Hawke's Bay Today

Resource trust faces stormy future

Financial forecast looks dim for Knowledge Bank

- Michaela Gower

Local historical recordkeep­er Hawke’s Bay Knowledge Bank is facing an uncertain future, but it says it will fight to keep the digital resource available to the public.

The Knowledge Bank, as of March 31, 2024, may not have sufficient funds to operate the way it has been due to its reliance on Hastings District Council and Lottery Community grants.

The board had been warned by the council through conversati­ons over the past two months that their usual amount of funding was not guaranteed.

As a result, two board members resigned. Both declined to comment to Hawke’s Bay Today.

A Hastings District Council spokespers­on said events and organisati­ons that recently or regularly applied for discretion­al funding were advised of “the very difficult financial circumstan­ces facing the council”.

“While all applicatio­ns are welcome and will be considered as usual, it was a signal to these groups that they may want to consider making all efforts to source funding from alternativ­e sources, as well as applying to [the] council.”

Hawke’s Bay Digital Archives Trust chairman Peter Dunkerley said Napier City Council had given in the past, but otherwise the resource was funded by community sponsors.

He said without the funding that ends on June 30, 2024, the main issue lay with staffing costs.

“Getting funding for staff costs is at best difficult, and [in the] worst case very difficult,” Dunkerley said. “There may well be more funding coming, but only modest amounts because councils have been the major backbone support.”

Hastings Mayor Sandra Hazlehurst said Hastings District Council was a strong supporter of the work of Knowledge Bank.

“The council has a history of financiall­y supporting Knowledge Bank (as it does other community organisati­ons) through [the] council’s community grants fund.”

She said funding included $30,000 a year for three years ending June 30, 2024, alongside other smaller projectbas­ed grants.

“We welcome applicatio­ns to the community grants scheme for the next financial year from community organisati­ons, including from Knowledge Bank, for considerat­ion alongside the Long Term Plan process.”

Hazlehurst also suggested Knowledge Bank put a charge on the access of the material to give it a sustainabl­e footing.

Dunkerley said in the past they didn’t want to charge people for access. However, it was something that was being talked about.

The digital archive would fall back into a volunteer operation, as the funding enabled the group to have a paid manager based at Stoneycrof­t in Oma¯hu Rd in Hastings.

“We are doing a bit of a rescue job. This is the situation we have got, and we have to look at how can we best manage it.”

He said as long as no costs were incurred, they would continue to collect and preserve Hawke’s Bay’s history.

“It’s the history of Hawke’s

Getting funding for staff costs is at best difficult,

and [in the] worst case very difficult. There

may well be more funding coming, but only modest amounts because councils have been the major backbone

support. Hawke’s Bay Digital Archives Trust chairman Peter Dunkerley

Bay. It’s the people of Hawke’s Bay writing the history of Hawke’s Bay.”

The council said no decisions had been made, and organisati­ons are welcome to make funding applicatio­ns.

 ?? Photo / Connull Lang ?? Hawke’s Bay Knowledge Bank is housed in historic Stoneycrof­t Homestead, a Victorian-style colonial home built in 1875.
Photo / Connull Lang Hawke’s Bay Knowledge Bank is housed in historic Stoneycrof­t Homestead, a Victorian-style colonial home built in 1875.

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