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N.Y. Regents approve rules to protect museum pieces

ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) – Important museum pieces will be protected under rules adopted by the New York state Board of Regents.

The Regents, who are responsible for the general supervision of all educational activities within the state, approved new rules that would restrict the sale of museum pieces as facilities face continued hard fiscal times.

The rules would require proceeds from sales to be used for acquisitions and would also seek to keep museum relics and pieces in the public domain even if a museum shuts down.

Former Assemblyman Richard Brodsky of Westchester said the rules will prohibit important cultural pieces being sold to private collectors in order to pay for operating expenses.

Brodsky, now a fellow at Wagner College on Staten Island, calls this an extraordinary moment in New York’s cultural history.

Brodsky and the legislature has sought the protections since the recession cut into museums’ revenues.

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AP-WF-05-18-11 1017GMT