Wednesday, December 9, 2009

Library hits beach for stories and crafts














Betsy Williams, Correspondent
Sarasota Herald Tribune
Published 12/2/09

Englewood Charlotte Public Library has moved to the beach; well, at least once a month for about an hour.

For the new "Beach Storytime," library Supervisor Lynda Citro takes the youth reading program for preschoolers to Englewood Beach.
The sessions, geared toward age 2 and older along with their caregivers, offers stories and a seasonal craft.

Just in time for Thanksgiving, the November event offered unique thank-you cards for the children and adults to decorate and "send to someone special, just to say thanks," Citro said.
Helping out with the program under the pavilion next to the playground was library volunteer Louise Hoffman.

"We tried it once right on the beach, but dealing with the sand was just too much," Citro said.


New to the area, Lisa Reedy and her children, Alyssa, 2, and Jacob, 5, have been checking out various youth programs around the county to see what the children enjoy. The family drove from Port Charlotte and planned to spend the day at the beach after the library program.

Jean Hunker and her 3-year-old granddaughter, Sierra Young, arrived early so the youngster could get some play time in before the library program.

"She misses going to preschool, playing with other children," said Hunker, who packed a lunch for the two and also planned to stay after the program for a picnic and more play time.


The next Beach Read is scheduled for 10:30 a.m. Dec. 17th. There is no charge.

Wednesday, October 28, 2009

Indian River Opens Joint Use Library

Congratulations to Indian River County Library System and Indian River State College on the October 27 opening of their new 30,000 square foot, 2-story library.

The Brackett Library is named for funders Bob and Sandy Brackett and was made possible by a combination of public and private funding. Read more at
http://www.tcpalm.com/news/2009/oct/27/indian-river-countys-newest-library-branch-opens/

Tuesday, October 6, 2009

Library System Receives Grant

October 3, 2009
by Elizabeth M. Mack /Tallahassee Democrat Staff Writer


Leon County Commissioner Akin Akinyemi is at the library at least two to three times a week — sometimes he even brings his kids. He comes mainly in between meetings.

"It's always full when I come," he said. "I'm fortunate that I have an office computer, but for some people this is all they have."

Akinyemi was among county officials celebrating news Friday that the library system received $83,250 in grant money from the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation.

The money will be used to buy 150 miniature laptop computers, which will double the amount of computers the library system has, said Helen Moeller, director of libraries. Demand is high for the computers; people have to wait up to an hour to use them for an hour-long session.

"There is a tremendous demand for the libraries' public computers," she said. "The world of information has changed so drastically that if you don't have the Internet, it can be difficult to get information and even do things like apply for jobs."

Moeller said the new computers will help decrease the "digital divide" among people who can afford computers and those who can't. Library card holders will be able to check out one of the mini laptops and go anywhere in the library to access the Internet.

Mike Pate, Tallahassee program director for the Knight Foundation, said studies by the organization have proven that a majority of the population in the country without access to computers go to public libraries.

"Libraries are the greatest providers of free Internet, offering residents access to the critical news and information they need to make decisions about their lives," he said. "At the least, we can put the libraries and their users in a situation where they don't have to wait as long for a computer."

Library officials said the computers won't be available for a few months. Staff members must first develop policies and procedures for their use.

Thursday, September 17, 2009

Wednesday, September 16, 2009

State tells schools hands off library funds

Dave Weber reports in the Sentinel School Zone that a Florida Department of Education memo has warned school districts that school library funds are to be limited to a specific purpose. An e-mail message from public school chancellor Frances Haithcock advised superintendends that public library media categorical funds are intended for the purchase of library media resources to be checked out through the school library by students and teachers.

http://blogs.orlandosentinel.com/news_education_edblog/2009/09/state-tells-schools-to-keep-hands-off-library-money.html

Tuesday, September 8, 2009

The future of libraries, with or without books

By John D. Sutter

- From CNN, updated 8:14 a.m. EDT, Fri September 2, 2009

- Thanks to Chuck McClure for sharing
Libraries are trying to image their futures with or without books.

(CNN) -- The stereotypical library is dying -- and it's taking ist shushin ladies, dank smell, and endless shelves of books with it.

Books are being pushed aside for digital learning centers and gaming areas. "Loud rooms" that promote public discourse and group projects are taking over the bookish quiet. Hipster staffers who blog, chat on Twitter and care little about the Dewey Decimal System are edging out old-school librarians.

And that's just the surface. By some accounts, the library system is undergoing a complete transformation that goes far beyond these image changes.

Authors, publishing houses, librarians and Web sites continue to fight Google's efforts to digitize the world's books and create the world's largest library online. Meanwhile, many real-world libraries are moving forward with the assumption that physical books will play a much-diminished or potentially nonexistent role in their efforts to educate the public.

Some books will still be around, they say, although many of those will be digital. But the goal of the library remains the same: To be a free place where people can access and share information.

"The library building isn't a warehouse for books," said Helene Blowers, digital strategy director at the Columbus [Ohio] Metropolitan Library. "It's a community gathering center."

Think of the change as a Library 2.0 revolution -- a mirror of what's happened on the Web.

Library 2.0

People used to go online for the same information they could get from newspapers. Now they go to Facebook, Digg and Twitter to discuss their lives and the news of the day. Forward-looking librarians are trying to create that same conversational loop in public libraries. The one-way flow of information from book to patron isn't good enough anymore.

"We can pick up on all of these trends that are going on," said Toby Greenwalt, virtual services coordinator at the Skokie Public Library in suburban Chicago.

Greenwalt, for example, set up a Twitter feed and text-messaging services for his library. He monitors local conversations on online social networks and uses that information as inspiration for group discussions or programs at the real-world library.

Other libraries are trying new things, too.

The Public Library of Charlotte and Mecklenburg County, in North Carolina, has a multimedia space where kids shoot videos and record music. It also runs a blog dedicated to gaming and hosts video game tournaments regularly.

Kelly Czarnecki, a technology education librarian at ImaginOn, a kids' branch of that library, said kids learn by telling their own stories.

"Our motto here is to bring stories to life, so by having the movie and music studio we can really tap into a different angle of what stories are," she said. "They're not just in books. They're something kids can create themselves."

Czarnecki believes that doesn't have to come at the expense of book-based learning.
The Aarhus Public Library in Aarhus, Denmark, takes things a step further.

The library features an "info column," where people share digital news stories; an "info galleria" where patrons explore digital maps layered with factoids; a digital floor that lets people immerse themselves in information; and RFID-tagged book phones that kids point at specific books to hear a story.

"The library has never been just about books," said Rolf Hapel, director of the city's public libraries.

Community Centers

Jason M. Schultz, director of the Samuelson Law, Technology and Public Policy Clinic at the University of California at Berkeley Law School, said libraries always have served two roles in society: They're places where people can get free information; and they're community centers for civic debate.

As books become more available online, that community-center role will become increasingly important for libraries, he said.

"It depends on whether we prioritize it as a funding matter, but I think there always will be a space for that even if all the resources are digital," he said.

Some libraries are trying to gain an edge by focusing on the "deeply local" material -- the stuff that only they have, said Blowers, the librarian in Ohio.

"How do we help add that value to a format like the Internet, which is expansively global?" she said. "So we look at what do we have here that we could help people gain access to by digitizing it."

That material can be used to start community discussions, she said.

Librarians

This shift means the role of the librarian -- and their look -- is also changing.

In a world where information is more social and more online, librarians are becoming debate moderators, givers of technical support and community outreach coordinators.

They're also no longer bound to the physical library, said Greenwalt, of the library in Skokie, Illinois. Librarians must venture into the digital space, where their potential patrons exist, to show them why the physical library is still necessary, he said.

A rise in a young, library-chic subculture on blogs and on Twitter is putting a new face on this changing role, said Linda C. Smith, president of the Association for Library and Information Science Education.

Some wear tattoos, piercings and dress like they belong on the streets of Brooklyn instead of behind bookshelves. They're also trying on new titles. Instead of librarians, they're "information specialists" or "information scientists."

Libraries like the "Urban Media Space," which is set to open in 2014 in Aarhus, Denmark, are taking on new names, too. And all of that experimentation is a good thing, Smith said, because it may help people separate the book-bound past of libraries from the liberated future.

"It's a source of tension in the field because, for some people, trying to re-brand can be perceived as a rejection of the [library] tradition and the values," she said. "But for other people it's a redefinition and an expansion."

Funding woes

In the United States, libraries are largely funded by local governments, many of which have been hit hard by the recession.

That means some libraries may not get to take part in technological advances. It also could mean some of the nation's 16,000 public libraries could be shut down or privatized. Schultz, of the Berkeley Law School, said it would be easy for public officials to point to the growing amount of free information online as further reason to cut public funding for libraries.

Use of U.S. public libraries is up over the past decade, though, and many people in the information and libraries field say they're excited about opportunities the future brings.

"I came into libraries and it wasn't about books," said Peter Norman, a graduate student in library and information science at Simmons College in Boston who says he's most interested in music and technology. "Sure I love to read. I read all the time. I read physical books. But I don't have the strange emotional attachment that some people possess."

"If the library is going to turn into a place without books, I'm going to evolve with that too," he said.

Thursday, August 27, 2009

FLA President Promoted

Wendy Breeden, Lake County Library Director and President of the Florida Library Association, has been promoted to be the director of the newly created Lake County Department of Public Resources.

The new Department included the divisions of Library Services, Tourism & Business Relations, Parks & Trails and Agricultural Education. The Department also includes the programs of Public Lands Management and Volunteers.

Wednesday, August 26, 2009

Centennial Park Branch Library Faces Final Chapter

by Kevin Wiatrowski/ The Tampa Tribune
August 26, 2009

HOLIDAY - Pasco County commissioners may sacrifice Centennial Park Branch Library, the first county-financed public library, to keep Pasco's other libraries open five days a week.

Commissioners' other option is to rotate staff between Centennial Park and the nearby South Holiday library, opening each on alternating weekdays. They'd both operate short-staffed on Saturdays.

Library Services Director Linda Allen will spell out those options in more detail at the county's next budget workshop Sept. 1 in Dade City.

Either option would take effect Oct. 1 with the county's fiscal 2010 budget.

Closing 21-year-old Centennial Park would shift its 28,700 regular patrons to South Holiday, doubling the burden on that newer but smaller branch.

The two libraries are about two miles from each other - Centennial Park on Moog Road, South Holiday on Mile Stretch - both residential neighborhoods.

Closing Centennial Park, however, could still pose a problem for some patrons.

"Even though they're so close together, we have a lot of people who use only one," Allen said.

The prospect of closing Centennial Park arose during commissioners' budget workshop with county staffers this week. It reverses commissioners' earlier opposition to closing any libraries as they try to close a $36 million budget hole for fiscal 2010.

Pasco County has seven county-owned libraries. New Port Richey and Zephyrhills have their own libraries.

The closing is among a host of changes Allen has proposed to cut costs.

Allen told commissioners she plans dramatic cuts to the libraries' offerings. Sixteen online databases popular with student researchers will disappear. The county will buy fewer paperbacks, fewer periodicals and no DVD movies or audiobooks.

"We are not looking to make sure there's something on every topic in the library," Allen said.

Maintenance of equipment will be done in-house, and landscaping work will be cut by about two-thirds, she said.

Also on the horizon are the elimination of library-sponsored events for adults, fewer activities for teens and children and cutting the summer reading program.

Commissioners could appropriate $408,000 in new taxes to keep the library system as is. The money would fill 18 of 32 empty jobs, but it wouldn't expand hours curtailed last year. Those cuts closed libraries on Mondays.

Outside the Centennial Park library Thursday morning, Cathy Tobias made a sour face after hearing the library might close.

"This is real close to my home," Tobias said, who lives within walking distance. "We use this library all the time."

The prospect of closing Centennial Park library was quickly followed by concerns the empty building could become a target for vandals. County officials said they would consider moving employees from leased space into the empty library if it is abandoned.

Commissioners quashed Allen's proposal to rotate staff between the New River library in Wesley Chapel and the Hugh Embry library in downtown Dade City.

That strategy was seen as a way to keep each library open at least part-time, but commissioners felt the 14 miles between them posed an obstacle for many of their patrons.

Commissioners want both libraries open full-time.

Commissioners also asked County Administrator John Gallagher to search the county's construction funds for money that could build a library in Trinity to replace Centennial Park.

The most likely site is on county-owned land next to a new fire station on Trinity Boulevard, but it's unclear when or if that library could be built.

Wednesday, August 12, 2009

St. Johns County teens learn money management at library

St. Johns County Library offers a one-day financial literacy program for those ages 15-20 who want to learn to handle their money. Read the full story at http://www.jacksonville.com/news/metro/2009-08-12/story/program_at_libraries_helps_teenagers_learn_to_manage_money

Monday, August 10, 2009

FLA Citizen of the Year Doug McNamara Recognized

This Florida Times-Union story about FLA's 2009 Citizen of the Year Doug McNamara quotes several librarians and describes Mumford Library Books.
http://www.jacksonville.com/news/metro/2009-08-10/story/mumford_library_books_is_a_book_lovers_paradise

Friday, August 7, 2009

FSU Libraries receive $100K from Athletics Dept.

The FSU Athletics Department has given $100,000 to FSU Libraries. The donation was made possible by funds received for the Seminole football team's participation in the Champs Sports Bowl lasat December. See full story at http://www.seminoles.com/genrel/080609aab.html

Monday, August 3, 2009

Seminole County rejects privatizing libraries

The Orlando Sentinel reported on July 28 that Seminole County won't turn its public libraries over to a private contractor.

http://www.orlandosentinel.com/news/local/seminole/orl-seminole-libraries-private,0,6159827.story

Dining out helps Delray Library

"Dine out for a cause" fundraiser benefits Delray Beach Public Library. Read full story at
http://www.sun-sentinel.com/news/palm-beach/delray-beach/sfl-fldineout0802pcaug02,0,5253522.story

Tuesday, July 28, 2009

Library jobs, hours in Brevard face cuts
No branches slated to close, but 48 positions may vanish

Read full story at http://www.floridatoday.com/article/20090728/NEWS01/907280326/1006/Library+jobs++hours+face+cuts

Tuesday, July 14, 2009

Officials gather for official opening of library resource center

By Sara Brubaker
Correspondent/The Gainesville Sun
July 9, 2009

About 150 people crowded into a new library and neighborhood resource center in northeast Gainesville on Wednesday afternoon to celebrate its official opening.

The Library Partnership - A Neighborhood Resource Center, located at 1130 N.E. 16th Ave., represents the culmination of a collaborative effort among the Alachua County Library District, the Department of Children and Families and the Partnership for Strong Families to bring much-needed resources to the community.

"We're just like any other fully functioning library," said Alachua County Library District director Sol Hirsch. "The biggest difference is our partnership. Our work complements each other."

Hirsch, along with administrators and directors of the DCF and the Partnership for Strong Families, came up with the idea of the joint library and resource center in October.

Construction began in March, and the facility opened unofficially on June 15, just eight months after the initiative was first discussed.

The full-service branch library boasts a community meeting room, a children's area, a teen room, 20 computers and a full collection of books, periodicals, magazines and DVDs, much of which was donated from other branches. It is about the same size as the Archer and Newberry library branches.

"Basic, traditional services are our foundation, but we're also concentrating on community outreach," Hirsch said.

Between 195 and 240 people a day have utilized the new facility since it opened in June, according to Anita Jenkins-McCarter, the library manager. She said she expects that number to double once school starts again in August.

Sixty percent of the 7,500-square-foot center is space shared by both the library and the resource center.

The resource center, operated by the Partnership for Strong Families, introduces people to social services and links them with organizations to assist them, such as FloridaWorks, the YMCA and about 30 other community partners.

Hirsch said the joint venture, which he said is the first of its kind in Florida, embodies the library district's motto, "Thinking outside the book," he said.

"We're not waiting for people to come to us, we're going out to the community. This partnership represents a common sense approach - When money's tight, why not come together?" he said.

Several members from the community organizations spoke before Wednesday's ribbon-cutting ceremony, including Laura Shaw from the Alachua County Library Foundation and Scherwin Henry, a Gainesville commissioner.

Shaw presented the Library Partnership with a $15,000 donation for the Snuggle-Up Room, the children's area shared by the library and the resource center.

Henry said northeast Gainesville lacks positive attention and rarely sees the introduction of worthwhile community programs, but the library meets a very real need for neighborhood resources.

"This type of creativity and innovation is what makes our community the best place to live in the state of Florida," he said.

The speakers conveyed their excitement about the potential of the center to revitalize children, teenagers, working adults and grandparents.

Carressa Hutchinson, the Family Resource Center coordinator, said the library's location on a bus route, large parking lot and variety of resources housed under one roof make it indispensable to the surrounding neighborhoods.

Hutchinson grew up in northeast Gainesville and graduated from Eastside High School. She said she has recognized the lack of sufficient resources in her community for a long time.

"We're living in a time when there are so many budget cuts that people are finding it impossible to get the information they need," Hutchinson said. "This library is a new way of effectively delivering information so that people can actually take advantage of all the social services that are out there."

Tough times bring boom to Brevard libraries


More check out free services as funding dips
July 14, 2009
BY PATRICK PETERSON
FLORIDA TODAY

Hard times have made public libraries more popular.



Gunnery Sgt. Richard Irizarry of Viera is one of the few Marines stationed at Patrick Air Force Base. He saves money by getting movies at the Suntree/Viera Public Library on Jordan Blass Drive, especially family-friendly ones for him and his son to watch. (Tim Shortt, FLORIDA TODAY)


Patrons are flocking to the 18 Brevard County Library System branches, which have become an economical alternative to paying for Internet service, cable TV and DVD rentals.

"You get free movies and CDs. I get books and use the computer," said Yolanda Jordan, 32, of Merritt Island. "I get e-mail and an application for school."

The recession has prompted an increase in library usage for Jordan, who comes to the Cocoa branch at 308 Forrest Ave. several times a week. The library helped Jordan save $60 a month since she canceled her cable service.

"You've got to cut back," she said.

Last year in Brevard County, 5.48 million books, a 5 percent increase from 2007, were checked out by about 3.5 million library visitors, a 3 percent increase. Some 1.67 million DVDs have been circulated since September. And last year, nearly 59,000 people each month used personal computers in the libraries, an 8 percent increase. Most of those new users appear to be job hunters or those applying for unemployment or food stamps.

This increased usage come as libraries, like their patrons, are dealing with their own financial issues.

After a 19 percent budget cut last year, the county library system faces a proposed 20 percent cut to its cut $25.35 million budget in October.

"Our revenue is down but our business is booming," said Frank Vestal, department finance manager for the library service.

At the Melbourne branch at 540 E. Fee Ave., a job center was set up five months ago in the reference department to assist the growing number of job hunters. Reference librarians have developed a new expertise in employment resources, since judging by the questions they are asked, more patrons are searching for jobs on the Internet and using the wireless signal with laptops. (The library does not ask patrons why they are using the Internet.)

"We just notice that we have more foot traffic," said Jeri Prieth, director of the Melbourne branch. "Some will say, 'I've cut my cable and we're coming for books and movies.' Some will say, 'I've cut the cable service and I'm using the Internet.' "

The library offers 4,000 DVDs and videos and stocks new releases as well as classics.

"We buy the latest DVDs," Prieth said.

The number of visitors has increased, despite a decrease in the number of hours the library can remain open due to a hiring freeze.

"We all expected a decrease in usage after the library closed 10 hours a week, and it didn't happen," Prieth said.

At the Palm Bay Public Library, ten computers were refurbished and repurposed to provide Internet service to patrons. That gives the library a total of 16 computers.

"This particular library has increased Internet service due to the economy," branch director Lisa Olzewski said. "The computers are pretty much busy all the time."

In June, the library, at 1520 Port Malabar Blvd. NE, posted an 11 percent increase in visitors over the same time last year.

"I just know that a lot of people seem to be looking for services in order to obtain jobs or to obtain government assistance of some sort," Olzewski said.

Palm Bay short-order cook Michael Austin, 31, a regular library patron, uses the free DVD checkout to save money during the recession. He also relies on the library for information.

"In the past year I've used the library more," he said. "I just finished training a dog, so one of the librarians helped me find a book for that."

Though he lives in Palm Bay, he prefers the larger Melbourne library branch on Fee Avenue. He has noticed that the library has become crowded with job seekers searching the Internet for employment.

"I try to jump on the computers when I can," he said. "But there's always so many people."


Contact Peterson at 242-3673 or ppeterson@floridatoday.com.


Additional Facts


Ups and downs


At the Brevard County Library System, checkouts in 2007-08 were up 5 percent from 2006-07, and visitors were up 3 percent. At the same time, Brevard County Libraries are also experiencing budget cuts.

Here's the system-wide budget, with the actual or proposed cut:

2008-09: $25.35 million, down 19 percent
2009-10: $20.2 million, (proposed) down 20 percent

-- Brevard County Library Service






















Tough times bring boom to Brevard libraries

Tough Times Bring Boom to Brevard Libraries
More Check Out Free Services as Funding Dips
BY PATRICK PETERSON FLORIDA TODAY



Gunnery Sgt. Richard Irizarry of Viera is one of the few Marines stationed at Patrick Air Force Base. He saves money by getting movies at the Suntree/Viera Public Library on Jordan Blass Drive, especially family-friendly ones for him and his son to watch. (Tim Shortt, FLORIDA TODAY)


Hard times have made public libraries more popular.

Patrons are flocking to the 18 Brevard County Library System branches, which have become an economical alternative to paying for Internet service, cable TV and DVD rentals.

"You get free movies and CDs. I get books and use the computer," said Yolanda Jordan, 32, of Merritt Island. "I get e-mail and an application for school."

The recession has prompted an increase in library usage for Jordan, who comes to the Cocoa branch at 308 Forrest Ave. several times a week. The library helped Jordan save $60 a month since she canceled her cable service.

"You've got to cut back," she said.

Last year in Brevard County, 5.48 million books, a 5 percent increase from 2007, were checked out by about 3.5 million library visitors, a 3 percent increase. Some 1.67 million DVDs have been circulated since September. And last year, nearly 59,000 people each month used personal computers in the libraries, an 8 percent increase. Most of those new users appear to be job hunters or those applying for unemployment or food stamps.

This increased usage come as libraries, like their patrons, are dealing with their own financial issues.

After a 19 percent budget cut last year, the county library system faces a proposed 20 percent cut to its cut $25.35 million budget in October.

"Our revenue is down but our business is booming," said Frank Vestal, department finance manager for the library service.

At the Melbourne branch at 540 E. Fee Ave., a job center was set up five months ago in the reference department to assist the growing number of job hunters. Reference librarians have developed a new expertise in employment resources, since judging by the questions they are asked, more patrons are searching for jobs on the Internet and using the wireless signal with laptops. (The library does not ask patrons why they are using the Internet.)

"We just notice that we have more foot traffic," said Jeri Prieth, director of the Melbourne branch. "Some will say, 'I've cut my cable and we're coming for books and movies.' Some will say, 'I've cut the cable service and I'm using the Internet.' "

The library offers 4,000 DVDs and videos and stocks new releases as well as classics.
"We buy the latest DVDs," Prieth said.

The number of visitors has increased, despite a decrease in the number of hours the library can remain open due to a hiring freeze.

"We all expected a decrease in usage after the library closed 10 hours a week, and it didn't happen," Prieth said.

At the Palm Bay Public Library, ten computers were refurbished and repurposed to provide Internet service to patrons. That gives the library a total of 16 computers.

"This particular library has increased Internet service due to the economy," branch director Lisa Olzewski said. "The computers are pretty much busy all the time."

In June, the library, at 1520 Port Malabar Blvd. NE, posted an 11 percent increase in visitors over the same time last year.an style="font-family:trebuchet ms;">"I just know that a lot of people seem to be looking for services in order to obtain jobs or to obtain government assistance of some sort," Olzewski said.


Palm Bay short-order cook Michael Austin, 31, a regular library patron, uses the free DVD checkout to save money during the recession. He also relies on the library for information.

"In the past year I've used the library more," he said. "I just finished training a dog, so one of the librarians helped me find a book for that."


Though he lives in Palm Bay, he prefers the larger Melbourne library branch on Fee Avenue. He has noticed that the library has become crowded with job seekers searching the Internet for employment.

"I try to jump on the computers when I can," he said. "But there's always so many people."


Additional Facts
Ups and downs
At the Brevard County Library System, checkouts in 2007-08 were up 5 percent from 2006-07, and visitors were up 3 percent. At the same time, Brevard County Libraries are also experiencing budget cuts.


Here's the system-wide budget, with the actual or proposed cut:
2008-09: $25.35 million, down 19 percent
2009-10: $20.2 million, (proposed) down 20 percent -- Brevard County Library Service


Contact Peterson at 242-3673 or ppeterson@floridatoday.com.

http://www.floridatoday.com/



Wednesday, July 1, 2009

Should Seminole libraries be run by private companies? Petitions say no.

by Rachael Jackson, Sentinel Staff Writer
Orlando Sentinel, June 24, 2009


Alongside signs that read "Save Our Libraries," Margie Johnson and about a dozen volunteers are spending this week camped in front of Seminole County libraries, gathering signatures to oppose turning over the libraries to a private company.


The county, which faces a $19 million budget shortfall, doesn't yet know how much could be saved by "outsourcing" the $6.7 million library system, but it's exploring the idea.

"Our democracy is founded on free public information for everyone," Johnson, a member of the county's Library Advisory Board, said as she braved sweltering heat outside the Oviedo branch library, where every parking spot was full Tuesday afternoon.

If a private company were to run Seminole's five libraries, patrons would still be able to check out books, use computers and take advantage of other basic services for free. But people like Johnson, 75, worry that a company would put profits ahead of community needs.

Library Systems & Services LLC, a Maryland company that operates more than 60 libraries nationwide, boasts that it can help libraries save by getting deals on bulk book orders and by securing more grant funding. The company, known as LSSI, acknowledges that it typically reduces staff by 10 percent to 20 percent and that its 401(k) packages are usually less generous than government pensions.

Seminole residents have said they're concerned about how a private company would handle book-buying, hours and fees, but LSSI materials say those decisions are left to local officials.

The county is awaiting proposals from companies, and commissioners probably won't take up the issue until August.

According to the Florida Library Association, which opposes the outsourcing of library services, no Florida libraries are run by for-profit companies, though several local governments have recently considered it. Sarasota and Hernando counties decided against it.

But in Jackson County, Ore., Judy Baalman, the libraries' business and support services manager, said LSSI helped save the system. Libraries there were shuttered in 2007 because of budget cuts. Through a contract with LSSI, the libraries reopened six months later for about half of what the county had been spending. Some former employees were rehired, though the new staff had fewer professional librarians. Hours were cut, and some libraries are open only eight hours a week. Circulation decreased, though Baalman said it's approaching original levels.

"It appears for the most part that people of the county have fit their library use around the open hours," she said, adding that she still gets complaints about limited schedules. Some Jackson County communities have agreed to pay levies to keep libraries open more hours.

By Wednesday afternoon, Johnson and her team had collected more than 1,000 signatures. They've also launched an online petition and a blog, http://keepingpublicseminolepubliclibrary.blogspot.com./

Rachael Jackson can be reached at rjackson@orlandosentinel.com or 407-540-4358.

Monday, June 15, 2009

Librarians now add social work to their resumes




By
Will Van Sant, Times Staff Writer In Print: Tuesday, June 9, 2009









David Stoner, who directs adult services for the Clearwater Public Library System, helps Karen Prall post her resume on the Web. “The library is really the only place you can go to get direct help immediately,” said Prall. 


Librarians have an image problem — stern face, thick round glasses, "shush!'' — which they parody with Web sites like Warrior Librarian and Macho Librarians with Guns.


Now, harsh reality has swept aside self-mocking pretensions to comic book greatness and turned librarians into real, if largely unsung, heroes of the recession.


Take mild-mannered David Stoner.


Trained to help adults discover the trial of Socrates and sixth- graders track the Oregon Trail, he now spends half his time in the trenches of a battered economy. There his job is far more urgent: helping people who need jobs, food stamps or Medicaid.


"These days, it's really social work in some respects," said Stoner, who directs adult services for the Clearwater Public Library System. "And it's really satisfying to see how much you are helping."


• • •

Karen Prall has been a Clearwater library regular since September, when she lost her dental assistant job. She doesn't like going to WorkNet Pinellas, a nonprofit workforce development agency. She said staff there are overworked, disorganized and dismissive.


When she visited the library on a recent Friday afternoon, Stoner swiftly had Prall, who has limited computer experience, posting her resume to the Web.


"The library is really the only place you can go to get direct help immediately," said Prall, 39. "You ask them and they don't say, 'I'll be with you in 20 minutes.' They'll come over and help you right away."


WorkNet president Ed Peachey said his organization gets criticized often, but there are plenty of people who appreciate its services.


"We do the best we can,'' he said, "with the resources that we have."


Andrew Breidenbaugh, chief librarian at Tampa's John F. Germany Public Library, understands Prall's contrasting opinions of those who tried to help her.


"I don't really think many people think of librarians as government employees,'' he said. "I think they think of librarians as members of a helping profession, like teachers.''


Some colleagues, he said, lament the "good old days," when the job was more about helping people find great literary works than navigating technology and applying for government aid.
Still, he said, they know times have changed.


With public access to government increasingly electronic, and libraries offering the Internet for free, librarians have in effect become gatekeepers for vital services now in record demand, although overall public use of libraries around Tampa Bay has not risen dramatically.


Juliet Douglas, a librarian at John F. Germany, has identified three primary areas where her patrons, hurting in the down economy, ask for help.


First comes Access Florida, the state's electronic portal for food stamps, cash assistance and Medicaid. Then comes Safelink, another Web-supported program that gives free cell phones to people getting government assistance. No. 3 on Douglas' list is using the Web to apply for jobs.
Her library and others around the bay area have developed specific programs to help patrons in these areas. In Clearwater, for instance, the library offers a program called "Hired! Putting Your Best Face Forward."


The trend is nationwide.


A recent Library Research Service survey found that 70 percent of librarians reported helping more patrons with computers in the past 12 months, 66 percent reported helping more look for work and 34 percent helping more seek jobless benefits.


Demand for these types of services has led to new types of on-the-job training for librarians. The Public Library Association's 2008 national conference featured several recession-related seminars including one called "The Disconnected: Who Are They? How Can We Help Them?" It examined how libraries can serve unemployed young people with job and educational opportunities.


• • •

Even as librarians have become facilitators of social programs, they're serving as hosts to the disenfranchised — and not just the homeless, who have long taken refuge in libraries.


Anne Shepherd, director of the Dunedin Public Library, said every morning unemployed people settle in at the library, almost as if showing up to work. Some, she said, bring laptops and use the library's free WiFi.


"It gives them a sense of belonging," Shepherd said. "They come here, they know the staff, they sit at the same table every day, like possibly they belonged to an office in the past."


• • •

Stoner, 41, got his library science degree from the University of South Florida in 1994. When he started his career, Stoner said, the social service aspects of his job were largely nonexistent.
Now he and other librarians in Clearwater rely on a kind of cheat sheet that details which government program can address a specific need, such as housing or filing for unemployment.
He has embraced his new role but remains uncomfortable with the idea of being any sort of hero-of-the-recession. He was less than thrilled to even be photographed for this story.
Still, he talks of his role much as Clark Kent might.


"Whatever people need,'' Stoner said, "we will try to help them."
Will Van Sant can be reached at vansant@sptimes.com or (727) 445-4166.





Tuesday, June 2, 2009

Santa Rosa Library System selected as Florida Library of the Year

From The Pensacola News Journal
Special to the Pelican, May 27, 2009

The Santa Rosa County Board of County Commissioners recognized and commended the Santa Rosa County Library System during a recent county commission meeting for being selected as the Library of the Year Award by the Florida Library Association. Award winners were recognized at the association's 86th annual conference May 8 in Orlando. This award is presented to a Florida library that has demonstrated outstanding service to the community it serves.

The Santa Rosa County Library System was selected for its 2006 transition to a county operated system from the regional system and their significant increases in many library services including a 13 percent increase in circulation and a 21 percent increase in visitors. During this time, staff also launched a volunteer program, opened a new branch, renovated a branch and initiated new outreach programs.

Wednesday, April 22, 2009

Dirt turned for new Beach library


Photo by Terry Barner The News Herald
An artist's rendering shows the new 10,000-square-foot Panama City Beach branch of the Bay County Library scheduled for completion near Hutchison Boulevard and Lyndell Lane in July 2010.
by Pat Kelly/ New Herald Writer


PANAMA CITY BEACH — Panama City Chamber of Commerce official Beth Oltman promised it will be "our newest gem in Panama City Beach."


County Commission Chairman Jerry Girvin noted that it will put the hushed and dusty libraries of yesteryear to shame, with a computer center, an adult literacy classroom and teen activities area.


"The libraries of today are not your grandfather's libraries," he said.


And Beach Mayor Gail Oberst, who first got the ball rolling when she applied for a $500,000 state grant, said the exponential growth of Panama City Beach, and the resulting impact fees, will now help pay for history in the making.


"Here is a perfect example of growth paying for growth," she said.


City and county officials grabbed some golden shovels and turned dirt for the latest branch of the Bay County Public Library system on Thursday, a new 10,000-square-foot building that city officials hope will be completed in a year.


The $1.8-million high-tech library will be located at the corner of Hutchison Boulevard and Lyndell Lane and share space with the Senior Center and Lyndell Community Center.


The total cost of the library could reach $2.23 million after architectural, engineering and survey costs are included, officials said.


The construction contract was awarded to Construct Two Group. Construction director Charles R. Lewis III said Thursday he hoped to be finished with the project by Christmas.


The new facility will replace a current 4,500-square-foot building near U.S. 98 and State 79 that has outgrown its space, said Doug Gilmore, a member of the Bay County Library Board and chairman of a group of citizens and civic groups that worked on planning and fundraising.


Officials have said that 71,000 people moved through the old library in 2008, and 64,000 books were checked out. More than 300 people might use the library in a single week.


"It's a great day for the Beach's community," Gilmore said Thursday. "We've got a fantastic library coming that everyone can be proud of."


The city was awarded a $500,000 state grant for the library's construction, and almost $260,000 has been collected from private donations, which are still being solicited.


The rest of the funding will come from $689,501 in projected impact fees and $781,806 from the city's contingency fund. The old library building will be converted into needed city office space.


Panama City News Herald/ April 10, 2008

Sunday, April 19, 2009

Hefty budget cuts could affect Broward County libraries, parks

Hefty budget cuts could affect Broward County libraries, parks

By Scott Wyman South Florida Sun-Sentinel

April 19, 2009

Don't expect to check out a book at your local library on Sundays or visit many of the regional parks on Wednesdays. And if you live in northern
Broward County Click here for restaurant inspection reports, expect to drive farther to adopt a pet. Faced with having to reduce spending by up to $160 million because of the recession, county administrators are exploring severe cuts in community services. Seven smaller branches in the county's system of 37 libraries could be shut down, and the contract to help run the library at Nova Southeastern University in Davie canceled.

It could amount to the largest reduction in Broward government in modern history if county commissioners agree later this year. The closure of parks and libraries would come despite voters agreeing twice in the past decade to expand those programs. "Broward is a platinum county when it comes to services, but we won't be and may never be again," County Mayor Stacy Ritter said.

County commissioners will begin discussing the proposals Tuesday, but will not vote on a final spending plan until the end of September. Their financial forecasts call for the tax base to drop up to 15 percent this year, and the only way to avoid the spending cuts would be to raise the tax rates on homes and businesses.

Commissioners have not ruled out raising tax rates to make up for much of the lost revenue. But Ritter and other commissioners think such a move would be hotly debated and provoke public outrage.

The libraries that would be closed are the Beach Branch in
Pompano Beach, the Hollywood Beach Library, the Riverland Library in Fort Lauderdale Is your Fort Lauderdale restaurant clean? - Click Here., the Pembroke Pines Library, the Galt Ocean Mile Library in Fort Lauderdale, the Century Plaza Library in Deerfield Beach and the Lauderhill Mall Library. Service at the branch library on Sunrise Boulevard in Fort Lauderdale could be limited.

All libraries would be closed on Sundays, with hours at the 11 largest libraries cut to 48 hours a week from 58. Last year, operations at those libraries were cut from to 58 hours a week from 70.

Special programs organized for all libraries would be eliminated, including celebrations of Black History Month and Gay Pride Month.

About $5.7 million would be saved by breaking the contract with Nova Southeastern. The county and the university agreed in 1999 to build the Alva Sherman Library and signed a 40-year contract. The county has been paying for about 40 percent of the operations since.

In budget cuts made last year, the county shut most regional parks on Tuesdays. That would be expanded to Wednesdays. And, parks would be closed on Thanksgiving, New Year's Day and Martin Luther King Jr. Day in addition to the current holiday closures of Veterans Day, the day after Thanksgiving and Christmas.

Grounds-keeping would be slashed, nature centers would be open only five days a week and the pool at Markham Park would be closed. Free recreational programs such as Halloween parties would be dropped.

Also, the animal shelter in Pompano Beach would be closed to the public. Cities could still drop off stray dogs, but residents would have to go to the other shelter in Fort Lauderdale for adoptions.

Scott Wyman can be reached at swyman@SunSentinel.com or 954-356-4511.

Thursday, April 16, 2009

Sarasota - Privatized libraries: The notion gets a look

Privatized libraries: The notion gets a look

By Zac Anderson & Roger Drouin

Published: Thursday, April 16, 2009 at 1:00 a.m. Last Modified: Wednesday, April 15, 2009 at 10:42 p.m.

Sarasota's public libraries might become not so public.

In an effort to trim $50 million from the county's budget next year, county officials are looking to cut expenses everywhere -- including the library, a service that some residents consider one of the most basic.

The county is checking to see which companies run libraries and if privatizing the library system would reduce costs. At a budget workshop last month, County Administrator Jim Ley told the county commissioners there are "no sacred cows" when it comes to trimming the budget.

"We're looking at a $50-million revenue loss, at best projections," Ley said Wednesday. "So we have a challenge."

Long-time library supporters were surprised by the privatization news Wednesday and wondered why the county had not given them more notice about plans to study what could drastically change the way the library is run.

"This is something totally new to me. I don't even know what to think," said Jane Forbush, president of the Friends of the Jacaranda Library group in Venice and a member of the county's library advisory board for 12 years.

Forbush said she had a hard time seeing how privatization would be a good thing for the library system.

"A tremendous amount of hours are given by volunteers. Volunteers keep the library afloat," Forbush said. "I would think it would be" more difficult to get volunteers to help a private company.

Forbush also cautioned that the county could end up losing more money by privatizing.
The Jacaranda friends group spent $3,000 recently to purchase a new computer for the library's children's department. It is unlikely volunteers would want to give money to a private company, Forbush said.


Ley said that the county is only studying the possibility, and that even if a company takes over operations, it would remain a county library.

Ley also said respondents to the county's annual survey said libraries are one of the areas they would prefer to see cuts in -- rather than "hard services" such as police, fire, street sweeping and road maintenance. "If there is a revenue shortfall and the county had to cut, they say cut parks and libraries," he said.

Before any privatization takes place, the County Commission and a library advisory board would have to approve plans.

The county commissioners have not discussed privatization yet. At last month's budget workshop, they talked in general about looking into streamlining aspects of local government.

"We're trying not to reduce services," Commissioner Joe Barbetta said. "If the administration thinks this can be done without reducing services, then they will come back to us. It is a fine line, and we have to do our best. In this tough economic environment, we have to explore all options."

A partial privatization is possible, Ley said. For example, a company could oversee book purchasing and inventory, while the county operates counter service and librarians.


"We have two responsibilities," Ley said. "One is to get the best service for the least amount of money. The second is to provide the best library experience. The question is if there is a mutually achievable overlap in there somewhere."

Sarasota library volunteer Lydia McIntire said the county would have to make a strong case for privatization, but she would at least be willing to listen.

"I certainly wouldn't condemn it without hearing the pros and cons, that would be kind of silly," said McIntire, who volunteers a few hours each week as vice president of the Friends of the Selby Library. "They obviously must have a reason for thinking of this."

But McIntire added that she has always viewed libraries as a basic function of government, and privatization "seems like such a dramatic change."

"Isn't there something in the constitution about having libraries?" she said with a chuckle.
Both McIntire and Forbush said there has been no hint that the county was considering privatization, even when the volunteers met recently with Sarasota County Commissioner Shannon Staub.


This story appeared in print on page A1

Reading into the Future - Great Newsweek Library Article

Reading Into the Future: As a librarian, my world was always about books. But in this economy, I've evolved into a career counselor.

Eva Gronowska, Newsweek Web Exclusive

Libraries are my world. I've been a patron all my life, and for the past nine years I've worked at multiple libraries and archives in and around Detroit. The library as an institution has many roles, but as our country struggles through an economic crisis, I have watched the library where I work evolve into a career and business center, a community gathering place and a bastion for hope.

In the spring of 2007 I got a library internship at the Southfield Public Library, just north of Detroit. Summers at SPL were usually slow, but that year, we experienced a library that hustled and bustled like science-fair project week, midterms or tax season. Yet patrons weren't looking for Mosby's Nursing Drug Reference or 1040 forms. They were coming for information on entrepreneurship and growing their small business.

I interpreted people's interest in our business collection as the first step to pursuing their dreams, but these patrons were not motivated by dreams. They were responding to reality, and they were looking for Plan B. In Michigan, a slew of unfortunate circumstances caused the first rumblings of recession. Rising unemployment was compounded by rampant foreclosures. The auto industry went spiraling, and with it, their suppliers, then neighborhoods. Michigan's deficit grew, budgets were slashed and business slowed. Southfield used to headquarter five Fortune 500 corporations; today only Lear Corp. remains. As the city shed business, it shed tax revenue as well. Department budgets shrank and a hiring freeze permeated the city.

Things worsened in 2008, and in 2009 the economic crisis continues to suffocate Michigan. Interest in small businesses has remained high, but unemployment, the credit crunch and foreclosures command our patrons' attention and, consequently, ours. Last year, we put up a display with a variety of job resources that we restocked every hour. Each night the library closed, the display was bare. While we normally keep displays up for a week, we kept the job resources display up for months.

Our computer terminals began to fill up, too—this may not be unusual for smaller libraries, but SPL has more than 150 computers, and now some of the people coming in to use them had never even touched one. I challenge you to find someone that's never turned on a computer, explain to them how to use the mouse and keyboard, set up an e-mail address, and then fill out an online application. Now imagine doing that in less than 15 minutes while a line of people with more questions grows impatient at your desk. That's a typical weeknight at SPL.

Some of these folks are job seekers who are suddenly confronted with having to fill out online applications. I recently worked with a man in his mid-50s who was laid off after 25 years as a delivery driver. I helped him navigate the Web sites for UPS and FedEx, search through open positions, register his information and then apply for a job. He quickly became self-sufficient and returned often to check his application's status. I haven't seen him in a while; I'm hoping that's a good sign.

Housing is also a huge issue, and patrons routinely ask about rental vouchers, mortgages, foreclosure lists and apartment searches. A large number of low-income, mentally challenged or illiterate patrons often cannot comprehend the information and are in dire need of a social worker. At times, these conversations are trying, but demonstrate the extent of need.
Regardless of who they are, you can always hear the patron's voice quiver when living arrangements are uncertain. People are scrambling to keep a roof over their heads and as librarians we stay mindful that these folks are vulnerable. A local "company" publicized a free foreclosure-information event at SPL, unbeknownst to the library. The local news caught wind of it and aired a story without researching the company or contacting us. The next day we had ourselves a hubbub as people clamored to get their foreclosure packets. Worse yet, the representative of this "company" was asking for a $20 application fee just to give patrons what was freely available. One older woman was willing to forgo her medication for the week to pay the fee. A veteran librarian derailed the questionable practice by offering our service and the information for free.


Then there's the tightening credit market. People see the writing on the wall and they want to get educated. They can't afford a financial adviser, but checking books out is free. Some of the most popular titles now are "Rich Dad, Poor Dad," "Think and Grow Rich," and "Suze Orman's 2009 Action Plan." We answer question about taxes, stimulus checks, grants, bankruptcy, credit scores, credit reports and many other personal-finance issues. Fortunately, we have all had comprehensive business training. Without it we wouldn't know where to start—especially now.
The crumbling economy affects us all. I have had to work long hours and don't get to see much of my boyfriend or experience any kind of social life lately, but I am thankful to be in a position where I can help people overcome this struggle. The long days are made great when I help job seekers find work, talk to teens about college, meet new business owners, have a discussion about literature and watch senior citizens send their first e-mail to their grandchildren. These small victories and billions just like them are why librarians continue to fight the good fight. In Michigan, we haven't lost hope. As long as there are libraries here, there will always be hope.


Gronowska Lives In Southfield, Mich.
URL: http://www.newsweek.com/id/192764

Monday, April 6, 2009

Hernando officials weigh library offer from LSSI, a Maryland for-profit company

Hernando officials weigh library offer from LSSI, a Maryland for-profit company

By Dan DeWitt, Times Columnist Published Monday, March 30, 2009

Hoping to witness some residents pursuing knowledge at a sacred public institution, I stopped by the West Hernando branch library Monday morning — and found the parking lot empty.

Then I remembered. After last year's cutbacks, it doesn't open until noon on Mondays. Neither does the Main Library in Brooksville, which I didn't realize until I drove across the county and pulled into another deserted lot.


That's when I started to think harder about the column that I'd planned to write, one influenced by talking to Elaine Orlando, 73, a retired reference librarian from New York.

She is circulating a petition to prevent the county from handing the operation of Hernando's libraries over to a for-profit company.

I was inclined to think, as she does, that this is sort of like the Catholic church outsourcing Communion.

Because what purer form of democracy is there than libraries? Open to all; creating well-informed citizens and voters; spreading opportunity through self-education. Orlando, quoting Benjamin Franklin, called them the "people's university.''

And, just because I lost track of the Main Library's operating hours doesn't mean I don't go there frequently. I do. It's almost always packed. The librarians are usually well informed and helpful. The selection of books is about as thoughtful and complete as can be expected.
"The quality of service has always been excellent,'' Orlando said.


Right. So, why mess with it?

Well, we probably shouldn't. But the county has received a tempting offer from Library Systems & Services, also known as LSSI, which is based in Maryland.

The company says it can save the county $500,000 if it maintains the current hours, and $360,000 if it restores the hours cut last year. The company would rehire most of the current staffers, said company vice president George Bateman, and it would not set policy or select books.

Still, this would be a big step, even an experimental one.

Only 13 local governments across the country — none in Florida — have contracted with LSSI. Some of the clients, such as a county in Oregon that had briefly shut its libraries altogether, turned to the company only as a last resort.

And Barbara Shiflett, director of library services in Hernando, listed some of her concerns in a recent memo — that this might mean a fight with the county workers' newly elected union, that volunteers might not want to pitch in for a money-making enterprise, that LSSI would hire cheaper, less-qualified employees.

On the other hand, I think of those closed doors.

In the past two years, the library has seen nothing but cuts: Its budget has gone down by $644,000, to $2.5 million, its staff by the equivalent of 11.5 employees, the hours of operation at the Main Library, which is typical, from 54 to 40 per week.

Next year will mean less money and, I worry, even fewer hours and fewer new books and computers. So the county has been forced to at least consider LSSI's pitch, County Administrator David Hamilton said. He's referred it to a committee led by Commissioner Rose Rocco.

"It simply has to see the light of day,'' he said.

I guess it does. Because this is the kind of compromise we're forced to make when we decide we hate taxes more than we love democracy.

Thursday, April 2, 2009

New Port Richey Library offers budding teen rock musicians a place to jam


Through the Skylight band member Jason Dolinger, 17, center, gets the stage ready for a performance as Alexis Brown, 10, far right, tunes her electric guitar. Youth librarian Ghelder Arriaga hosts Garage Jams for teens some Wednesdays from 4 to 6 p.m. at the New Port Richey Library, 5939 Main St.
By Michele Miller, Times Staff Writer
In Print: Wednesday, March 25, 2009 St. Petersburg Times
NEW PORT RICHEY

They start straggling in a little after 3 p.m. when school's out for the day. A few have guitars slung over their shoulders. Others simply bring their voices and an eagerness to share the stage with like-minded kids.

Music is the bond that connects the 15 to 25 kids that frequent the place: from the long-haired heavy metal screamers, to the International Baccalaureate kid with the awesome voice and two-tone blue electric guitar she got for her eighth-grade graduation, to the slight ponytailed 10-year-old drum aficionado who was brought up on Led Zeppelin and Elvis Presley but counts Taylor Swift as her all-time fave.

They always show up early, said Ghelder Arriaga, the youth librarian who runs things. But the kids have to wait, maybe check out some books or read over lyrics, because no one enters the upstairs community room until Arriaga is done setting up the mikes, the mixer, the sound system and the musical video game Rockband for kids who are too shy to sing or play on their own.

Then, as soon as the clock strikes 4, the purple neon "Open" sign is flipped on, and the Garage Jam session starts at the New Port Richey Library.

For the next two hours the music of today's youth (and sometimes their parents' youth) reverberates through the brick building on Main Street as patrons quietly peruse bookshelves upstairs and down or surf the Web on computers.

It's a different kind of mix to be sure, but times have changed. Libraries have evolved to meet the needs of all their patrons.

The youth jam sessions, held Wednesdays three times a month, are the brainstorm of Arriaga, who thought it would be a good way to use the library's equipment while reaching out to the younger generation.

"As a librarian, one of the things we want to do is expose them to all the arts — traditional art, music, theater — because we have a lot of material here for them," Arriaga said. "I think more teens would go to the library if there were more venues for them."

The first Garage Jam was held in November to highlight the new youth music collection purchased by the library's teen council. The sessions evolved from that, Arriaga said.

"I thought back to my own youth, growing up in New York, and how we would put together these bands. Whoever had an empty basement, that was the place to go," said Arriaga, now in his mid-30s. "If you had a friend that had a basement, he had the key to this kind of thing. But here in Florida there are no basements — you have garages, so the kids play there."

Now there's another alternative for kids like M.J. Pereyra, 17, who balances her music with intensive studies in the International Baccalaureate program at Gulf High. She used to be quite shy. Now she sings lead vocals in front of guitar player Chris Pendley, 16, and heavy metal screamers Brian Deleonard and Jason Dolinger, both 17. She writes her own songs and even has her own young fans who regularly record the group's sessions at the library on their cell phone cameras.

"This is actually great," M.J. said after Arriaga recorded her singing a cover of Temperance's You Make Me Happy for a video to post on MySpace. "I used to not be able to play guitar in front of people. Now I have the confidence to sing in front of people. It's made me what I am today."

"I come here because I like to sing, and I like to watch the band," said Kimberly Parrish, 14. "It's very nice, actually, that they do this for the teenagers."

Some adults agree.

"I'm really pleased that they're having this musical event for the kids," said Susan Vaughn, 66, a retired school librarian who volunteers as a cataloguer at the library. "I don't find it distracting at all. I think it's wonderful that these kids are here being creative, that they have a safe place to be. It's a new age. It's not a museum. It's an active living place."

Of course, not everyone feels the same. Arriaga said responses to the music program have been mixed.

The kids love it, of course. Local teachers and parents seem to like it, too — especially when reluctant readers venture in to check out the books on their favorite bands.

"The kids are reading — even if it's lyrics that I've printed off for them, they are reading," he said. "And some of the parents use this as leverage. If the kids don't keep up their grades or if they get in trouble, they can't come here.

"Some patrons don't like it," he said. "But I tell them, 'We're open 56 hours in a week and for just two of those hours we're doing this.' "

That's music to the ears of parents such as Rich Brown, who was eager to get his guitar- and drum-playing daughter Alexis, 10, into the garage band sessions after following the music up the stairs one recent Wednesday afternoon.

"Do you know how cool this is?" Brown said. "This is so cool. I wish they had something like this when I was a kid."

Fast facts
If you go

The New Port Richey Public Library is at 5939 Main St. For information on programs, call (727) 853-1279 or visit www.nprlibrary.org.

Thursday, March 26, 2009

He found his job, helping others find theirs

Joel Larus works with Ed, a homeless man, at the Selby Public Library last week. His "counseling center" consists basically of a table near the library entrance.



By Billy Cox
Published: Tuesday, March 17, 2009 at 1:00 a.m. Herald Tribune

SARASOTA - So this guy sees the Job Seekers' Program signs posted at Selby Public Library and approaches Joel Larus, the man in charge.

The visitor says he just got laid off at a local restaurant, and he needs work in the worst way.

Larus asks what his culinary specialty is, and the guy says barbecued ribs.

Larus asks if he ever considered catering to New College and University of South Florida students on the north Trail. The guy says no, but then starts thinking aloud about styrofoam delivery boxes and plastic cutlery and pricing schedules.

Larus asks him how much it might cost to get started, and the fellow says maybe $100, which he doesn't have. Larus doesn't usually do this sort of thing, but he reaches for his checkbook and spots the guy a $60 loan.

Furthermore, Larus pays him $20 in advance for two rib dinners to be delivered to his condo at 6 p.m. that Friday night.

Larus waits. The guy never shows. Larus phones for an explanation. The guy hangs up. Larus loses $80.

"Well," says the old Ivy Leaguer with a laugh, "it could've been worse."

Making loans to strangers isn't typical sport for an 85-year-old. Nor is seeking out unemployed strangers who might well be lying every time they speak. But these are treacherous times, and Larus is certain he can be of help.

So, from 10 a.m. until noon on Tuesdays and 1 to 3 p.m. on Thursdays, Larus waits for people to show up at his makeshift job counseling center that consists basically of a table near the library entrance. Nearby is a room he uses for consultations, where he tries to match workers with potential jobs.

Recently, after listening to more than 300 hard-luck cases since setting up his one-man Job Seekers' Program in late 2007, Larus has noticed a shift in the line-up of people who approach him. A more educated, white-collar demographic is beginning to emerge from the rising floodwaters of unemployment.

"I had a Ph.D. last Thursday!" Larus exclaims, as if he had just bagged a tarpon.
Actually, the self-proclaimed doctorate holder could have been lying, too. After all, Larus doesn't do background checks. He doesn't gather contact information. He doesn't verify their employment status.

But Larus is prepared for anything with his mother lode of employment information contained in a 2-inch thick stack of 4-by-6 note cards. Everything is in there, from local employment agency information to potential employers to contact information jotted down from help-wanted roadside signs. Not to mention his own ideas, like the barbecue catering gig.

"Am I doing good work? Frankly, I don't know," says the retired antiques entrepreneur and academic. "The problem is, very few come back. If I am successful in sending someone to a job, that's where he or she goes. They don't come back here."

Roman Gimenez, 56, doesn't know if his recent session with Larus will pay off. He has been reduced to working odd jobs since his lawn service collapsed.

"Joel gave me quite a few leads that I've been following," says Gimenez, struggling to keep his family in their house. "He knows about a lot of places around here, places I never thought to look. He's a very kind and helpful person."

Library director Liz Nolan suspects Larus' efforts are paying off more than he knows.

"Somewhere along the line, he must be making a positive difference, because people seek him out," she says. "And even if he helps just one person find a job, he's done a great thing."

With free Internet access, and a location a few blocks from the Salvation Army's soup kitchen, Selby Library is a natural magnet for indigent traffic. Larus, a voracious reader, took note years ago. More recently, with the numbers of the unemployed accelerating, he also discovered a community in denial.

"There's a problem in Sarasota," he says. "If you hang around Five Corners or Starbucks or Whole Foods, you'll see the backpacks and the tents. I listen to these people, and I've heard horror stories."

Larus, whose parents introduced him to volunteerism ages ago, also understood that many of the itinerates were content with their hardscrabble lifestyles. But he approached Nolan with some ideas about helping those who were sick of it. Nolan decided to give him some space, for good reason.

Larus earned an undergraduate degree at Harvard and his doctorate at Columbia, where he once taught international relations. But for nearly 30 years, he made real money in the antiques business in Boston. In 1997, two years after arriving in Sarasota, the opera aficionado founded a continuing education program for retirees called the Pierian Spring Academy.

Partially accounting for Larus' latest actions are his readings of Hinduism's Four Stages of Life, particularly the final phase -- asceticism. Although he is not inclined to reject material comforts as prescribed, he finds an appeal in its stripped-down philosophies. Certainly he hears more desperate variations of that theme with the strangers who gravitate to him.

"I've had one or two bank robbers, several thieves, two wife-abusers, one husband-abuser," he recalls. "Prostitutes. I've had drug abusers, heroin, crack, that kind of thing."

Larus' sessions can put him at a distance with his social circles, from his fellow gym rats who give him strange looks when they find out what he's doing, to his wife, Jane. "Sometimes if there's a crime story in the paper involving a homeless person, she'll say, 'I wonder if that was one of your friends.'"

In the brighter moments, it's almost as if he's enjoying a run of true kismet. One morning he's having coffee and reading a New York Times story about how Maine is experiencing a shortage of dentists. Hours later, a jobless husband and wife -- certified dental technicians -- wander into the library from California and ask for advice.

Larus refers them to the article. "And I said let me make a few calls and I'll get you a bus ticket to Maine," he adds. Then he states the obvious. "It can get kind of weird."

David Proch, executive director of Resurrection House, which provides lodging and services to the homeless, swings many of his clients over to Larus for consultations. He's certain of at least this much: "Joel is going to stay busy if he keeps doing this."

Larus makes it sound as if he has little choice. "I see and hear what's happening to the good men and women who built your condos, who prepare fine food in restaurants, who service your lawns so faithfully," he says. "Sarasota's affluent retiree and business community has no idea of the pain and the crises their fellow citizens are going through. I can't ignore this."

But ask who benefits the most from this quixotic mission -- which, for all he knows, could be a huge waste of time, not to mention $80 -- and Larus looks like he just saw lanterns glittering on the dark side of the moon.

"I'm hoping I can find my own spiritual enlightenment," he says.