Tuesday, December 30, 2008

Library cards lend hand to businesses

Broward County's Eileen Cobb, Monroe County's Norma Kula and Miami-Dade Public Library System's Jennifer Shipley are quoted in this Miami Herald story about how libraries are helping people deal with economic challenges. Read the full story at http://www.miamiherald.com/business/story/828565.html.

Wednesday, December 24, 2008

Libraries Offer Plenty For Storms To Stew Over

By CATHERINE DOLINSKI The Tampa Tribune
Published: December 19, 2008

TALLAHASSEE - The economy is a shambles. State revenue is in a free-fall. House leaders in both parties stand accused of misusing their political powers.

This week, state Sen. Ronda Storms identified another menace: The Dewey Decimal System.

Storms, R-Valrico, railed against the book-cataloging system during a budget hearing on state library aid, calling the Dewey Decimal System "anachronistic," costly and just plain frustrating.
The system requires training for both staff and users, she complained. If Barnes & Noble organizes its books more simply, why can't libraries?

"A lot of little old librarians are going to have a heart attack that I even said that out loud," Storms said during Wednesday's hearing. "But it really is ridiculous."

Secretary of State Kurt Browning, who oversees state support of libraries, told the committee that Dewey Decimal is the national standard, set by the Library of Congress.

"The Library of Congress can do what the Library of Congress wants," Storms said. "If it's costing us money ... it's time to wake up and smell the coffee."

Browning spokeswoman Jennifer Davis later addressed the money issue. "Conversion to another system would be very costly," she said.

The senator had another bone to pick as well - over "Seinfeld."
Storms objects to public libraries loaning out copies of TV show episodes.

"If there's one thing this country doesn't need more of, it's more TV," she said. "More books is good; more cultural arts ... but I'm not sure we need more episodes of 'Seinfeld' in our library."

Committee Chairman Mike Fasano, R-New Port Richey, said Storms could propose instructions to insert in the state budget about libraries' specific use of funding. That prompted Storms to speculate about more funding for libraries that agree to spend it on purchases of books instead of TV shows.

That smacks of censorship and micromanagement, said Larry Spalding, lobbyist for the American Civil Liberties Union.

"It would be wonderful if all children were motivated to listen to Mozart and read things that are educational," he said. "But not all children are the same. Libraries adapt."
Reporter Catherine Dolinski can be reached at (850) 222-8382.

Tuesday, November 25, 2008

Business booming at Palm Beach County libraries

By Bill Dipaolo

Palm Beach Post Staff Writer

Monday, November 24, 2008

PALM BEACH GARDENS — Banks are tanking and the auto industry is ailing, but business is booming at county libraries.

Circulation and attendance are up 30 percent in the past two years. Book clubs and community meetings at the 16 county libraries are thriving. More job seekers are using the computers to update résumés. Parents who can't afford day care or summer camp are using libraries as an alternative.

That's why the 14-month closing of the North County Regional Library on PGA Boulevard starting in January will be tough for patrons and other nearby libraries which will have to pick up the slack.

Leaders of groups now meeting at North Regional have already started asking for space at North Palm Beach Library next to Village Hall, library director Donna Riegel said. She is talking with county officials about moving North Regional's children's program to North Palm Beach while North Regional is closed.

In Lake Park, budget cuts have forced the Park Avenue library to cut staff and hours.

"The closing couldn't come at a worse time," said Mike Kennely, director of the Lake Park library.

The 14 months of inconvenience will be worthwhile, said Palm Beach County Library Director John Callahan.

"Usage at the expanded library will skyrocket. There will be more community space and modern equipment," Callahan said.

A new children's wing is planned, with areas for story time and crafts. The number of computers will be doubled to about 50. The 125-person meeting room, now used for library and other events, will become a community meeting room. There also will be five individual study rooms, and four group study rooms.

And a new-fangled return system called Radio Frequency Identification will allow librarians to rapidly accept returned books and refile them.

When the North County Regional expansion is complete in April 2010, the 40,000-square-foot building will be the largest in the county system. It will be renamed the "Gardens Branch Library."

"Librarians will have more time to do what they are trained for — help people find information," said Callahan.

Seven county libraries — including North County Regional — are planned for new construction and renovations by the end of 2009. The $68 million cost will be paid by the 2002 county voter-approved $55 million bond issue, tax dollars and impact fees, said Callahan.

The county library system has about 400 full-time employees and an annual budget of about $49 million. Last year, county libraries had about 5 million visitors who borrowed about 7.5 million items, said Callahan.

"When economic times are tough, our business goes up," said Callahan. "Libraries are no longer just a place for research. We are community centers. It's a reaction to the Internet. People love technology. But they still crave personal interaction."

For more library information, go to pbclibrary.org or call (561) 233-2600.

Monday, November 17, 2008

It is time to invest in first-class libraries

Pensacola News Journal

November 17, 2008

Editorial


The economy is down but the circulation at the West Florida Public Library system is up, which shows the desperate need to improve a system that ranks among the worst in the state.


Clearly, no community should be without a first-rate library. The library is a portal to the world of knowledge for people of all ages, and should reflect that value.


During these tough economic times, it hard to dismiss the importance and popularity of the public library.


The West Florida Public Library system had significant increases in books and other materials checked out during the 2007-08 fiscal year, compared to the previous year.


Circulation of books and other materials increased from 680,000 to 747,000, a roughly 10 percent increase. Use of library computers increased 15 percent, from 138,000 users to 159,000 at the various branches of the library.


People who used the library to check out materials, use the computers or read newspapers and magazines increased about 5 percent, from 584,000 to 613,000.


Clearly, an enhanced library system that serves the needs of area residents is a good investment.


For too long, the West Florida system has had the unfortunate distinction of ranking at or near the bottom statewide in library investment and facilities.


At some point — at least we hope — more area leaders and residents will begin to grasp the connection between the investment in things like libraries, and the community's economic vitality.


To its credit, the local public library does the best it can, given its age and deteriorating condition, but there is only so much to be done.


It's time to make the investment to provide a first-class community a first-class library.

The payoff will be worth it, and not only in learning or research. There will be payoffs in economic opportunity as well.

Friday, October 31, 2008

Leon schools and public libraries may combine

According to a story posted October 30 by WCTV-TV, the Leon County Commission and School Board are considering plans to combine public libraries and schools. The full article includes a video clip and is posted at http://www.wctv.tv/news/headlines/33600269.html.

Tuesday, October 21, 2008

October 21, 2008

Flagler seeks library pact with St. Johns By HEATHER SCOFIELD Staff Writer

PALM COAST -- Flagler County residents have always been able to check out books from libraries in neighboring St. Johns County without paying a fee.
Until a few months ago, that is.

The economic downturn, housing market meltdown and subsequent loss of property tax revenues in Florida counties has left libraries and other government-supported agencies around the state scrambling to find new ways to stay afloat, said Flagler County Library Director Holly Albanese.

For the St. Johns County Library system, that meant a new era of charging out-of-county residents for their St. Johns County library card.

But many Flagler residents depend on St. Johns' libraries for services and materials they can't get in Flagler's small system, Albanese said.

"Flagler residents have always enjoyed reciprocal borrowing privileges in St. Johns County," Albanese said. And she wants to keep it that way, Albanese said.

In a meeting Monday, Flagler County commissioners agreed to sign an agreement with St. Johns officials that would keep the neighborly generosity flowing between the counties, with residents of each county able to get free library cards in the two counties.

The Flagler County library system consists of one major library in Palm Coast and a satellite branch in Bunnell that only operates a few days per week. So residents often depend on the larger, neighboring county library systems to meet their needs when Flagler can't. And an August voter referendum that would've protected or even expanded library services in the county in light of recent budget woes was shot down, so officials aren't sure when the funds will be available for library system improvements, County Administrator Craig Coffey said.

"It makes keeping these types of arrangements more important," Coffey said.
More than 41,000 registered borrowers utilize Flagler County libraries, some of whom are St. Johns County residents, Albanese said.

And while Flagler's neighbors can still get a Flagler County Library Card without charge, Coffey said the library is looking to recoup some of its budget losses from the last few years in part through a new service that would provide passport photos to residents who require them.

heather.scofield@news-jrnl.com
http://www.news-journalonline.com/NewsJournalOnline/News/Local/newFLAG01102108.htm

Thursday, October 2, 2008

Treasure Island don't need no li-berry

St. Petersburg Times

By
Howard Troxler, Times columnist Published Wednesday, October 1, 2008 8:24 PM

The Gulf Beaches Public Library in Madeira Beach is a bright and friendly place. On Wednesday morning the staff was hanging Halloween decorations in the children's section, and getting ready for the afternoon session of its Alfred Hitchcock film series (Foreign Correspondent).


Just after the library opened, the parking lot already was half filled, and bikes were lined up in the rack. Most of the computers already were in use. "I'm looking for the American Revolution," one patron wandering in the shelves said to a staff member.


I knew how he felt.


For more than 40 years, the Gulf Beaches Public Library has been supported by five Pinellas County cities — Treasure Island, Madeira Beach, Redington Beach, North Redington Beach and Redington Shores.

Until now.


Treasure Island has pulled out of the deal for the coming year, citing a tight budget. Treasure Island will not chip in its $107,000 share of the library's $513,000 budget.


If you are a Treasure Island resident who wants a library card, you'll have to pay $100, the same as any other outsider to the Pinellas library system. The city will not reimburse you, as some Pinellas cities do.


It is fair to say that Treasure Island's unilateral pullout has left some bad feelings all around — among the other cities holding the bag, as well as some of its own residents. The library is drawing down its reserves while it figures out what to do.


The library has an explanatory sign at its entrance for Treasure Island residents. To encourage them to buy a card, the library is holding a drawing for two $50 gift certificates at Publix, and two $50 gas vouchers (or these days, about half a tank).


Jan Horah, the library director, asked me to say this: If you're a Treasure Island resident who intends to buy the $100 card, please do it there, so her branch gets the money.


I saw a cheerful fellow come in, sit down at the front desk and eagerly pay his $100. I asked him if he was from Treasure Island, and he said yes.


"My wife and I are frequent users," Dick Krahenbuhl, 70, told me. She'll go through two or three books a week; he's the "shuttle driver" back and forth to the library.


"I disagree with the city, and I'll tell you why," he said. "They'll never convince me there isn't some way to save money somewhere along the way."

Actually, Treasure Island's $16.7-million budget looks reasonably tight. It's cut jobs and jacked up other fees on residents.

If I were mean, I would point out that the City Commission itself will cost $60,000 next year in salaries, life and medical insurance.

Life and medical insurance!

But that would be mean.

Treasure Island's alternative was to keep property taxes just high enough to cover the $107,000 library cost, averaging an extra $21 per parcel of land.

Twenty-one bucks. Not worth it, they said. Let those who want a library card pay $100. And if they don't have $100, the heck with them.

It seems odd to have to argue for the importance of libraries in a democracy. In fact, I don't think you can have the second without the first. But this view is probably out of fashion in a defiantly know-nothing age.

If Treasure Island doesn't think libraries are important, Treasure Island deserves what it gets in return. That goes for the rest of us, too.

Wednesday, September 24, 2008

Cuts undermine 'house of wisdom'

- Another great library story in the St. Petersburg Times!

By
Bill Maxwell, Times Columnist Published Friday, September 19, 2008 3:59 PM

Tampa Bay area public libraries have been in the news a lot of late and not for good reasons. Most recently, because of budget shortfalls, Treasure Island commissioners voted to stop funding the Gulf Beaches Public Library system that serves Madeira Beach, Redington Beach, North Redington Beach and Redington Shores.

Earlier, the Hillsborough County library system ruled that beginning in October, residents of other counties won't be permitted to borrow anything unless they cough up a $100 per-household annual fee. St. Petersburg, Clearwater and Hernando County have cut hours to save money.


I empathize with Tampa Bay area residents who lament the hard times that have hit this American icon. Indeed, public libraries — collectively referred to as the "house of wisdom" — have played a major role in the lives of millions.

They certainly have been central to my life. As a child who grew up following my father up and down the U.S. East Coast as a migrant farm worker, I always found the local public library. After work, I would go to these places for refuge. I was free to sit and read anything I wanted, at least in the Northern states.


Although my father would be tired after work, he'd drive me to the public library in the towns we lived, drop me off and pick me up at an agreed-upon time.
The public library that meant the most to me as a child was in Crescent City.

My grandmother was a maid, and one of her sites was the Crescent City Women's Club, which doubled as the library. It had a collection of about 2,000 volumes.
I often went with my grandmother to clean the building, but I spent more time reading than working. At first, my grandmother scolded me for not working. Later, she encouraged me to read.

Mrs. Anna Hubbard, the director, saw my interest in books and suggested works for me to read — Native Son, Of Mice and Men, The Catcher in the Rye and many others. She'd bring me into her office and discuss the books with me.


Because blacks weren't allowed to use the library, Mrs. Hubbard would put books in a grocery bag and let me bring them home. I took an oath of secrecy, because she could have gotten in trouble.


When I attended Wiley College in Texas, I gave up my football scholarship and took a work-study job in our Carnegie Library. Because of theft and romantic assignations, students weren't allowed in the stacks. I had the wonderful task of finding students' requests.


I had the entire collection to myself. When I wasn't in class, I spent most of my time in the stacks reading and just browsing. Another great thing about the library was that although it was on Wiley's campus, local blacks, who weren't allowed in the downtown library, could use it free of charge.


Since those days at Wiley, I've moved around a lot as a teacher and a journalist. Everywhere I've lived — from Fort Lauderdale to Chicago, to New York, to San Angelo, Texas, to Tuscaloosa, to Key West, to St. Petersburg — I have obtained a public library card. In fact, getting a library card is one of the first things I do wherever I move.


The public library is an integral part of the American fabric. In addition to providing books and other reading materials, it's a place for, among other functions, authors to read and sign their works and where afterschool reading programs for children are held.


A 1999 study, titled The Significance of the Public Library on a Child's Reading Achievement, suggests that above-average students used the public library more than below-average students; parents of above-average students took their children to the library at an earlier age than parents of below-average students; and students in the below-average group did not participate in library programs as often as above-average students.

Libraries also hold a prominent place in popular culture. When Fronzie, the "king of cool'' on the TV's Happy Days got a library card, for example, libraries across the nation reported a huge spike in the number of people, especially teens, applying for library cards. Believe it or not, the New York Public Library was one of the few adult things that interested the disillusioned Holden Caulfield.

Ironically, public libraries in many parts of the country are in crisis at a time when they are more popular than ever. According to the American Library Association, visits to public libraries increased 61 percent from 1994 to 2004, and the numbers have continued to rise.

So what's the future of public libraries? No one has the definitive answer, but one thing is for sure: If the economy continues to tank over time, forcing municipalities to further trim their budgets, the value and accessibility of this grand old institution will diminish in ways we can't imagine.


© 2008 • All Rights Reserved • St. Petersburg Times 490 First Avenue South • St. Petersburg, FL 33701 • 727-893-8111
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Monday, September 15, 2008

Adults learn to read, write at library

South Florida Sun-Sentinel.com
By Christina Veiga
Special correspondent
September 14, 2008


When he's not spending time mastering chess, Aaron Thomas is at Lauderhill Towne Centre Library learning how to read. Thomas, 29, is one of more than 250 adults learning how to read and write through Each One Teach One,
Broward County Library's adult literacy program.

"It's very important to me to try to get an education. It doesn't really matter how old you are, especially living in the United States," said Thomas, a Jamaican native who came to the U.S. when he was 20. But Thomas, a club-level chess player, admits learning wasn't always a priority for him.

Growing up in Jamaica, Thomas never took school seriously. He didn't get along with the other students and would much rather "play around" than learn. "I think it was because I was so young and not understanding the importance of having an education," Thomas said.

That changed three years ago when Thomas decided to join Each One Teach One after deciphering an ad for the program in a local newspaper. Run by the library's Learning Services Department, Each One Teach One matches tutors and students who meet weekly to work one-on-one at their local library.

"By coming here and trying to go and fill out an application and not be able to do it, I decided to try to get in some program where I could be able to learn to read to be able to help myself and move around," Thomas said.

With the help of his tutor Carl Zettelmeyer, Thomas obtained his American citizenship since joining the program. He now can read a newspaper proficiently and is working toward earning his GED, or high school-equivalent diploma. Thomas hopes eventually to become a plumber to make a better living.

"I'm learning as much from him as he's learning from me.

I think of my role as more of a coach than a teacher, so to speak, because he brings a great deal to the situation," said Zettelmeyer, a retired high school English teacher. Reading and writing aren't the only skills Thomas has learned since moving to the U.S. He learned to play chess "by accident" about a year ago.

"I do maintenance and I was walking one day and I looked in the garbage room and I saw some chess pieces and a chess board," Thomas said. "I went to the park, and I asked somebody to teach me to play.

"Now, with an above-average rating of about 1,600, "The people that taught me how to play, they can't beat me right now," Thomas said.Just like chess, learning how to read and write has provided Thomas with newfound skills, confidence and independence. "It's a wide world out there.

Once you learn to read, you could step up — do other things, start a business, do whatever you want to do, go to college. But, you know, you have to take it step by step.

"Anyone interested in joining Each One Teach One should call Broward County Learning Services at 954-625-2820.

Copyright © 2008,
South Florida Sun-Sentinel

Sunday, September 14, 2008

Cafe has plenty to offer hungry patrons at Leesburg library

OrlandoSentinel.com
Rosalind Jennings
Special To The Sentinel
September 14, 2008


Guests visiting the city's public library can now get a cup of coffee and even a gourmet or vegetarian meal before hitting the stacks. The library finished construction of a roughly 1,500-square-feet area slotted for a cafe earlier this year.

And last month, Z-Caf, with an extensive food menu and coffee roasted on-site, opened on the first floor of the library at 100 E. Main St. in downtown.

The menu includes meat sandwiches and more than 50 coffees. It also has a large selection of vegetarian and vegan sandwiches and other vegetarian meals.

Co-owner David Kahan said he wanted an extensive menu because he expects the cafe to get many repeat customers because of its convenient location.

"We feel it's important in a community when you are selling to a lot of people -- people who often come in two or three times a day -- to have plenty," Kahan said. "You don't want your menu to be tiresome. You want it to be exciting. We try to be balanced.

"The menu lists breakfast and lunch-dinner meals. Breakfast offerings include sandwiches made with eggs, cheese and sausage. Deli sandwiches are made with tuna, ham, roast beef and chicken.

They also serve classic meals such as hot dogs, grilled cheese with tomato and mushroom, grilled tuna melt and grilled turkey melt. They have quesadillas with chicken, turkey or beef, and offer a house salad, hummus salad and gourmet salad.

The cafe serves 12 varieties of wraps, including grilled pesto with turkey, grilled pesto with pepperoni, grilled roast beef Reuben and a grilled Mediterranean eggplant and bacon.

The other half of the menu is vegetarian.Both Kahan, 47, and his co-owner and wife Haemi Kahan, 47, are vegetarians, so coming up with vegetarian recipes comes natural to them.

"Our menu is like an artist's palette," Kahan said. "We create different paintings with our food.

"The canvas includes vegetarian breakfast meals and classics such as a vegetarian chili dog and a vegetarian bacon, lettuce and tomato sandwich. Also on the menu: eight vegetarian quesadillas, five types of vegetarian burgers and 13 varieties of vegetarian wraps, such as vegetarian teriyaki turkey and falafel-hummus.

The Kahans also serve 15 vegetarian gourmet sandwiches such as grilled pesto with eggplant, grilled vegetarian meatball sub and grilled vegetarian roast beef Reuben.

"We are definitely fulfilling a need here," Kahan said. "Vegetarians are not a stereotype. They come in every age and every demeanor. We get lots of retired folks -- some people drive all the way from Mount Dora. When they come in and see the menu, they say, 'Oh my gosh, there's all these choices.'

"Coffee selections come from a host of countries.Java fiends can enjoy such brands as Hawaiian Kona and Jamaican Blue Mountain along with coffees from lesser-known sources such as East Timor and the Galapagos Islands.

"We like people to know we are set up like a wine bar for coffee," he said. "Anyone [coffee variety] that you want, we can grind the beans and make it.

"The cafe also has shakes, smoothies, iced lattes, cappuccinos and more. There's energy coffee, which has twice the caffeine. Fruit milkshakes come in such flavors as guava and passion fruit.

Those steering clear of dairy also can find a drink, Kahan said. And the cafe prepares sugar-free beverages.

"We offer vegan [without dairy] milkshakes," he said. "Any drink we have we can make soy-based.

"Library Director Barbara Morse noted that wireless Internet is available in the cafe -- just as in the rest of the library.

"It's so neat to see people reading books and working on their laptops," Morse said. Morse said the chicken salad is one her staff's favorites. She drinks coffee herself and loves the large variety.

The Kahans began their coffee business in 2002. They opened their first Z-Cafe at the Orlando Public Library in downtown Orlando about three years ago. They also operate in the Cagan Crossings Library in Clermont and in the Florida Hospital in Apopka.

For more information, call the restaurant at 352-326-2439.


Copyright © 2008, Orlando Sentinel

Wednesday, September 10, 2008

Sarasota Library in the news

The Tampa FOX station often profiles the Selby Library in their "What's Right with Tampa Bay" segments. This was one of our favorites from this summer!

Watch the video by clicking here

Tuesday, September 2, 2008

Libraries win quiet battle: Institutions transformed in Web age

FLORIDA TODAY - September 2, 2008

By SUSANNE CERVENKA

The Internet was supposed to send America's public libraries the way of eight-track tapes and pay phones.

But it turns out, they're busier than ever.

Libraries have transformed themselves from staid, sleepy institutions into hip community centers offering Internet service, classes for kids and seniors, and even coffee and video gaming nights.


Some have classes on citizenship for recent immigrants or provide sessions on improving computer skills.


Most offer wireless Internet service, and many consult teen advisory councils for guidance on how to attract young people.

At most libraries, traffic is up -- in some cases, way up -- fueled in part by the lure of free computer use, according to experts and a Gannett News Service analysis of state and federal data.


At the same time, budget pressures on cities and counties that provide most of the funding have forced dozens of libraries to cut back their hours or close.

"We're busier than ever," said David McMurrin, north area director for Brevard County libraries, where attendance is up more than 3.5 percent, according to the analysis.


"Our challenge is to maintain our services with the increased demand."

The newest improvement in local libraries services begins today as the library system reopens after a new computer system was installed over the weekend.

The new system tracks library inventories and will improve the process of checking out and renewing books and searching for materials online.
It will also make librarians' work more efficient.

Books remain a staple, but libraries also offer DVDs, CDs and electronic audio books for MP3 devices. Many allow readers to reserve and renew items online.


"As a group, libraries have embraced the digital age," said Lee Rainie, founding director of the Pew Internet & American Life Project, which has surveyed public attitudes toward libraries.

A December 2007 Pew survey found that 53 percent of Americans visited a library in the past year. That's expected to grow as more people look for free resources and entertainment in a slowing economy.

People between 18 and 30 were most likely to visit a library and also were the most likely to say they'd return, the Pew survey found.

At the Central Library in Cocoa recently, 27-year-old Scott Dunlap of Cocoa said he visits the library almost every day to use its wireless Internet connection.

He dropped his home Internet service to save money and now brings his laptop to the Forrest Street building to keep in touch with his daughter and do legal research.

He also regularly checks out books on CD and DVDs.

"There's a lot of interesting stuff people don't even realize is here," he said.

The GNS analysis compared data from 2002 and 2006 on the nation's nearly 9,200 local library systems, using information provided by the National Center for Education Statistics and by each state and the District of Columbia.

GNS also looked at state-level data compiled by NCES for 2005, because in some cases that data was more reliable or complete than information from 2006.

The analysis found that libraries are thriving in the Internet age:
Attendance increased roughly 10 percent between 2002 and 2006 to about 1.3 billion.

In Brevard, the total number of visits were up almost 112,000 to about 3.2 million, more than 3.5 percent over the earlier year's totals.

Circulation, which measures how often library visitors check out print or electronic materials, increased about 9 percent, from 1.66 billion to 1.81 billion during the five-year period. Brevard library visitors checked out materials almost 4.6 million times, an increase of about 13 percent over 2002.

Nationally, library spending on day-to-day costs was $31.65 per person in 2005. Brevard County spent $31.68 per person.

The number of Internet-capable computers in the nation's libraries soared 38 percent between 2002 and 2006, from about 137,000 to nearly 190,000. Brevard County libraries increased the number of computers 70 percent during the span, from 165 to 281.

The increase in Internet access is thanks in part to the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, which launched a national program in 1997 to bring the Internet to libraries.

By 2003, the foundation had spent $250 million on some 47,000 computers, as well as training and tech support, said Jill Nishi, deputy director of the foundation's U.S. Libraries initiative.

Free Internet access is particularly important for low-income people, said Ken Flamm, an economics professor at the University of Texas at Austin who has studied the role of the Internet in public libraries.

Only about a third of households with incomes below $25,000 have Internet access, according to federal data.

"In a world in which Internet access is increasingly important for all sorts of things, from getting a driver's license to preparing a homework project or looking for a job, this is becoming a vital lifeline for the least advantaged segment of the population," Flamm said.

More often, businesses and government offices are pushing customers to their Web sites for job applications, assistance needs and other contacts, Brevard County's McMurrin said.

Still, the most popular material used in libraries remain the books, McMurrin said.
"Books are the perfect technology," he said. "It doesn't need batteries. If you drop a book, it doesn't break."wong

Ledyard King and Robert Benincasa of Gannett News Service contributed to this report. Contact Cervenka at 242-3632 or
scervenka@floridatoday.com.

Beach Library Turns 1

Beach Library Turns 1

130,000 people visited facility over past year

Lorraine Thompson
Record Correspondent
Publication Date: 09/02/08


Patrons and members of the Friends of the Anastasia Island Branch Library gathered Aug. 24 to celebrate the library's first birthday.

Library branch manager Susan Flynn and St. Johns County Library director Debra Rhodes Gibson welcomed visitors after a slide presentation which reviewed the year's activities.

More than 130,000 patrons of all ages visited the facility in its first year.

The Island Branch library is located at 124 Sea Grove Main St. in the Sea Grove community off A1A South.

Hours are 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. Tuesday and Thursday; 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Wednesday and Friday; 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday.

The library is closed Sunday and Monday.

For Anastasia Island Branch Library information call 209-3730.

http://www.staugustine.com/stories/090208/community_090208_036.shtml

Wednesday, August 27, 2008

Use Up In Jacksonville Too!

Down Economy Good For Library Business
Posted By:
Ryan Duffy 18 days ago

Great tv news story featuring Director Barbara Gubbin!


JACKSONVILLE, FL -- This summer, the entire Jacksonville library system has seen more users in several areas compared to last year.

Overall, library use is up nine percent this year.

There has been a seven percent increase in people walking in and hits on the library website have increased 23%.

"The bottom line is we aren't seeing anything go down, we're doing more at the library and yes part of that is attributable to the economy and people having to make difficult decisions about what they can afford to do and can't and what we offer is free," says library director Barbara Gubbin. And it's not just books, but DVDs and music all for free.

Gubbin says people are also using the library to help with economy related problems.

Librarians have seen an 18% increase in the number of people with questions.
"People need help with updating their resumes, how do I apply for this job online, it says I have to apply online, I'm not quite sure where to go, can you help me," says Gubbin.

Gubbin says she hopes this might be a time when people rediscover their local library.

Visit the Jacksonville Library online at
www.jpl.coj.net

First Coast News

Friday, August 22, 2008

E-Government at Florida Libraries: More Support, Coordination Needed


Norman Oder -- Library Journal, 8/22/2008

- Residents asks librarians for help with tax forms, child welfare benefits
- Some librarians wary of liability, lack training
- Could increase support or chargebacks be a solution?

Librarians in the past few years have begun to recognize how much libraries contribute to e-government, given that federal and state agencies increasingly offer access to services only online, and for many citizens libraries are the only gateway to the Internet. (See "Drafted: I Want You To Deliver E-Government," published by LJ in August 2006.) Now the authors of that important initial research have looked more closely at e-government issues in Florida, concluding that greater coordination of and support for e-government services at libraries is crucial.

Amelia Gibson and Drs. John Carlo Bertot and Charles R. McClure, with other Information Institute staff at Florida State University, recently completed a study, Florida Public Libraries and E–Government: Services, Issues, and Recommendations, which suggests that libraries have become more than simply access points to government information and forms but places where residents seek program assistance


Types of requests

Most requests by library users concerned the IRS, taxes, and upcoming stimulus payments. The next most frequent requests related to the Florida Department of Children and Families, food stamps and public assistance. Also, residents sought education information (school enrollments, voluntary pre-kindergarten, FAFSA/student loan); asked for legal advice, forms and information, and United States Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) resources; conducted county-level property searches and searches into ownership information; and initiated government job searches.

The Florida Department of Children and Families, which handles child welfare issues and more, has closed most of its offices, the report notes, and in South Florida, a web-based appointment system is often required to make an appointment at the United States Citizenship and Immigration Services office.

Librarian anxiety
“This evolution of librarian as information provider to caseworker has multiple and profound implications,” the authors report. “Not only is this a substantial shift in librarian duties, but it also requires librarians to become facile with multiple agency programs.” Librarians expressed concern and anxiety about their lack of preparation. In some libraries, staffers have been instructed not to assist with e-government forms because of liability concerns.


The report points out that agencies that exchange face-to-face services for Internet based services may be shifting costs to locally funded organizations like libraries—creating “an unfunded mandate from state agencies.”


Recommendations
The report recommends that libraries reach a statewide consensus on how best to provide e-government services and resources; service levels could vary by library size, numbers of public access computers available. It suggests that libraries within the state form a consortium to maintain e-government resources and exchange best practices. It recommends that libraries and state agencies should collaborate on the design and implementation of e-government services and resources, which could lead to better support for librarians needing assistance.


It also recommends increased library staff training in e-government, with the help of local and state agencies. Finally, national, state and local governments should directly support libraries as providers of e-government services and resources. One possibility “is to implement an agency charge-back mechanism, similar to efforts in which government agencies routinely engage through outsourced services.”

City (Pensacola) Considers Building New Downtown Library


August 19, 2008
Pensacola News Journal

Jamie Page - jepage@pnj.com

The Pensacola City Council is considering spending $6 million on a new downtown library.

Library officials requested money for a new library during its budget presentation at the city's budget workshop Monday for the 2008-09 fiscal year, which begins Oct. 1.

The Pensacola Public Library on West Gregory Street was built in 1956 and was expanded in the 1960s. Gene Fischer, West Florida Public Library director, said Monday the library needs major updates.

"It's just falling apart. It wasn't designed as a modern library," Fischer said. "It was built back when public libraries were essentially warehouses for books. Now people want computers and meeting spaces, and it just wasn't designed for that."

The West Florida Public Library board of directors recently voted unanimously in favor of building a new downtown library.

The five council members present for the presentation backed the request to move forward in hiring an architect next fiscal year to design a new library and agreed to weigh options for building it. Options include tearing down the existing building and constructing a new one in its place, refurbishing it, or tearing down the old city fire station on Spring Street and building it there to keep the existing library open.

The design would be done next year, with construction coming later, said Dick Barker, city finance director.

The city has $6 million in local sales tax money set aside for a library project. That money would build an estimated 20,000 to 30,000 square feet of space. The existing building is 27,500 square feet.

Thursday, August 21, 2008

Orlando library lets teens' voices be heard

By Chris Wellander | Special To The Sentinel
June 22, 2008

http://www.orlandosentinel.com/community/news/azaleapark/orl-orteens2208jun22,0,672947.story

Downtown Orlando on a Thursday evening. A band is tuning up to play a set; the crowd is seated and waiting; the refreshments are overflowing.

But when this band of teenagers performs, its music will ring out through the cavernous first floor of the Orlando Public Library -- not exactly what one would expect from a place known for telling folks to keep quiet.

Programs like open-mike night go on all the time at the library and would not exist without the library's teen programs, many created by the teens themselves.

The original Teen Voices council was made up of students from Howard Middle School. Since then the group has grown to include teens throughout Orange County.



"Teen Voices is our teen advisory group," said Heather Pippin, the teen-council coordinator. "We go to them to ask questions about programs; they come to us and ask us to hold programs that they think other teens would be interested in."

The program started about five years ago as a way to get more teenagers involved in the library. According to Pippin and Danielle King, the library system's first teen programming coordinator, these young people have a huge amount of input into what goes on at the libraries.

"None of the library's programs would have happened without Teen Voices," said King, now an assistant manager at the Alafaya branch. "Sometimes we think we have a great idea, and we go to them and they say, 'Uh, no, teens won't go to that.' "

"One girl I remember was really shy, and in three years she was president of Teen Voices and started the Animanga Club," said Danielle King. "It also gives the younger teens someone to look up to."

Teen Voices meets every month to decide on upcoming programs and to talk about related teen issues. Every club the library has developed, from the robotics club to the performing arts club, were originally developed by Teen Voices.

Douglas Rintoul, 16, is Teen Voices president and a University High School student.

"It's a lively discussion," Douglas said. "Everyone's bubbling over with ideas, most of the time, and we usually end up narrowing it down to three or four choices and then voting on them."

Events such as the video gaming competitions, teen movie nights, and even parties for the volunteers were all chosen and planned by the group. They have a hand in setting the summer reading list by picking the theme and even selecting some of the books. They even picked out the furniture in the lounge area, known as Club Central.

The students also find that Teen Voices has helped them develop skills that might have remained dormant if they hadn't gotten involved.

Vanessa Williams, vice president, said Teen Voices and the library's other programs help teens stay out of trouble.

"It gives teens something else to do," Vanessa said. "Like right now, I could be at a club or something, like some other people I know, instead of being at the library."

Vanessa is home-schooled and has been with the group for four years.

Modern libraries aren't just books anymore

by Etan Horowitz | User's Guide
June 28, 2008
Orlando Sentinel

http://www.orlandosentinel.com/technology/orl-horowitz2808jun28,0,6419231.column?track=rss

Everybody knows that in a down economy, one easy way to save money is to check out books, CDs and DVDs from the library instead of buying or renting them.

But that's only the beginning. The Orange County Library System is one of the most innovative libraries in the country, and it offers lots of free ways to satisfy your technology, entertainment and information cravings.

Here's a sample:


Catch a flick -- on DVD or on your computer



Etan Horowitz E-mail | Recent columns

The library's DVD collection rivals any neighborhood video store and even Netflix. There are about 145,000 titles to rent and the library carries every one of the 100 most popular rentals on Netflix. There's also a ton of classics, independent and foreign films and even popular TV shows such as The Sopranos.

Like Netflix, you can have DVDs delivered to your door, but you have to return them yourself or pay the postage. New DVDs are shelved on Tuesday morning, so get there early if you want a jump on everyone else.

And if you can't wait for your DVDs to arrive in the mail, the library lets you download about 700 movies, TV shows and community programs to watch instantly on computer through a downloadable program called MyLibrarydv.

There aren't any new releases, but there are about 90 movies from Sony Pictures Entertainment, including quality flicks such as Donnie Brasco, Philadelphia, Taxi Driver and Jerry Maguire.

Once you download a movie, you can watch it without being connected to the Internet. So before you go on a trip, you could download a few movies to your laptop and then watch them on the plane.

For more on MyLibrarydv, including the system requirements, go to www.ocls.info, click on "Library Catalog" and then click on "MyLibrarydv."


Computer classes

Always wanted to learn how to create a Web page, use Photoshop or edit a video? Or do you need to brush up on PowerPoint, Excel or Outlook? The library offers about 1,000 computer classes a month in English, Spanish and Haitian Creole. There are even classes you can take online.

Recently, the library added a Mac lab with nine new Apple iMacs. Classes are taught on topics including GarageBand, Keynote, iPhoto, iMovie and iWeb.

Some of the other interesting classes offered include: "Basic Computer Maintenance and Security," " eBay Buying and Selling," "Podcasting Basics," and " Google Earth and Google Maps." For a full schedule of classes, go to www.ocls.info and click on "Classes & Programs" or get a copy of the library's monthly newsletter.


Audiobooks

Audiobooks are a great way to pass the time if you are traveling or if you prefer to do your reading with your ears.

The library has more than 40,000 audiobooks in nearly every form imaginable, including cassettes, CDs, MP3 CDs and downloadable files.

But perhaps the coolest type of audiobook that the library offers is one that doesn't require a separate player and fits in your pocket. It's called a "Playaway" and it's a pre-loaded digital audiobook that weighs about two ounces. All you need to listen to a book is a pair of headphones. You can also hook it up to external speakers or your car stereo. Each Playaway has all the controls you need to listen to your book and you can adjust the volume or speed. The device also remembers where you left off.


Video games

If your kid has been bugging you for an Xbox 360 or a Wii, send them over to the library. Each library location has an Xbox 360 that children under 17 can play. They also have Nintendo Wiis, which they occasionally bring out.

The branches also frequently hold gaming nights where teens compete on the Nintendo Wii and in games such as Guitar Hero and Dance Dance Revolution. There are even gaming nights for adults and seniors.

If you have a Nintendo DS, Xbox, Xbox 360, or PlayStation 2, the library has about 300 games that you can check out.

Monday, August 18, 2008

Libraries report record number of visitors

Libraries report record number of visitors
Record number of visitors use free resources for personal and professional reasons.


by Marcia Chercoles

South Florida Sun-Sentinel

August 14, 2008

Jairo Fuentes was tired of paying $60 a month for Internet service just to check his e-mail. So last year, the Hollywood resident canceled his service. Since then, he's been a regular at the Hollywood Branch Library, where he connects his laptop to the free Wi-Fi.

"With the money I save I can do so many other things, like go to the movies," said Fuentes, 37, who runs a transportation company.

A slow economy and tight budgets are driving more people to South Florida's public libraries, which are experiencing record numbers of visitors. Some go for free services they can't afford at home anymore, such as Internet access, newspaper and magazine subscriptions. Many unemployed also use libraries to update and print resumes, look for jobs, and learn computer skills to get a new job.

So far this year, the Broward County Library System has seen a 13 percent increase in the number of materials checked out compared to all those checked out last year. The Palm Beach County Library System reported a 16 percent increase for the same period.

"June was one of the highest circulations we've ever seen, due in part to the economy. You have more people coming to the libraries because the items are free," said Nemoure Ahmed, branch manager at the Boynton Beach Library.

When the doors of the Hagan Ranch Road Branch Library in Delray Beach open every morning, about 15 people rush to the DVD and audio book sections. The new facility at first resembles an electronics store; those looking for books must first walk through the extensive multimedia selection.

Marie Lawson, a Delray Beach hairdresser, checks out a couple of audio books and DVDs each week. "It is a free form of entertainment," she said.Walida Swaggard, 31, regularly takes her son Manuel, 7, to the Hollywood Branch Library and checks out DVDs and CDs.

"Not only it's a pastime, but now it's become more of an economical resource to fall back on now that prices have gone up, especially when you are trying to cut corners," said Swaggard, who is a science teacher in Hollywood.

Libraries also are seeing record numbers of people logging onto their Web sites for free access to the Wall Street Journal and other publications that would otherwise require a paid subscription. Broward's public libraries have had a 30 percent increase in Web site visitors so far this year. Palm Beach libraries saw a 28 percent increase.

Libraries have also become a resource center for the unemployed, who ask the reference desk for books on how to write resumes and cover letters, use the computers and local newspapers to look for jobs, or take computer skills classes.

Renee Lafleur, 27, lost her job as a sales person in a gift shop at the airport a month ago. She signed up for a beginner's computer class at the Hollywood Branch Library this week to refresh her computer skills. She hopes to find a job doing data entry or customer service.

"Now you are required to file applications online, file reports, do many more things. They also ask you how many words can you type per minute," Lafleur said.

Tara Connolly, computer center manager at the Hollywood library, marks a stroke on her calendar every time someone asks her a computer-related question. She answered 5,624 questions in June, up from 3,829 in June 2007.

The most common questions include how to create a resume, look and apply for online jobs, or navigate through the Web site myflorida.com to find government services such as food stamps. Waiting time to use the computers can reach an hour during peak hours.

"I've got a few coming back telling me 'I got a job,'" Connolly said. "Others have not been so successful."

Copyright © 2008,
South Florida Sun-Sentinel

Sunday, August 17, 2008

Dolly Parton imagination library opens

Dolly Parton imagination library opens
[St. Augustine Record, 08/17/08]
http://www.staugustine.com/stories/081708/off_the_record_081708_022.shtml

The St. Johns County Public Library System is partnering with the Early Learning Coalition of Putnam and St. Johns counties, St. Johns County Chamber of Commerce, St. Johns County Education Foundation and other community organizations to bring the Dolly Parton Imagination Library to St. Johns County. The Dolly Parton Imagination Library allows for children, born after May 1, 2008, to receive a free age-appropriate book every month until their fifth birthday at no charge to the parent.

At any branch of the St. Johns County Public Library System or by downloading an application online at www.sjcpls.org, parents may sign up their children to receive free hardcover books in the mail.

If a parent signs up a newborn for the program, they will receive a 60-volume library by age 5. The only eligibility requirements are that the child must be born after May 1, and must reside in St. Johns or Putnam counties.

Library director Debra Rhodes Gibson is excited about the program.

"The library system is happy to be part of the Dolly Party Imagination Library, as it is a wonderful program that promotes early literacy and lifelong learning," she said. "Our hope is for every child to have access to books, and certainly the Dolly Parton Imagination Library helps make that possible."

Developed by Parton
The program was developed by Dolly Parton in 1995 for her native Sevier County, Tenn. Parton wanted to foster a love of reading among her county's preschool children and their families, and she wanted children to be excited about books and the magic they can create. Moreover, she could ensure that every child would have books, regardless of their family's income. Parton has since decided to offer her Imagination Library for replication in any community that would financially support it.

In Putnam and St. Johns counties, the DPIL program is a true partnership, with several groups working together to make it possible. The Early Learning Coalition and program donors pay for the books and mailing, while the Chamber of Commerce helps with the promotion.

The St. Johns County Education Foundation accepts all donations to the program, and the St. Johns County Public Library promotes the program and registers and maintains the database of donors and children.

From there, The Dollywood Foundation takes over and manages the system to deliver the books to the home.

Once enrolled, each child will receive classic titles each month such as "The Little Engine That Could," "Owl Moon," "Goodnight Gorilla" and more.

Each child will continue to receive one free hardcover book each month until he or she reaches the age of 5.

For information about the Dolly Parton Imagination Library or to register, go to any library branch or go to www.sjcpls.org.

Wednesday, August 13, 2008

'LEO' the bookmobile visits Players senior center

[St. Johns County Public Library]
'LEO' the bookmobile visits Players senior center
by Chuck Adams, Staff Writer

http://www.beachesleader.com/articles/2008/08/13/ponte_vedra_leader/news/doc48a2205a812e5465178689.txt

“LEO” can be seen pretty much all over St. Johns County.

LEO, or Library Express Outmobile, is the St. Johns County Library System vehicle that visits and takes books to a variety of facilities, including senior citizen centers, shopping complexes, daycare centers, churches and even the Vilano Pier.

LEO, better known as the bookmobile, visits The Players Community Senior Center every two weeks.

Betty Frederick, extension services manager for the county library system and formerly of the Ponte Vedra Beach Branch Library, is the reason the bookmobile exists.

“I wrote the grant [in 2000] when I first came here,” Frederick said Wednesday while standing in the bookmobile at The Players.

“Actually they had submitted a grant before for a bookmobile, but it wasn’t competitive enough. I had to dust if off, clean it up.”

At the time the target market was primarily seniors, still a large part of the mix.

“But now it’s gone beyond,” said Frederick.

“This is primarily because we have this wonderful plan for siting libraries, where they ought to be built based on population.”

That plan, however, has run into roadblocks.

“We probably won’t see another branch built in my lifetime,” said Frederick.

Potential sites, she said, were the new communities of Nocatee and RiverTown, also World Golf Village and a stand-alone for the Hastings area, where the existing library is in an historic building.

“All that was in the plan. But we’ve got to put that plan on hold. We’re forced to because we don’t have the funding.

“The mobile library is the absolute, one of the best services the library system provides,” said Frederick, “because it essentially takes the library to where people live, work, congregate, who sometimes are unable to get to the library because of distance, don’t drive anymore, can’t see well enough.”

The Players Senior Community Senior Center and bookmobile have combined to identify 10-12 seniors living in Ponte Vedra Beach who are homebound.

Library materials are going to be sent to those seniors via Meals on Wheels on Tuesdays. The volunteers who deliver the meals will take library material, then pick it up when the seniors are done.

While the county library system has more than 475,000 volumes, the bookmobile can offer some 3,000 items, said Frederick.

“We have every format that the Ponte Vedra library has, except that we can’t hold as many.

“We go to daycare centers, child development centers,” she said.

“We’re all over the county.”

[Anastasia Island Branch] Library plans anniversary celebration

Library plans anniversary celebration
By Lorraine Thompson
Posted: Tuesday, August 12, 2008
(http://staugustine.com/stories/081208/community_081208_001.shtml)

There's more to living on this island than going to the beach. There's also the Anastasia Island Branch Library, which opened a year ago and has since served more than 130,000 patrons who checked out more than 150,000 items.

A one-year library birthday celebration begins at 10:30 a.m. Aug. 23. After brief remarks by St. Johns County Library director Debra Rhodes Gibson and branch manager Susan Flynn, Friends of the Anastasia Island Branch Library will provide cake, coffee and punch.

Two new original mosaic works by local artist Manila Clough -- "Beach Birds" and "Pelicans" -- will be presented by the artist to the library.

Since its opening on Aug. 11, 2007, the library has increased its daily circulation from 400 to more than 800 and has expanded its offerings to include events for children, teens and adults. It also offers meeting rooms and space to the community, computer workstations for the public, wireless Internet access throughout the building and access to the entire collection of the St. Johns County Public Library System.

Adults are invited to stick around after the celebration (or come back later) to play Bingo for Books for Adults starting at 2 p.m. in the large meeting room. Adult popular fiction books will be offered as bingo prizes. Participants are guaranteed at least one free book.

The island library is at 124 Sea Grove Main St., in the Sea Grove community off A1A South. Hours are 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. Tuesday and Thursday; 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Wednesday and Friday; and 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday. The library is closed Sunday and Monday. For information, call 209-3730.

Tuesday, August 12, 2008

Jacksonville Ask a Librarian Story & News Clip

First Coast Librarians Give Human Answers to Online Searches
- July 18, 2008



JACKSONVILLE, FL -- When you search the internet, do you ever wish you could have a human being jump in and answer the question? You can -- for free -- and the answers may come from right here on the First Coast.

Let me tell you a story.

It's about learning things in the days before
Google.

Instead of typing a question -- get this -- you would speak it out loud.
And while Google comes back with 112,000 potential answers to a question like: "What was the weather like the day Disneyland opened?"

The old way to learn gives you just
one answer.

It's the right one.

"110 degrees," Jacksonville librarian Karen Hardin said with a smile as she looked at her computer screen.

She read further into the article.

"Asphalt was still steaming because it had been laid the night before, literally trapping high-heeled shoes," she said.

You see, back before there was Google, there was Karen Hardin. She's a librarian. And the old way to learn involves asking a real person.

In a back office at
Jacksonville's Main Library, she's on patrol.

"What we do right now is basically just wait for someone to come up," she said.
Moments later, her computer's speakers let out a "ding!"

"There we go," she said.

Someone just went to a library website somewhere in Florida, clicked the "
Ask a Librarian" link, and asked her a question.

She launches into answer mode: surfing the web with the customer, asking follow-up questions, digging through databases you've never heard of, and delivering a reliable answer.

It's like Google -- but with a trained researcher leading the way.
Different libraries all over the state take shifts answering questions.
You may get someone in Tampa today, or Orlando tomorrow.

So take your question that's got Google stumped to Karen Hardin and her colleagues.

They'll help you learn just like folks did in the days before the first search bar showed up on any computer screen.

Want to try it yourself?

Click here to link to the Jacksonville Public Library's "Ask a Librarian" service.©2008 First Coast News. All rights reserved.

Lisa Black, Author of Takeover

The Lake County Library System announces Authors @ The Library, a new initiative to encourage the love of reading! Starting this September, one of our 13 libraries will present an author on tour with a new book each month.

The Lake County Library System presents the first in the Authors @ The Library series, HarperCollins author Lisa Black with her debut novel Takeover a tight, riveting thriller. In the tradition of Kathy Reichs and Jeffery Deaver, this talented novelist introduces a gutsy forensic investigator caught inthe middle of an explosive crisis. Lisa will appear on Wednesday, September 17, 2008, 2 p.m. at the W.T. Bland Public Library in Mount Dora Florida and at 7 p.m. at the Leesburg Public Library in Leesburg, Florida.

Ms. Black spent the happiest five years of her life in a morgue. Strange, perhaps, but true. In her job as a forensic scientist at the Cuyahoga County Coroner's Office, she analyzed gunshot residue on hands and clothing, hairs, fibers, paint, glass, DNA, blood and many other forms of trace evidence, as well as crime scenes. Now she works as a latent print examiner for the city of Cape Coral, Florida, police department, working mostly with fingerprints, photography and crime scenes.

Friday, August 8, 2008

Jacksonville - Bookworms may have less to check out at the library

Bookworms may have less to check out at the library

The Florida Times-Union
August 8, 2008 By DAVID HUNT, The Times-Union

Rising book prices, combined with a decreasing materials budget, might shrink selection at Jacksonville's public libraries next year.

In the past four years, the number of card-carrying library users has jumped by 185,000, or roughly 46 percent. In the same time, the amount of money for books and audiovisual items such as CDs and DVDs has increased only 12.6 percent.

The library system's proposed materials budget for next year would be a 13.4 percent decrease compared to the same line item in 2004, the first year Mayor John Peyton oversaw library budget planning.

City officials say Jacksonville spends $45 on its library system for each resident - a per-capita figure that tops the list of public library funding statewide. But the combined effect of more users and a shrinking budget has some worried that quality could soon drop.

"It's kind of like putting off maintenance. It's a mistake because it does come back," said Harry Reagan, president of Friends of the Library.

Although city officials say the money will be replaced by state funds, Bill Scheu, a library trustee, said the amount still would be hundreds of thousands of dollars less than what the library got in 2006-07.

"This is supposed to be a first-class library, but it's gradually being whittled down to a second-class system at best," Scheu said.

What's more, stocking the library is getting pricier.

According to library figures, the average book cost was $13.96 in 2006-07, compared to $16.20 this year. Nonprint items, such as CDs and DVDs, cost an average $25.46. That rose to $27.48.
Between the same two years, the number of cardholders increased by nearly 48,000 and circulation jumped by more than 400,000.

Reagan is heading a petition drive to get more funding. While Peyton said he respects Reagan's effort, he argues that the library budget is nearly double what it was when he took office.
Scheu is quick to counter that the library's bigger budget is a product of former Mayor John Delaney's Better Jacksonville Plan, which added six branches.

Before those additions, the library's annual materials budget was more than $4 million. Next year, the city would be pledging $3.6 million.

That's if the City Council approves Peyton's overall city budget proposal, which would boost public safety spending to put more police on the city's streets.

Scheu said he thinks Peyton "virtually abandoned" social programs, such as libraries, that might help prevent crime by providing structure for at-risk youths.

Peyton, who has prioritized literacy throughout his time in office, defended his budget proposal. He said city officials were able to hold library spending comparable to the current year's figure even at a time when property tax reform, combined with general economic woes, forced all city departments to stretch dollars.

"Everyone has had to make concessions. The library has been treated fairly," Peyton said. "We give them a sizeable amount of money and rely on their expertise to determine how to use it."
Council Vice President Richard Clark said he's unsure how much debate will focus on library spending this year. Last year, the council shot down a proposal to save money by cutting library hours. So far, that idea has not been revisited.

"Any core service is going to be up for discussion," Clark said. "That goes for libraries, parks, fire or anything else."

david.hunt@jacksonville.com,
(904) 359-4025
This story can be found on Jacksonville.com at http://www.jacksonville.com/tu-online/stories/080808/met_315604377.shtml.

Santa Rosa Reconsiders Saturday Closing

Libraries may heed calls for more hours Santa Rosa considers opening on Saturdays
July 16, 2008
Pensacola News Journal
Louis Cooper lcooper@pnj.com

In Santa Rosa County, if you want to check out a book or use a library computer, you can only do it on a weekday.

For nearly a year, Santa Rosa's five libraries have been open Monday through Friday to save money.

However, some county commissioners say they've heard from constituents who want the libraries to open Saturdays.

"I've heard from a considerable number of people who went to the libraries on Saturday to use the computers for research but didn't check out books," said Commissioner Tom Stewart. "In this age, when we're trying to decide how to provide services with reduced budgets, everything is open to suggestion."
Library director Linda Hendrix said she will be meeting with her superiors this week to discuss possible changes.

"We're going to be looking at all the possibilities," she said. "You could do the schedule in 20 different ways, but we know when the most people come to the libraries."

Hendrix said closing on Saturdays came after four library positions were cut. Currently, four employees work at the Gulf Breeze, Navarre, Milton and Pace libraries each, and two work at the Jay Library. Some work also is done by student employees and volunteers.

"The bottom line is when you're running the libraries with very few staff, we have to look at the schedules we can maintain," she said.

Nearly 90 percent of library business takes place Monday through Thursday, between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. She said Saturday was the most logical place to cut hours.

"The people who work in the libraries know the people who come in on Saturdays, and for a large part, the people who come on Saturdays come every other day of the week as well," Hendrix said. "There is a great belief among the people who run the libraries that cutting the Saturday hours did not diminish services to most people."

Gulf Breeze resident Pat Rose, who retired after 28 years as the librarian at the Gulf Breeze Library in 2002, said the library was usually open on Saturday when she worked there. Sometimes, however, lean budgets closed the facility on Monday.

She believes the lack of Saturday hours, along with the earlier 7 p.m. closing during the week, has kept some people from using the library as much.
"Some people don't get home from work until 7 o'clock," Rose said. "Families where both parents worked would bring their children on Saturdays."
Rose suggested splitting the difference between Friday — which is the second slowest day of the week for Santa Rosa libraries — and Saturday, opening half a day for each.

Kathy Ocobock, who has used the Gulf Breeze Library since she moved to the area in 1989, works weekdays. She said her library use has plummeted since the Saturday hours were cut.

"The only time I have to go to the library is on my lunch break, and that's just to pick up a book or something," Ocobock said. "I can't spend any time there because of the hours."

Santa Rosa libraries left the West Florida Regional Library System in 2006, creating the countywide system. Since then, library usage has skyrocketed, Hendrix said.

Santa Rosa's five libraries are open 9 a.m. to 7 p.m., Monday through Thursday, and 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Friday. Before Oct. 1, they were open 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday, Friday and Saturday, and 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday.

Ocala - New Libraries Stimulating Interest

OUR OPINION
New libraries stimulating new interest

Ocala.com
Published: Monday, August 4, 2008 at 6:30 a.m.


We have found plenty to gripe about as Amendment 1 property tax reforms take their toll on local government budgets and services.

On one level, all of these voter-mandated cuts have affected the quality of life for Floridians statewide. But one area we have taken special note of lately is the plight of public libraries.

In many parts of Florida libraries, and the communities they serve, are suffering.
For instance, Broward County faces an unenviable dilemma regarding a new, $19 million library branch. The facility cannot be opened because the county, due to Amendment 1, cannot afford to hire new employees. In fact, the county has axed 139 library-related positions to satisfy budget needs.

Polk County has proposed closing its Historical and Genealogical Library, considered one of the finest in the Southeast, as part of eliminating cultural programs to save almost $600,000.

Brevard County is considering slashing its fund to purchase library materials by two-thirds and gutting 17 positions. Duval County proposes cutting its acquisition fund by $1 million.

Marion County has not been immune. Library Director Julie Sieg recently said the amount she has to spend on buying materials will drop from $903,000 this year to $856,000 next year.

The curious thing, though, is that the library remains a popular destination. As the Star-Banner reported last week, attendance and circulation at the two newest library branches in Dunnellon and Belleview have skyrocketed since those facilities opened about two months ago.

Comparing June's numbers with those from June 2007, materials circulated in Belleview at a rate 57 percent above last year's figures, while the number of registered borrowers rose 227 percent; in Dunnellon, circulation was up 61 percent, registered borrowers up 237 percent.

The heightened traffic at these new facilities reflects what happened at the main library branch when it moved from its cramped quarters downtown to its spacious new location further east on Silver Springs Boulevard: Provide the public a roomy, modernized, aesthetically pleasing library, and the public will swarm to it.

There is a question of whether the economy has made public libraries more popular by draining families of disposable income they might spend on books and other goods. It's a fair point. After all, Miami-Dade County's public libraries have witnessed an attendance surge of some 200,000 over this time last year - an increase of 4 percent - that was attributed to the economic slump.

Yet we cannot see how that phenomenon accounts for all the increased activity in Dunnellon and Belleview. We tend to think those communities are still reveling in the thrill of a nice, new facility.

Whatever the cause, though, we're pleased to learn of all the traffic at the county library system's new branches. Libraries are special places, and while we do not begrudge fed-up taxpayers for demanding that government cut its costs, we can only wonder, when you consider the impact Amendment 1 is having on this valuable service, if the anticipated $240-per-tax-bill average savings is worth it.

Tuesday, August 5, 2008

Circulation and usage increases in St. Johns County Libraries

Two recent items from the St. Augustine Record:

Libraries haven't missed a beat [editorial]
http://www.staugustine.com/stories/080208/opinions_080208_059.shtml
Saturday, August 2, 2008

When the St. Johns County Public Libraries went on a new schedule because of cutbacks in county revenue, officials worried about public reaction to changes in hours and days.

Debra Rhodes Gibson, library system director, says the traffic is steady. So far so good. In June Sunday hours were eliminated and at least an hour a day was cut from libraries' schedules.

But that hasn't deterred traffic. Gibson believes the economy is playing a big role. Patrons are taking out more books at a time to perhaps cut down on trips. They're also taking out more movie videos; probably instead of spending more money at theaters.

Give those library patrons an "A." They haven't missed a beat. They still love their libraries.

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Summer attracts more to libraries [article]
By Ileana Morales
http://staugustine.com/stories/072408/news_072408_011.shtml
Thursday, July 24, 2008

Some days finding a parking spot at the public library is like trying to find one downtown: hard.

More people are spending time at St. Johns County libraries than last summer, despite that fact that all six county libraries cut their hours starting in May. All locations are now closed on Sundays.

"The hours we're open we are hopping," said Valerie Peischel, manager at the main library where she has worked for 12 years.

On long days at the main library on U.S. 1 -- 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. -- she said more than 1,200 people come in.

Peischel said she suspects high gas prices are keeping more people in town and enjoying free activities like those at the library.

People took out 128,811 books and videos in May for all locations, up by more than 11,000 from last year. This year's numbers for June were up by almost 2,000 from the previous year.

People are cutting back on other expenses, eating out less and freeing up more time to check out books and movies, Peischel believes.

"That's just my guess. That's my gut," Peischel said. "That's what's happening in my household."

The libraries are attractive to many because new movies on DVD are released at the same time as they are at major private video chains such as Blockbuster.

Library records show circulation is up for both movies and books, but books are beating movies.

"That's what we're in business for," said Peischel, smiling.

Carrie Klein, who hugged a few books on Wednesday afternoon while she browsed shelves, said she has been visiting the library more often this summer, about a couple times a month to pick up three books at a time.

"The books are newer, more available," Klein said. "And with the economy the way it is, it's just a lot cheaper."

She said it's a quiet place to escape the summer heat when "gas prices are ridiculous" and she stays close to her downtown home.

Peischel said lots of kids come in to check off their school summer reading lists so parents don't have to buy those books.

At 1 p.m., with an impending storm, the 18 computers for adults are taken and a couple of laptop computers are out.

Karen Pan, spokeswoman for St. Johns County, said it's amazing that libraries are filling up more while open fewer hours.

"We're glad the public is making use of it," Pan said.

Monday, August 4, 2008

Kids compete in summer reading competition

Four teams join Battle of Books, remember trivia
By Maria Herrera South Florida Sun-Sentinel
August 3, 2008

Olivia Lowrey consulted each of her teammates, scribbled the answer on a marker board and flipped it over for the judges to see.

Books Busters — consisting of Lowrey, 12, Khallid Carter, 11, and Vitnelson Saintfleur, 14 — had just scored another point.

The team was one of four to participate in the first Palm Beach County Library Battle of the Books on Saturday at the Main Library west of West Palm Beach.

The program was part of an effort to keep children reading during the summer months, Palm Beach County Library Outreach Services Manager Wendy Rosenfeld said.

"They didn't know each other when the program began," she said. "So it's also a way to create new friends."

More than 35 children participated in the program at library branches throughout the county. In the end, four teams — Book Busters, Purple Pen People, Insert Name Here and Team Southwest County — battled each other in three rounds, answering questions about three books they read in the past eight weeks.

The books were Running Out of Time, The View from Saturday and Joey Pigza Swallowed the Key."

From the titles, you wouldn't think they were interesting books," said Lowrey, of Lake Worth. "But they taught me not to judge a book by its cover."

Lowrey, whose team went on to win the competition, said she and her teammates already have plans to read more books."

Bigger books," added Carter, "with pages in the thousands."

While the children competed, parents watched with T-shirts and banners matching those of the teams. Carter's mother, Debra, watched and rooted for her son.

"They were readers already. You almost have to be a reader to enjoy something like this," Debra Carter said. "But it showed them there are other kids who are readers, too."

Maria Herrera can be reached at meherrera@sun-sentinel.com or 561-243-6544.

Friday, August 1, 2008

Importance of Libraries in Rural Communities

This has not been posted through the media but might be of interest to many of you. Students from the University of Florida came to the Archer Branch Library here in Alachua County because they wanted to do a brief documentary about the importance of a public library in that town and to the town residents. This was completely unsolicited, a bit unpolished, but to the point. It could be used as an advocacy tool to support funding for rural libraries and to highlight the importance of e-government services.

I have permission from the students to use and distribute this video. Let me know what you think.

Sol
Sol M. Hirsch, Director
Alachua County Library District
352 334 3910 shirsch@aclib.us
http://projects.jou.ufl.edu/mmc6936f07/johnson/archer/library.html

Libraries Shine In Tough Economic Times

National Public Radio - All Things Considered, July 29, 2008 · With the economy slowing, many Americans are doing research in the public library. Boyd County, Ky., Library Director Debbie Cosper says public-use computers are always full and people are checking out books rather than buying them.

Miami-Dade proves libraries serve more when times get tough!

For the last few weeks ALA has been working with the national media about how the public relies on libraries more during challenging economic times. The article below and associated CBS4 news clip about Miami-Dade’s experience provides the proof! Be sure to check out the video clip! http://cbs4.com/local/library.westchester.books.2.784750.html

Charlie Parker -

Economic Slump, A Gain For South Florida Libraries
Poor economic times has led to an increase in attendance from the public who would rather borrow than buy

WESTCHESTER (CBS4) ―

Attendance is up at Miami-Dade's 44 public libraries, which has had five-million visitors so far this year. That's 200,000 more than the same time last year. Library officials would like to take all the credit, however, they're the first to admit the bad economy has a lot to do with it.

"Internet for instance. We offer free Internet service to people who can't afford it anymore, or could never afford it; they could come to us," according to Raymond Santiago, a library director.

Juan Navarrete is one of those people. He's a regular at the computer terminals, searching for everything from news to jobs."I'm a counselor, so recently I've been getting emails from faith-based organizations that are hiring," Navarrete said."

Maria Rafet and her son, Simon, visit the West-Dade regional library twice a month. He loves Japanese cartoons, DVDs, which he says he can't find anywhere else, and that they're free. "That's the best part," smiled Simon. "My parents don't have to pay for it." His mother is also saving on the Mediterranean diet book she's been looking for.

"If you buy it in the store, it's $30. But here, it's free and one can find many other books and pick the best of them," Maria added.

Attendance in the children's summer programs have also jumped thirty percent, which is another inexpensive way for parents to keep children busy without spending money.

While budget cuts have cut hours at Broward libraries, Miami-Dade opened a new library in June with two more scheduled to open in September in Westchester.