Current through Register Vol. 46, No. 39, September 25, 2024
(a)
Definitions. Whenever used in this section, the following terms shall have the
meanings indicated:
(1) Museum means an
organized non-for-profit institution, including but not limited to halls of
fame, zoos, aquariums, botanical gardens and arboretums, that is essentially
educational or aesthetic in purpose, with professional staff, which ordinarily
owns, exhibits, maintains, and/or utilizes artifacts, art, and/or specimens,
including non-tangible electronic, video, digital and similar art, cares for
them, and exhibits them to the public on some regular schedule.
(2) Historical society with collections means
an organized not-for-profit institution, with purposes limited to a reasonable
and clearly defined geographical area or to one or more specific subjects of
interest, which gathers, preserves, advances or disseminates knowledge about
the past through research, collections acquisition and management, preservation
and/or interpretation, which carries on educational and public programs on a
regular schedule, which makes its programs and resources accessible to the
public, and which is appropriately and professionally staffed by paid and/or
volunteer personnel who possess sufficient training and knowledge to meet the
requirements of its mission and the needs of its collections.
(3) Institution means a museum or historical
society with collections formed by the Board of Regents or otherwise
incorporated as an education corporation under the laws of the State of New
York.
(4) Accessible means the
extent to which the institution ensures that its collections, interpretation,
public and educational programming, and physical plant are reasonably
convenient for the public to use, understand and enjoy.
(5) Accession means:
(i) adding an object to an institution's
collection, or
(ii) the act of
recording/processing an addition to an institution's collection.
(6) Catalogue means the systematic
classification of objects or specimens in the collection according to accepted
museological practice.
(7)
Collection means one or more original tangible objects, artifacts, records or
specimens, including art generated by video, computer or similar means of
projection and display, that have intrinsic historical, artistic, cultural,
scientific, natural history or other value that share like characteristics or a
common base of association and are accessioned; for purposes of this section,
historic structures owned by an institution shall be considered as part of a
collection when so designated by the institution.
(8) Collection care means the responsibility
and function of an institution that involves developing and implementing
policies and procedures to protect the long-term integrity of objects,
artifacts, records and specimens, as well as their associated data and
documentation, for use in research, education and exhibits.
(9) Collection management means the
responsibility and function of an institution, through its collections
managers, subject specialists, curators, and other institutional administrators
to foster the preservation, accessibility, and utility of the institution's,
collections and associated data, including recommending and implementing policy
with respect to: artifact, record or specimen acquisition, collection growth,
and deaccessioning; planning and establishing collection priorities; obtaining,
allocating, and managing resources; and coordinating collection processes with
the needs of curation, preservation, and collection use.
(10) Deaccession means:
(i) removing an object from an institution's
collection, or
(ii) the act of
recording/processing a removal from an institution's collection.
(11) Diversity means broadly
inclusive participation in every aspect of governance, staff, operations and
programs to represent the community and constituency served in terms of race,
ethnicity, gender, economic background and geography.
(12) Education/public programs and
exhibitions means the full range of mission-related educational activities in
which the institution engages, to promote understanding and appreciation of a
subject, and to support life-long learning.
(13) Hours of operation means publicly stated
and promoted regular hours during which the public has reasonably convenient
access to the institution's education/public programs and
exhibitions.
(14) Interpretation
means the ways that the institution uses its collections, exhibits, and
research to communicate meaning to the public.
(15) Mission statement means a statement
modeled on and derived from the institution's corporate purposes, as set forth
in its charter or certificate of incorporation, that identifies the benefits
derived from the institution's activities.
(16) Operating budget means the amount of
annual income or expenditures of the institution, excluding funds raised for
capital improvements, funds received or designated for addition to endowments
and funds raised or obtained from sale of collections.
(17) Professional staff means at least one
paid employee who commands an appropriate body of special knowledge in the area
for which he or she is employed, and the ability to reach museological
decisions consonant with the experience of his/her peers and apply accepted
standards of practice, and who also has access to and acquaintance with the
expertise, best practices, literature and scholarship of the field; provided,
however, that a museum with an operating budget of $100,000 or less shall be
appropriately and professionally staffed by paid and/or volunteer personnel who
possess sufficient training and knowledge to meet the requirements of its
mission and the needs of its collections.
(18) Public trust means the responsibility of
institutions to carry out activities and hold their assets in trust for the
public benefit.
(19) Research means
a studious inquiry conducted in support of an institution's stated purposes in
order to bring to light new facts or to confirm or revise accepted
conclusions.
(b)
Requirements for museum and historical society chartering.
(1) Provisional charters. To be eligible for
a provisional charter, a museum historical society with collections shall
submit to the Board of Regents a petition for a provisional charter together
with evidence in writing which, in the judgment of the Board of Regents, makes
it appear likely that the institution will be successful in achieving
registration.
(2) Absolute
charters. To be eligible for an absolute charter, a museum or historical
society with collections shall submit a petition for an absolute charter
together with evidence in writing establishing, in the judgment of the Board of
Regents, the institution's compliance with the provisions of this section,
including, but not limited to, the general requirements for museums and
historical societies with collections under subdivision (c) of this section and
the provisions for registration under subdivision (d) of this
section.
(c) General
requirements for museums and historical societies with collections. Each
Institution shall meet the following requirements:
(1) Organization. The institution shall:
(i) be in compliance with all applicable
local, State, and Federal laws and regulations; and
(ii) maintain a mailing address within New
York State adequate for legal service;
(2) Mission. The institution shall:
(i) develop and adopt a written mission
statement;
(ii) prioritize its
activities to meet its mission statement; and
(iii) review, and revise as necessary, its
mission statement at least every five years.
(3) Governance. The institution shall:
(i) have a board-approved set of by-laws
and/or constitution;
(ii) have a
board of trustees of which no more than one-third of the members are related to
each other by birth, marriage or domicile;
(iii) where there is a relationship between
the institution and another corporation, society, organization, institution or
association, in which the institution and the other entity are related by
common membership, governing bodies, trustees, officers, shared finances,
collections or facilities, the institution shall have a board of trustees of
which no more than one-third are officers and/or directors of the other entity
at the same time, provided that this provision shall not apply to any unit of
government; and
(iv) have a
written, board-approved code of ethics applicable to trustees, administrators
and staff and volunteers that addresses issues of public trust, conflict of
interest and is reviewed each year.
(4) Finance. The institution shall:
(i) prepare an annual budget and financial
statements that are regularly reviewed by the board;
(ii) have formal financial policies and
maintain written records of financial transactions and reports pursuant to
generally accepted accounting practices;
(iii) appoint a board-constituted audit
committee, composed of a minimum of three board members other than the
treasurer and president, to review the institution's financial transactions and
reports; this requirement shall apply to every institution regardless of the
size of its operating budget and regardless of whether the institution has
conducted a financial review pursuant to subparagraph (iv) of this
paragraph;
(iv) conduct a financial
review in accordance with the following:
(a)
if its annual operating budget exceeds $250,000, the institution shall cause to
be conducted annually an independent audit by a certified public accountant,
which shall include the auditor's report and the auditor's written opinion that
the financial statements are presented fairly in all material respects and in
conformity with generally accepted accounting principles applicable to
not-for-profit organizations;
(b)
if its annual operating budget is at least $100,000 but no more than $250,000,
the institution shall cause to be conducted annually an independent review by a
certified public accountant in conformity with generally accepted accounting
principles applicable to not-for-profit organizations;
(c) if the annual operating budget of an
institution is below $100,000, no independent audit or review shall be
required; provided that nothing herein shall relieve an institution of its
responsibility to appoint an audit committee to review the institution's
financial transactions, pursuant to subparagraph (iii) of this
paragraph;
(v) conduct
its financial affairs in such a way that it does not jeopardize the ownership
or integrity of its collection or any portion thereof; and
(vi) have obtained and continue to maintain,
or shall have filed an application for, tax-exempt status under section
501(c)(3) or other section, as applicable, of the Internal Revenue Code or the
corresponding provision of any future United States Internal Revenue
Law.
(5) Facilities. The
institution shall:
(i) have a physical plant
that is accessible to individuals with disabilities to the extent required by
law;
(ii) have adopted emergency
action and disaster preparedness plans appropriate for the institution's
facilities, exhibits and collections;
(iii) ensure that the physical plant is
adequately insured; and
(iv) ensure
that any structure or facility owned or leased by the institution that houses
offices, classrooms, exhibits or collections is equipped with an adequate,
working alarm system for detection of fire, smoke and intruders.
(6) Collections care and
management. The institution shall:
(i) own,
maintain and/or exhibit original tangible objects, artifacts, records,
specimens, buildings, archeological remains, properties, lands and/or other
tangible and intrinsically valuable resources that are appropriate to its
mission;
(ii) ensure that the
acquisition and deaccessioning of its collection is consistent with its
corporate purposes and mission statement;
(iii) ensure that deaccessioning of items or
materials in its collection is limited to the circumstances prescribed in
paragraph (7) of this subdivision;
(iv) have a written collections management
policy providing clear standards to guide institutional decisions regarding the
collection, that is in regular use, available to the public upon request, filed
with the commissioner for inspection by anyone wishing to examine it; and
which, at a minimum, satisfactorily addresses the following subject areas:
(a) acquisition. The criteria and processes
used for determining what items are added to the collections;
(b) loans. The criteria and processes used
for borrowing items owned by other institutions and individuals, and for
lending items from the collections;
(c) preservation. A statement of intent to
ensure the adequate care and preservation of collections;
(d) access. A statement indicating intent to
allow reasonable access to the collections by persons with legitimate reasons
to access them; and
(e)
deaccession. The criteria and process (including levels of permission) used for
determining what items are to be removed from the collections, which shall be
consistent with paragraph (7) of this subdivision, and a statement limiting the
use of any funds derived therefrom in accordance with subparagraph (vii) of
this paragraph;
(v)
ensure that collections or any individual part thereof and the proceeds derived
therefrom shall not be used as collateral for a loan;
(vi) ensure that collections shall not be
capitalized; and
(vii) ensure that
proceeds derived from the deaccessioning of any property from the institution's
collection be restricted in a separate fund to be used only for the acquisition
of collections, or the preservation, conservation or direct care of
collections. In no event shall proceeds derived from the deaccessioning of any
property from the collection be used for operating expenses or for any purposes
other than the acquisition, preservation, conservation or direct care of
collections.
(7)
Deaccessioning of collections. An institution may deaccession an item in its
collection only in a manner consistent with its mission statement and
collections management policy and where one or more of the following criteria
have been met:
(i) the item is inconsistent
with the mission of the institution as set forth in its mission
statement;
(ii) the item has failed
to retain its identity;
(iii) the
item is redundant;
(iv) the item's
preservation and conservation needs are beyond the capacity of the institution
to provide;
(v) the item is
deaccessioned to accomplish refinement of collections;
(vi) it has been established that the item is
inauthentic;
(vii) the institution
is repatriating the item or returning the item to its rightful owner;
(viii) the institution is returning the item
to the donor, or the donor's heirs or assigns, to fulfill donor restrictions
relating to the item which the institution is no longer able to meet;
(ix) the item presents a hazard to people or
other collection items; and/or
(x)
the item has been lost or stolen and has not been recovered.
(8) Education and interpretation.
The institution shall offer programmatic accommodation for individuals with
disabilities to the extent required by law.
(d) Requirements for registration museum and
historical societies with collections. An institution shall be deemed
registered upon the granting of an absolute charter. To be eligible for
registration, an institution shall meet the requirements for an absolute
charter pursuant to subdivision (b) of this section and the following
additional requirements:
(1) Organization.
The institution shall:
(i) have been
chartered, incorporated or in operation a minimum of five years;
(ii) have sufficient financial and physical
resources to achieve its mission and meet the standards prescribed in this
section; and
(iii) be open and
accessible to the public on a regular basis, provided that institutions having
an operating budget in excess of $100,000 per year shall be open to the public
a minimum of 1,000 hours of operation per year.
(2) Governance. The institution shall:
(i) organize its governing authority, staff,
financial resources, collections, public programs and other activities to
effectively achieve its mission statement and fulfill its public trust
obligations; and
(ii) effectively
advance diversity of membership and participation in the institution's
mission;
(3) Finance.
The institution shall have obtained, and continue to maintain, tax-exempt
status under section 501(c)(3) or other section, as applicable, of the Internal
Revenue Code or the corresponding provision of any future United States
Internal Revenue Law.
(4)
Facilities. The institution shall:
(i) own or
occupy through lease or other legally enforceable agreement safe,
well-maintained and accessible facilities; any lease or agreement shall be
sufficiently long as to be convenient for the public and accommodate the
institution's need for operational stability;
(ii) ensure that the physical plant is
adequately maintained; and
(iii)
ensure that any historic structure owned by the institution that is eligible
for or listed on the State and/or National Registers of Historic Places will be
restored and/or maintained according to accepted historic preservation
practices.
(5) Education
and interpretation. The institution shall:
(i) use its collections to present programs,
publications, and exhibitions that are consistent with the organization's
mission, based upon the highest standards of scholarship and offered to as
broad a segment of the population served as possible, with consideration given
to the learning styles of the audiences to be served;
(ii) present regularly scheduled, publicly
stated and promoted programs and exhibits that are intrinsically educational
and that use and interpret collections for the public's benefit;
(iii) employ a variety of presentation and
teaching techniques that acknowledge the ways audiences gather information and
learn; and
(iv) ensure that any
school programs conducted by the institution shall be based on the appropriate
State learning standards, and with input from teachers and/or other
educators.
(f) Use of names.
(1) The name of the institution shall be
consistent with and clearly indicative of its purpose, and shall not be
identical with or so similar to the name of any existing entity as to cause
confusion between the institution and any other entity incorporated under the
laws of New York.
(2) The terms
"National," "American," "United States," "World," "International," and similar
geographically descriptive terms shall not be used in a corporate name unless
the institution seeking to use such term can demonstrate that:
(i) the institution has such coverage, scope
of collections, breadth of exhibits, broad representation and sufficient
recognition to warrant such term in the corporate name; or
(ii) such term is used in a context that does
not imply a geographical area that is served by the institution.
(3) No museum or historical
society with collections shall use the word "library" and no historical society
with collections shall use the word "museum" in connection with its operations
unless authority to operate a library or museum is conferred by the charter of
the museum or society and the library or museum operation meets the
requirements of the Rules of the Board of Regents and the Regulations of the
Commissioner of Education with respect to the operation and registration of a
library or museum; provided that such prohibition with respect to the operation
of a library shall not apply to collections of books and/or other materials
maintained for reference use and not for public circulation.
(g) Dissolution. A museum or
historical society with collections shall comply with all applicable State
statutes, rules and regulations relating to dissolution and distribution of
assets, and shall not disband or dissolve, nor distribute, spend down or
otherwise dispose of its assets, except as provided thereunder.