Study
Panel Report on the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum
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[January 08, 2015]
SPRINGFIELD
- A report of the study panel established to examine issues and
concerns surrounding the governance of the Abraham Lincoln
Presidential Library and Museum (ALPLM) in relation to its parent
agency, the Illinois Historic Preservation Agency (IHPA), was
released on January 7. Copies of the report were provided to the
respective chairs of the IHPA Board of Trustees, the ALPLM Advisory
Board, and the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library Foundation for
distribution to their members, and to members of the Illinois
General Assembly, where hearings on the proposed legislation were
held on October 1 and November 19, 2014.
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The study came about as the result of proposed
legislation (House Bill 3638 and Senate Bill 218) to create a
separate state agency to govern the ALPLM. The report was produced
for the IHPA, the ALPLM Advisory Board, and the Abraham Lincoln
Presidential Library Foundation, the organizations responsible for
policy making, program development, education, and fundraising at
ALPLM. Two representatives from each organization and three
independent experts on museums and research libraries comprised the
panel.
The report concludes that establishing ALPLM as a separate agency is
unlikely to solve the complex problems that led to the introduction
of the pending legislation. Rather, separation of the ALPLM from the
IHPA would weaken both organizations and “would result in a
significant lost opportunity for the state,” depriving it of
important synergies between the ALPLM and the other historical
sites, memorials and programs that exist under the IHPA.
Instead, the report urges integration of ALPLM into a reorganized
IHPA, to achieve “a better balance between the political culture
that created ALPLM, the bureaucratic culture that has managed ALPLM
for the past decade, and a museum and research library culture that
must assume a higher profile in the [institution’s] future.”
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The author of the report, Dr. Brent Glass, director emeritus of the
Smithsonian’s National Museum of American History, argues that
changes in the current governing structure of both IHPA and ALPLM
could provide Illinois “a nationally recognized public history
agency with the resources—human, physical, and cultural—commensurate
with its rich and varied heritage.” The report’s conclusions and recommendations were unanimously
endorsed by the study panel at its meeting on December 22.
Co-chairs of the panel, Donna Sack of the Association of Midwest
Museums, and Bernard Reilly, of the Center for Research
Libraries, expressed confidence that the report will shed new
light on the complex issues surrounding ALPLM governance and
operations and their hope that it proves useful to state
legislators in considering the pending legislation.
[Donna Sack/Bernard Reilly, Study
Panel Co-Chairs]
Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum Governance Study
(21-page Pdf)
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