06.02.09
This Just In–Again
As the editor of American Libraries Online, I’m always on the lookout for news stories to research and develop about libraries and trends affecting them. Because libraries impact just about every aspect of society, there’s an impressive daily deluge to sort through, as the abundance of annotated links in our weekly e-newsletter American Libraries Direct attests.
However, the global economic crisis has turned that deluge into a fiscal tsunami for libraries, and has raised the threshold for what is newsworthy rather tellingly. There was a time when American Libraries would cover just about every threatened library service cutback or closure that the editors got wind of. In fact, libraries threatened with closure made national headlines in the general press: Even the New York Times covered the near-demise in 2005 of the Salinas (Calif.) Public Libraries, while American Libraries Online trumpeted its subsequent return to fiscal health after voters relented and agreed to properly fund the three-branch system. The library world was similarly startled by the six-month shutdown in 2007 of the Jackson County (Oreg.) Libraries due to the loss of federal logging-industry subsidies.
What makes news in any field is the unusual, the unimaginable, the offbeat. That’s what rivets readers. For the time being in libraryland, however, what used to be unimaginable has become all too commonplace. Several times a week, the editors of American Libraries see headlines and postings about yet another local governing authority looking to make ends meet by slashing library service hours, laying off staff—or even closing one or more branches. Closure threats come and go in cities like Hartford, San Diego, Concord, Memphis, Trenton, and Philadelphia. For those who like their crises serialized, there’s the annual deficit dance in New York City, which is currently in full swing.
Well, the ante has risen again on what constitutes a newsworthy library crisis. This month, American Libraries is following the quest for stable library funding at the state level in New Jersey, Minnesota, Pennsylvania, California, and Connecticut—with no telling where else red ink may run. New Jersey legislators are considering a bill backed by a municipal league to halve a barely sufficient third-of-a-mill funding formula only a year after the library community averted a similar attempt. Pennsylvania lawmakers have before them a choice of slashing state library aid by 50% or 5%; the state library association is willing to consider it a victory to retain FY2009 funding levels. In California, the May 19 defeat of five ballot initiatives has created budget chaos for public, academic, and school libraries as Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger looks to balance the state books by taking back some local aid amid other cuts.
And so it goes. But there’s another aspect of all this that makes news each and every time: grassroots activism. That’s what kept the doors open in Philadelphia, Memphis, San Diego, and Trenton; what budget-makers in Concord and New York City are up against; and what state library associations elsewhere are tapping into as lawmakers wrangle over priorities. It’s what got the school librarians of Washngton State into the (albeit unfunded) definition of what constitutes a basic education and has lit a fire in the bellies of other library lovers. In this regard, public libraries are following hard on the heels of school library media programs, whose dedicated media specialists and aides have been fighting marginalization for decades. They may lose battles along the way, but always seem to come back swinging.
May the time soon come when I can once again regard as a man-bites-dog anomaly the occasional news tip about a threat to library funding.
Robert John said,
June 3, 2009 at 4:24 pm
In Illinois, going into Oak Brook Public Library’s website recently,
you’d have found notice that it was considering cutting hours and other
savings methods. Oak Brook is an affluent community, but whose dollars (along that with the village as a whole) are dependent upon retail revenues (including a large mall). Makes one wonder that if such a community can’t afford a library who can?
Gayle Zech said,
June 4, 2009 at 4:48 am
Naturally, when library services are needed the most by the residents/patrons, that’s when funding is cut. It has been my observation that elected officials, school administrators, executives, etc. believe that their salaries, benefits and status are exempt from cuts whereas the personnel on the front lines of service are the first to be cut. Having lost my job due to privatization at an upscale school district in Michigan and being forced to support myself and my two children on unemployment and child support when I get it, I have no compassion for these decision makers of and in publically held corporations, governments, school districts, etc., that cry foul on budget. Their needs to be an overhaul of the system from the top down to ensure that every service is retained, every employee is retained and everyone makes a sacrifice for the common good. Unfortunately, greed is rampant everywhere these days that the current US economy is a perfect example of what happens when things run amuk, there are no checks and balances, greed runs rampant and they rob Peter to pay Paul. The US economy has just been through the ultimate Ponzi scheme courtesy of the banking and financial services industry and the decisions that were made. These decision makers need to be held accountable just like Bernie Madoff and no one in an entity or organization where the public is an investor or taxpayer, and I mean no one, should make more than the Presidential salary of $400,000 a year. If you NEED more than that to survive, then its YOUR problem and not MINE. However, if are wildly successful and have a privately held entity, then pay yourself what you feel you are worth and I have no problem with that. Congratulations, you’ve earned it. As a lifelong Michigan resident, I can only wonder how much it cost the US taxpayers for Obama to fire Rick Wagoner from GM (i.e., severance package) and Robert Nardelli to exit Chrysler. Those are two brands that are not deserving of my future purchase considerations! I’m thinking Ford Escape Hybrid or Ford Fusion Hybrid when I FINALLY find employment.
Elisa said,
June 5, 2009 at 12:33 pm
Not enough money to do one important service, but there just so happens to be money to do something else that probably has lower priority. Sad.
Norma said,
June 11, 2009 at 8:45 am
More hope and change combined with “everything’s free on the internet.”
Angie Strait said,
June 23, 2009 at 12:52 pm
Ohio libraries are now facing a 50% cut as well. We have this week only to convince lawmakers to change their minds. Visit for further info.
Bev Goldberg said,
June 23, 2009 at 2:15 pm
Angie,
Thanks for bringing Ohio’s dire situation to the attention of Inside Scoop readers. American Libraries Online just posted a news item about this at
http://www.ala.org/ala/alonline/currentnews/newsarchive/2009/june2009/ohiolibsthreatened062309.cfm .