I’m nigh-certain that Wytham was never under the control of CEA’s Executive Director.
I think that this litmus test is pretty weak, though, as a response to Arepo’s suggestion that CEA was the primary beneficiary of Wytham. However, I also think that this suggestion is mistaken. I believe that CEA hosted <10% of the events at Wytham (maybe significantly less; I don’t know precisely, and am giving 10% as a round threshold that I’m relatively confident using as an upper bound).
I’m nigh-certain that Wytham was never under the control of CEA’s Executive Director.
I think that this litmus test is pretty weak, though, as a response to Arepo’s suggestion that CEA was the primary beneficiary of Wytham. However, I also think that this suggestion is mistaken. I believe that CEA hosted <10% of the events at Wytham (maybe significantly less; I don’t know precisely, and am giving 10% as a round threshold that I’m relatively confident using as an upper bound).