

"With many millions of pounds of public funding provided to the Trust, it is right that MPs will have the chance discuss how this situation was allowed to come about and the lessons that must be learnt for the future," she said.

:bbc_news:
User avatar
dutchman
Site Admin
 
Posts: 55245
Joined: Fri Oct 23, 2009 1:24 am
Location: Spon End

Re: City of Culture to be loaned £1m in public cash by council in move that's 'not without risk'

Postby rebbonk » Sun Jun 11, 2023 10:21 pm

Nothing will come of this. :fuming:
Of course it'll fit; you just need a bigger hammer.
User avatar
rebbonk
 
Posts: 70290
Joined: Thu Nov 12, 2009 7:01 am

Re: City of Culture to be loaned £1m in public cash by council in move that's 'not without risk'

Postby dutchman » Sun Aug 06, 2023 3:31 am

Assembly Festival 'could collapse' over £1.5m City of Culture debt

Image

The boss of one of the Edinburgh Fringe's biggest venue operators has warned the company may not survive another year due to a £1.5m debt.

William Burdett-Coutts said the Assembly Festival was surviving on a short-term loan.

He said Assembly organised a festival for Coventry's City of Culture year in 2021, but it has still not been paid by the trust in charge.

The Coventry City of Culture Trust went into liquidation in February.

UK City of Culture is a competition run by UK government's Department for Digital, Culture and Sport (DCMS).

Mr Burdett-Coutts, Assembly's founder and artistic director, criticised Coventry City Council and the DCMS for trying to "wash their hands of the situation".

And he said Assembly could be "dragged down in the trust's wake unless those responsible take action."

It comes as the Edinburgh Fringe launched on Friday.

Speaking to BBC Scotland, Mr Burden-Coutts said: "Assembly has been presenting shows since 1981 and is an integral part of the Edinburgh Festival Fringe.

"The company is of local, national and international significance working with arts organisations from around the world.

"We have played a significant role in the development of many world-class shows throughout the years and have helped launch the careers of countless household names, from Graham Norton to French and Saunders and many more.

"Assembly on its own plays to an audience equivalent to the live audience of Wimbledon and larger than Glastonbury - to lose that presence would be disastrous for the Fringe."

Mr Burdett-Coutts said Assembly's short-term loan would run out at the end of the year.

He said the Coventry festival - Assembly Festival Garden - had been very successful and the city had campaigned to have the event return in 2022.

However, he said that the trust had still not paid Assembly for months after the second festival ended.

"They kept on reassuring us that they would pay their bills and the money was coming," he said.

"But then come January or February we found out that the trust that ran the Coventry City of Culture went into liquidation owing us about £1.5m.

"So it's caused a massive hole in our finances - we're a small organisation so it's not something we can absorb. So we've got to find some way and somebody has to take responsibility."

Mr Burdett-Coutts added Assembly was in a "very precarious" position for future events. He said the Scottish government had written to DCMS urging it to step in.

"We're in a position where we basically run out of money at the end of the year," he said.

"We can get through this festival and look after everybody from this festival, but the next festival is in question. It depends on if we can find a solution."

:bbc_news:
User avatar
dutchman
Site Admin
 
Posts: 55245
Joined: Fri Oct 23, 2009 1:24 am
Location: Spon End

Re: City of Culture to be loaned £1m in public cash by council in move that's 'not without risk'

Postby dutchman » Thu Feb 27, 2025 11:33 pm

City of Culture creditors will not be repaid

Image

Creditors who are collectively owed more than £4.2m by the Coventry City of Culture Trust will not be repaid, an administrator has said.

The trust was created in October 2015 to oversee Coventry's bid and subsequent holding of the huge event throughout 2022 and 2023.

However, it collapsed amid financial trouble in February 2023, with debts of hundreds of thousands of pounds owed to creditors, including Coventry City Council and West Midlands Police.

Administrators have recouped about £550,000, but have now moved to dissolve the organisation, meaning most creditors will not be paid back.

The report, authored by joint administrator Mike Kienlen, head of restructuring and insolvency at Armstrong Watson, confirmed the administration period ended on Thursday.

The company, which used forensic accountants during its investigation, also confirmed it would not pursue legal action against the trust, after an agreement was made with a committee of creditors.

The "risks and costs" of doing so "outweigh any potential benefit", the firm said.

As well as £1m owed to the council, the trust also owed £1.5m to arts organisation Assembly Festival and £505,000 to West Midlands Police.

A spokesperson for the city council said it was continuing to comply with the Charity Commission, which was also completing an investigation into the trust.

"The administration of the trust and the now confirmed loss of our loan, alongside the losses of a range of other creditors, is bitterly disappointing and is not the outcome anyone wanted to see," they said.

"We know the loan was spent on maintaining cultural activity in the city and ensured payments to both suppliers and to major and smaller cultural bodies that had provided content and events."

On top of the larger loan, other funds of tens of thousands of pounds were also paid to the trust by Culture Coventry, The Albany Theatre and Coventry University.

Kevin Shaw, chief executive of The Albany Theatre, said his organisation was owed £34,200.

"On top of the money, there was a promise of further work going forward which would have been really helpful," he said.

"It obviously has a detrimental impact on companies like us.

"All theatres operate on a slight knife edge and that's a significant amount of money to try and replace."

The final report said that all former employees of the trust who made claims for wages, holiday pay and redundancy would receive a full payout, while HMRC would receive 53p in the pound in relation to deductions from employees' wages and outstanding VAT.

:bbc_news:
User avatar
dutchman
Site Admin
 
Posts: 55245
Joined: Fri Oct 23, 2009 1:24 am
Location: Spon End

Re: City of Culture to be loaned £1m in public cash by council in move that's 'not without risk'

Postby dutchman » Wed Mar 12, 2025 3:45 am

'City culture trust failure left us a huge debt'

Image

The founder of an arts firm which is owed £1.5m following the collapse of a city's cultural trust said his firm has had to borrow a "huge amount" of money to survive.

William Burdett-Coutts, who set up Assembly Festival, said he had been left shocked when told his company was not going to be repaid any money after Coventry City of Culture Trust collapsed in February 2023.

The trust left debts of £4.2m owed to a number of creditors, which also included Coventry City Council and West Midlands Police.

Administrators recouped about £550,000, but recently moved to dissolve the organisation, meaning most of those waiting for money will not see it.

Joint administrator Mike Kienlen, of Armstrong Watson confirmed the administration period has ended and also said it would not pursue legal action against the trust, after an agreement was made with a committee of creditors.

"We did the job in good faith and were expecting to get paid," Mr Burdett-Coutts said.

"[It] has left us with a huge, huge debt which has almost killed my company."

His firm has been presenting shows since1981 and is one of the Edinburgh Fringe's biggest venue operators.

In 2023, he said Assembly Festival was surviving on a short-term loan.

There was an irony the company had taken on the work in Coventry in order to try to stabilise financially after the Covid-19 pandemic, he said.

"Rather than solving that problem it's given us an even bigger one," he said.

He felt the organisers of the festival in Coventry did not have the resources they needed to underwrite the projects they had committed to.

He said: "The whole point of running these [City of Culture] years is to build up a fabric of work within the community and for that to carry on in the coming years, and for the relationships that are built between the city and the financial world and the cultural world to have a kind of ongoing legacy.

"Obviously that hasn't happened in Coventry and I think that's a great shame."

Peter Gillet, director of commercial services at West Midlands Police, said the force had expected to be at the top of the repayment list as it was a publicly-funded organisation.

"Disappointingly, that has not happened," he said.

He explained the outstanding money was to help cover policing costs associated with City of Culture status, as the influx of people into Coventry increased demand on services.

Mr Gillet said that despite the financial issues, the policing operation had been deemed a success.

"We're proud of the work we did over the 12 months to use art and culture to reach new audiences allowing us to have challenging conversations on topics such as homelessness, and male violence against women and girls," he said.

:bbc_news:
User avatar
dutchman
Site Admin
 
Posts: 55245
Joined: Fri Oct 23, 2009 1:24 am
Location: Spon End

Previous

Return to News

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 2 guests

  • Ads