|
A
Public Trust at Risk:
The Heritage Health Index Report on the State of
America’s Collections
“A Public Trust at Risk: The Heritage Health Index
Report on the State of America’s Collections (HHI),”
a project of Heritage Preservation and IMLS, revealed that
our collections of objects, documents, digital material, and
living collections are not only essential to America’s
cultural health, but are imperiled and in need of swift protective
action.
The study’s findings, announced in 2005, are sobering.
HHI concluded that
- 190 million objects held by archives, historical societies,
libraries, museums, and scientific organizations in the
United States are in need of conservation treatment;
- 65 percent of collecting institutions have experienced
damage to collections due to improper storage;
- 80 percent of collecting institutions do not have an
emergency plan that includes collections, with staff trained
to carry it out; and
- 40 percent of institutions have no funds allocated in
their annual budgets for preservation or conservation.
HHI identified four concrete recommendations to greatly alleviate
serious conservation problems and spare us the painful loss
of some of our most valued treasures. For more information,
visit
the HHI Web site.
In addition to support from IMLS, the study was also made
possible by the Getty Foundation, the Henry Luce Foundation,
the Samuel H. Kress Foundation, the Bay and Paul Foundations,
the Peck Stacpoole Foundation, and the Gladys Krieble Delmas
Foundation.
Meeting the Needs Identified by HHI
The Institute has long supported projects that seek to address
the needs that have now been documented by HHI. Components
of preservation and conservation are supported by all of the
Institute’s grant categories. IMLS funds institution-based
projects, as well as broader, collaborative efforts. See www.imls.gov
for more examples.
|