If the success of a public library depends on its ability to understand and meet the needs of its community and to promote its services, resources and programs to the community, how can this be done? What obstacles must be overcome? Before you write your own treatise on this topic (!) you might want to check out this 4 page article, “Local Government Managers and Public Libraries: Partners for a Better Community“, [PDF, This file requires the free Adobe Reader]
Although this statewide Idaho report, [PDF] comes from focus group sessions with Idaho digital natives ages 12-17 and 18-25, the 18 finding will be interesting to all librarians. (This file requires the free Adobe Reader)
The Idaho Commission for Libraries is “using the information to help libraries design valid/useful/viable (pick one) services for their digital audiences”.
For more information about the project, contact the Idaho Commission for Libraries at lili@libraries.idaho.gov or call 208-334-2150.
Reflections on Mary Baykan’s presentation at Association for Rural and Small Libraries Annual Conference, Columbus, Ohio, September 26-29, 2007 by Rich Boulet for the Maine Library Community
Excellent professional development experience
With help from the Maine State Library and support from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation I recently attended to the annual conference of the Association for Rural and Small Libraries in Columbus Ohio. There were about 160 attendees for this compact, focused conference and it was among the best professional development experiences I have had to date. There were 6 of us from Maine who made the trip: Valerie Osborne and Bonnie Dwyer representing the northern and central district consultants, and Sonja Plummer-Morgan (Mark and Emily Turner Memorial Library in Presque Isle), Jeanne Benedict (Henry D. Moore Library in Steuben), Maureen Cole (Hollis Center Public Library) and myself from Blue Hill Public Library.
Maine libraries have MARVEL! and other statewide infrastructure
While there I learned a number of things and came back with a sense that we are most fortunate in Maine relative to lots of library destinations around the country. Important library infrastructure such as MARVEL!, MaineCat, and MSLNthat we use every day is by no means commonplace around the country. Lots of libraries struggle on their own with basic database subscriptions (that we can almost take for granted in MARVEL!), finding a suitable ISP (a day does not go by that I am not reminded of what a great resource MSLN is) and streamlining resource sharing (where would we be without Minerva, SOLAR, URSUS, etc.?). Many areas of the country have even fewer resources than Maine to put into library services, leaving libraries there with very large service areas to cover and fewer tools to do so.
Survey on the value of libraries
One of the most useful sessions that I attended was a presentation by the 2007 Library Journal Librarian of the Year, Mary Baykan from the Washington County Free Library in Maryland. Mary shared with us how she and her colleagues realized a significant increase in state funding for library services in the face of almost certain budget cuts.
Baykan hired a nationally known polling agency to survey Maryland’s residents about their perceived value of library services. Questions in the Maryland Poll included ones about attitudes toward library service: are libraries essential, or are they viewed as cultural amenities on par with theaters. There were also questions about the economic impact of libraries. For example:
“When was the last time that someone in your household visited a local public library in person? Was it within the last week, the last couple months, last year or longer?”44 percent stated that they visited within the last week, an additional 36 percent stated that they visited within the last couple of months, and a final 9 percent stated they visited sometime within the last year. The median times used equaled 12 per year.
[Baykan, M. (2006, September). Maryland’s Successful Campaign to Increase Library Funding. Retrieved 10 28, 2007, from Information Today, Inc.]
The vast majority of respondents to this poll highly valued library services and responded quite favorably. The few negative data she received were used in-house use to improve library services.
The effectiveness of the study is particularly convincing when you look at the costs and the return on investment. The poll cost a total of $57,000, but according to Ms. Baykan, resulted in an additional $35 million (over 4 years) in additional funding for Maryland’s libraries. This is an incredible return on the initial investment to Maryland’s library patrons- 614 times over!
My gratitude goes to the Maine State Library and the Bill and Melinda Foundation for underwriting this engaging professional development experience.
Did you miss hearing Michael Sullivan speak at the recent Northeastern Maine Library District Fall (NMLD) Council meeting in October? What a thought-provoking presentation!
According to Michael Sullivan, public libraries are in trouble. Slashed budgets, librarian shortages, governmental and social pressure on library collections and policies, even the closing of many public libraries around the country. Meanwhile, library advocates smugly claim that the public library will never go away, and technological futurists confidently assert that public libraries will go the way of the horse and buggy.
What are the real challenges and the real dangers? What is merely mirage? If public libraries really are in danger, what can we do to assure a place in the future? Michael Sullivan, a true library maverick, challenged every assumption about public libraries as he spoke at the NMLD Fall council meeting.
Check out my notes now posted on the NMLD website
(Michael Sullivan is the former director of the Greenland, Stratham and Center Harbor public libraries and an adjunct faculty member at Simmons College Graduate School of Library and Information Science in Boston.)
What are national “experts” predicting about the future of libraries?
One of the most exciting conferences I’ve ever attended took place in Atlantic City, N.J. in May of this year. Experts from across the U.S. described their views about the future of libraries. I truly wish everyone of you could have been there with me. The best I can do, however, is link you to notes from that conference. I hope you find them as compelling as I did.
Notes from Mid Atlantic Futures Conference , Imagination to Transformation, May 2007
In addition, the New Jersey State Librarian has some interesting information on her blog. Tabletop Computing is Here (downloading, resizing, and sharing photos can happen instantly)from the New Jersey State Library’s blog, “Blake’s Blog“.
If you have web sites or opinions you’d like to share about the future of libraries, please feel free (encouraged) to share them here. Best, Linda
I live in the Bangor Daily News ciruclation area and am always impressed at the amount of news from and about libraries that appears each week. Here are two recent examples from the BDN:
The Stewart Public Library in Corinna is offering a series of concerts this summer on the library lawn starting on June 14 and ending on Augusta 16. (these are Thursdays)
The Vose Library in Union has received $50,000 from the Stephen and Tabitha King Foundation toward construction of a new building. The building campaign has raised over $250,000 in the past six years. The design for their new building is energy efficient and will “benefit from passive solar gain offered by the library’s site” as well as an outdoor amphitheater for children’s programs. A nature trail is also planned. An Art and Wine Tour is planned to help raise funds this summer. Amazing plans for the future are being made by many Maine libraries!