Wexford People

Crunch time for Opera Festival

ANNOUNCEME­NT IS IMMINENT ON FUTURE OF THIS YEAR’S EVENT

- By MARIA PEPPER

A DECISION is imminent on the future of this year’s Wexford Festival Opera, which is worth tens of millions to the local economy.

Festival management are analysing Covid-19 social distancing rules and are hoping to make an announceme­nt soon, according to a spokeswoma­n this week.

The Festival is scheduled to run from October 20 but under Phase 5 of the Government’s plan to exit lockdown, due to begin on August 10, festivals and cultural gatherings may be held only with restricted numbers and re-opened theatres must maintain safe distancing.

This could be a major challenge in the National Opera House where fixed seats are tightly packed, not just for the audience but also the orchestra and performers. The festival spokeswoma­n said an announceme­nt on the holding of the 2020 Festival is ‘imminent’ and will be ‘positive’.

‘They have to make a decision now to avoid potential catastroph­ic losses. It can’t le left to a month before the opening,’ said Mayor of Wexford, Cllr. George Lawlor.

‘The Festival is a terrific economic boost to the town between summer and Christmas and any cancellati­on or curtailmen­t would be a tremendous blow but the crisis we find ourselves in will dictate whether we have a Festival or not,’ he said.

WEXFORD Festival Opera is due to make a decision soon on the future of this year’s programme in the light of Covid-19 restrictio­ns which are forcing many arts organisati­ons to cancel events or hold virtual versions online.

‘We are still monitoring the situation. We are analysing the social distancing requiremen­ts and are hoping to have some news soon,’ said a spokeswoma­n on Monday.

The Opera Festival, which is the single biggest cultural contributo­r to the Wexford economy, worth tens of millions each year, is scheduled to take place from October 20 to November 1.

It was reported earlier that all going well, plans were proceeding towards a full festival in the autumn, with cast members already announced and stage designs in progress.

But under the recently-outlined Phase 5 of the Government’s plan to exit the lockdown, beginning on August 10, festivals and other cultural gatherings may be held only with restricted numbers and re-opened theatres must also maintain safe distancing.

That will present a major challenge for the Opera Festival with social distancing being the main difficulty in the National Opera House which has two theatres of 771 and 176 fixed seats, not just for the tightly packed audience but also the orchestra and performers, as well as in other spill-over venues around the town.

With an internatio­nal audience and stage performers and backstage crews due to arrive from all over the world in September for rehearsals and preparatio­ns, Opera Festival management must make a decision soon on a viable format of this year’s event.

The festival spokeswoma­n confirmed on Monday that discussion­s are being finalised and an announceme­nt on the holding of the 2020 is ‘imminent’ and will be ‘positive’.

Meanwhile, Wexford Festival Opera said it has always been publicly open about incurring substantia­l debts in 2018, following the publicatio­n at the weekend of an audit which found there was ‘limited oversight’ of the artistic budget and no formal policies in relation to expenses, payroll, procuremen­t and credit card spending.

The audit was carried out by accountanc­y firm Mazars on behalf of the Arts Council after the internatio­nal opera event lost €730,000 that year. The findings were published in the Sunday Times which obtained the informatio­n following a Freedom of Informatio­n applicatio­n despite a request by the Opera Festival to the informatio­n commission­er not to make it public.

Wexford Festival maintained that the publicatio­n of the findings would be detrimenta­l to its reputation.

The Arts Council withheld its €1.45m grant for 2019 while the audit was taking place in

March last year and released the money after the festival gave a commitment to improve financial reporting in line with the audit recommenda­tions.

A festival spokeswoma­n said the organisati­on has been open about its ‘2018 financial woes’ which were mentioned in a 2019 artistic programme press release and also the chairperso­n’s festival programme address.

The difficulti­es arose from an ambitious artistic programme going over budget and lower than expected box office and developmen­t income.

The festival engaged fully with the Arts Council in relation to these issues and with the audit review by Mazars.

The spokeswoma­n said the audit was carried out to examine how the Festival could become better and stronger as an organisati­on rather than as a reprimand and there was never a suggestion of wrongdoing.

‘It identified what happened, why it happened and what we can do to ensure it doesn’t happen again, to make sure we are working as efficientl­y as possible. We learned a lot from it and we turned things around straight away.

‘The relationsh­ip between the Opera Festival and the Arts Council is very good. They are there to help and support,’ she said.

The Opera Festival said it fulfilled all the conditions of its Arts Council funding last year and was awarded the same amount in grants this year.

The festival returned to profitabil­ity in 2019 with all cost headings coming in below budget, and achieved a surplus as it had previously done in 2017.

In the audit, Mazars said the lack of oversight of artistic budgets by the festival led to risks that budgets were not adequately controlled.

According to the Sunday Times, it found the amount budgeted by the artistic department was in excess of the amount approved by the board.

A salary increase for one staff member was not included in the budget and there was no formal timely reporting in place by the artistic team to inform the artistic director (David Agler) of the developing overspend position on the budget, or to immediatel­y escalate the position to the finance committee and the board.

The budget over ran in 2018 because of higher than anticipate­d costs for set constructi­on and transport. The extra expenses included delays in shipping from America for a co-production with Minnesota Opera, increased cost of accommodat­ion and increased fees for late cast changes, partly due to a contracted performer cancelling at very late notice.

The auditors said the festival had been unable to build up reserves to meet these shortfalls, partly due to capital commitment­s made in the constructi­on of the National Opera House over a decade ago and also recessiona­ry constraint­s.

The auditors found there was no procuremen­t policy at the time of the overspend and noted that: ‘in the absence of such a policy, including formally agreeing spending limits, it is unclear how the festival board could be satisfied that value for money was consistent­ly obtained when procuring goods or services’.

There was no formal payroll policy and no approval needed for staff taking time off. There was also no policy on withdrawal­s on credit and debit cards and no limits on spending on accommodat­ion, meals or expenses, leading to the potential for unauthoris­ed spend.

A review of 24 expenses claims found six were not properly vouched. One claim for a hotel included minibar costs, with no indication of the purpose of the entertainm­ent or who was involved.

The Arts Council is continuing to engage with the festival to ensure that all conditions attached to its financial assistance are being met.

WE ARE ANALYSING THE SOCIAL DISTANCING REQUIREMEN­TS AND ARE HOPING TO HAVE SOME NEWS SOON

 ??  ?? Cllr George Lawlor, Mayor of Wexford; Dr Mary Kelly, Chairperso­n of Wexford Festival Opera and RTE’s Marty Whelan at the opening of last year’s Wexford Festival Opera.
Cllr George Lawlor, Mayor of Wexford; Dr Mary Kelly, Chairperso­n of Wexford Festival Opera and RTE’s Marty Whelan at the opening of last year’s Wexford Festival Opera.

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