Subject: Legal status of biological materials in collections
At the request of a besieged curator (and out of my own interest, I admit), I am trying to put together guidelines for museums or collections which are unsure of their permit status or legal ownership of recent biological material (including comparative osteological material, you paleontologists!). What I would particularly like to know about includes the following: 1. Have you had problems dealing with state, Federal, or foreign regulatory agencies which issue permits for biological collecting? I.e., are the regulations clear; is application for a permit straightforward; and have you ever received contradictory information from an agency? 2. Has your ownership of such material ever been challenged because you did not have the proper permit or follow agency procedures? 3. Has any agency ever impounded or confiscated such material from you? 4. Have you ever had problems with two or more agencies issuing apparently contradictory guidelines? 5. Does anyone on your staff have primary responsibility for permit applications and upgrades? 6. What, in your opinion, are the major changes (if any) that agencies should implement for permit applications? 7. Do you have custodial responsibility for collections which are owned, not by you, but by a public governmental entity or agency? If so, has this caused any problems with care and use of the collections? 8. Would your existing records prove legal ownership or good-faith negotiations with another party for ownership if you were challenged? 9. Have you or your collections ever been the target of animal-rights activists? If so, has this engendered agency investigations? 10. Have agency regulations had any impact on the degree or scope of your biological collecting over the past 10 years? What I am hoping to do is to develop a set of guidelines for people to use in checking the legal status of their collections, making appropriate upgrades or corrections, dealing effectively with regulatory agencies, and recognizing some of the challenges to ownership which may legitimately arise. This is intended to be a formal, peer-reviewed publication. Your answers will be kept strictly confidential; I'm just trying to get an idea of the magnitude of the problems are that some collections professionals have with agency oversight. >From talking to several of you, I know that such problems exist and that you have been frustrated in trying to comply with the laws and policies. Thanks in advance for any comments you may wish to make on this issue; feel free to refer anyone else interested in this to me. All best-- Sally Shelton Texas Memorial Museum *** Conservation DistList Instance 7:21 Distributed: Friday, August 20, 1993 Message Id: cdl-7-21-007 ***Received on Friday, 20 August, 1993