The Citistates Group presents

Libraries Advance Against All Odds

Neal Peirce / Aug 20 2010

For Release Sunday, August 22, 2010
© 2010 Washington Post Writers Group

Neal PeirceAmerica’s public libraries, fast turning themselves into “one-stop shops” for digital job searches, appear to be staging one of their great historic transformations.

Responding to a rush of recession-time visitors, 88 percent of our libraries now offer access to job databases. And at least two-thirds of library staffs are helping applicants complete online job applications, according to a national survey by the American Library Association and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.

As for access to free wireless services, 82 percent of libraries now provide it — up from just 37 percent four years ago. In two-thirds of cases, the libraries are the only source of free Internet service in their communities.

What’s amazing is that many libraries are able to maintain the bulk of their services and adapt to growing needs during a recession, even in the face of snowballing funding cuts by their local governments. More than 55 percent of urban libraries are reporting budget cuts, and a quarter have felt obliged to cut hours or close branches. Fifteen percent of libraries reduced their hours of operation in 2009 — three times the number reported in 2008. And 50 percent report they have insufficient staff to met their patrons’ job-seeking needs.

But they’re not taking it quietly. In Indianapolis, neighborhoods around the branches facing possible closure became very active, holding read-ins, marches and letter-writing campaigns. In Camden, N.J., one of America’s poorest cities, a fierce public outcry has followed the threat to close the entire library system.

And when Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa proposed 37 percent cuts to his city’s library budgets, advocates argued it would be the first time in the system’s 138-year history that libraries would be open just five days a week. And they came up with a strong productivity argument. In 1978, when there were 61 L.A. libraries (there are now 72), 1,459 staff librarians served 6 million visitors. Under Villaraigosa’s budget, they noted, there’d only be 848 staff slots — to serve 18 million visitors.

The silver lining for communities, note library sources, is that threats of actual branch closures create such a strong pushback that most communities compromise with cuts that go no further than constriction in staff or branches.

The reality, says Audra Caplan, director of the Harford County (Md.) Public Library and president of the Public Library Association, is that the role of public libraries has changed dramatically in the last 10 to 15 years. And computers and job-search assistance, while highly significant, aren’t the whole story.

“We’ve turned ourselves into community centers,” notes Caplan. “We have meeting rooms that get booked by community agencies, chess clubs, any not-for-profit. We bring in authors, we sponsor civic engagement-type programs. And we’re attracting a larger share of the population — even teens, or parents with toddlers.”

So what about serious research? “It’s still healthy,” Caplan insists. She acknowledges Google and Wikipedia are popular on the available computers. But libraries also subscribe to specialized and sometimes costly subscription databases — business, legal, health and other — and electronically extend the access to even their smallest branches. As for books (remember them!), libraries’ per capita circulation has increased roughly 20 percent over the last decade.

And in a sense the libraries are as varied as America. Many provide specialized services, including translation and English instruction, to America’s large populations of new immigrants. Some let patrons check out not just books but fishing poles, backpacks and garden tools.

And central libraries, notes Robert McNulty of Partners for Livable Communities, can be “the great good place in the city” — as a literacy, Internet and special film center, or as a place for lectures, for local performing arts and exhibitions. Or as a coffee house. Or as an information center for visiting tourists, or a safe place for kids.

Andrew Carnegie’s original idea in founding his string of free public libraries, McNulty notes, was that they’d be gathering places for young people — that once drawn there, they’d learn to read. So Carnegie built a boxing gymnasium into one of his Pittsburgh libraries, a swimming pool into another.

But right now, it’s computer access that leads the library parade. “Beginning computer skills are especially important for dislocated workers,” says Brian Clark of the Nashville (Tenn.) Career Advancement Center. “Having computer skills” he suggests, “won’t necessarily get a person a job. But it means the door won’t be slammed in their face” — in other words, before they can even state their case.

Opening doors? It’s true that funds saved or restored to libraries may mean deeper, sometimes very painful cuts in other parts of city and county budgets.

But what’s more American than open doors? Seen that way, libraries have been enablers of generations of Americans’ dreams. And with a little luck, they’ll help pull us out of our current economic morass too.


Neal Peirce’s e-mail is npeirce@citistates.com.

For reprints of Neal Peirce’s column, please contact Washington Post Permissions, c/o PARS International Corp., WPPermissions@parsintl.com, fax 212-221-9195. For newspaper syndication sales, Washington Post Writers Group, 202-334-5375, wpwgsales@washpost.com.

4 Comments

  1. Susan Rans
    Posted August 21, 2010 at 8:00 am | Permalink

    Libraries (and the dedicated people who staff them) are true communitiy builders. In 2006, the Urban Libraries Council and the ABCD Institute published a report called The Engaged Library, highlighting the kinds of community engagement undertaken in branches of the Chicago Public Library. In it, we outlined ways in which libraries can become community centers and included tools the can be used to create that environment. Copies are available for free download at http://www.abcdinstitute.org.

    During the research for that project, I met some of the most inspirational folks I’ve known–library branch managers. Stop by your local library and give a shout out to yours today!

  2. Jason Kramer
    Posted August 23, 2010 at 1:03 pm | Permalink

    As public libraries are transforming, so have academic and research libraries.

    Academic and research libraries are increasing being viewed as the “information infrastructure” they truly are. More than quiet places for monkish researchers, these high-end libraries are a vital service as states adapt to the innovation economy of the twenty-first century.

    Research, discovery, innovation, and entrepreneurialism are all bolstered by their access to academic and research libraries.

  3. Neal Peirce
    Posted August 23, 2010 at 8:14 pm | Permalink

    Link for library supporters:

    Geek the Library, a community-based public awareness campaign, is now available for adoption by any U.S. public library. The campaign is designed to highlight the vital role of public libraries in today’s challenging economic environment and to increase local library support. Geek the Library has proven ability to improve public perceptions about local library funding needs in test communities. Details about how libraries can use the campaign to increase local support are available at get.geekthelibrary.org.

  4. odette
    Posted August 25, 2010 at 4:21 pm | Permalink

    Saw your column on libraries. Thank you. We need help out here with money and staffing woes during the recession.

    Our library is in a community where many people need help, 85% of children get free lunches at school. We have partnered with a non-profit and have a free seed-lending library. When crops (mostly veggies and flowers) are harvested the hope is that ‘borrowers’ will return some seeds from their harvest. It is a popular service.

    Yes, this is in addition to computers, job searches –everything you mentioned, and in my case a bookmobile that goes to the local elementary schools because the school libraries have little to no staffing. The bookmobile is a chance for these kids to check out books to hone their reading skills and follow their interests.

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