Read and have a think
Editorial
A quiet week, as befits one where almost all libraries were closed except for order and collect and PC use. Some great ideas though, including postcards to pin book packages, celebrity story-times plus also – my favourite – library zoom backgrounds. I’m therefore delighted that Barney Allan from DCA (their advert is below – thanks for the sponsorship, DCA!) send in an interesting piece. Read and have a think.
A Digital Catch-22 for Libraries: Barney Allen from DCA on the problems with the library digital offer and worries over the “SDP”.
Libraries are seeing increased demand for digital services to reach users and meet their needs. Some have made good progress with digital loans, events and services. I work with service providers in these areas and it’s been good to see increased interest and take-up for our clients’ offerings.
I’m grateful for all this but more interested in a big anomaly here. Libraries say they are prioritising digital loans and services, diverting funds to e-content, striving to bridge the digital divide, promote digital literacy and other good things. Yet most UK library webpages, to quote one of our US partners, ‘Look like someone threw up a bunch of code’.
I’m interested to know why that is and if it can be fixed. Whenever I raise website issues with library people, they most often give me pitying head-shakes and say things like: ‘you don’t understand’ or ‘we’d get fired’ or even ‘but we have the Universal Offer’. It’s as if the impasse is absolute, the problems unsolvable and the finest minds in library leadership are resigned to a status quo of failure. It’s almost like it’s policy.
Digital circulations are still quite low – according to CIPFA – accounting for only a small percentage of total borrowings, which are themselves in steady decline. Measurement of anything in libraryland is always controversial and that’s probably fine too – maybe there are abundant unknowable benefits, it’s ‘not just about books’ after all, and who doesn’t have an aversion to capitalist KPIs?
But data is well, data. If usage continues to decline, then funding is challenged and jobs are at risk, not to mention the whole edifice. Growing digital usage should be an escape route for libraries in danger. And if we can’t improve these dull, unnavigable websites, usage won’t go up, funding will go down and libraries will close. Most public library websites are entirely controlled by local authorities’ IT teams. They tend to prioritise practical things like clarity, utility and security to deliver services and protect data, which is fair enough. If I want to know the holiday bin collection rota or how to pay my council tax, I need no razzamatazz – just the facts, thank you.
But libraries seeking to establish a digital footprint in a teeming market have a different set of requirements. Whatever the goals – supporting reading and literacy, business, education, training, children and parents, inclusion, diversity, mental health, Covid – they all require the capacity to make us aware that these library treasures exist and engage us to the extent that we use them. If we can agree that online discoverability and engagement really are desirable if not essential qualities for library services now, how can we fix them if we can’t talk with the people who control them? Is there anyone else we can talk to?
On the fixing part, we can probably forget the current library leadership. Library strategy and leadership is in the hands of some powerful and well-funded agencies, including DCMS, The British Library, Arts Council England, CILIP, Libraries Connected, The Reading Agency, The Carnegie Trust and of course the local authorities. Big talk and mutual-admiration abound as does big spending on very little, here are just two examples:
- Two out of three of the only blog pieces in the last 12 months on the DCMS library site were fanfares to imperial honours for librarians. So that’s alright then.
- The British Library has spent almost £1 million over the last six years producing world-beating reports on The Single Digital Presence, the national digital library that remains conspicuous by its absence.
So despite the plethora of management, reports and yes, money, UK digital library provision remains stunted and usage low. And if it is to be a function of policy and leadership that libraries have unappealing websites that deliver unsatisfying experiences, there is probably nothing we can do about that.
Or is there? After all, locked-down libraries have smelt the digital coffee and some have achieved good things, albeit in a small way. Users, God help them, meanwhile may have had a look at their library websites and well, that’s all mostly. Could there be a workaround? Who else can we talk to? Some libraries already make good use of social media, and third party platforms to create and promote online events. Dave Rowe at Libraries Hacked has suggested libraries should be making new sites outside the arid local authority sandbox that are designed to serve the public rather than council and library management. Another way forward might be sponsorship. Whatever, the current toxic library mix of an absent leadership and a crippled web presence is preventing the sector from achieving it’s digital potential and failing the public. There has to be something we can do to unpick or go round this Catch-22. Next time we’ll have a look at the options in more detail.”
National news
- Could libraries help us tackle loneliness? – Happiful. “A £3.5 million award to The Reading Agency has injected new life into libraries’ mental health and wellbeing programmes”
- Covid: £2.25m National Library Wales jobs rescue package announced – BBC. “An extra £3.95m will go to National Museum Wales, Amgueddfa Cymru. The money will be provided over the current and next financial years. The Welsh Government has faced criticism for failing to increase its grant funding for the library, including an accusation from one senior source at the institution that ministers failed to “recognise the importance of our cultural institutions”.”
- Covid: Oxford-AstraZeneca jabs to be given in old mobile library – BBC. “When the health board was searching for a suitable vehicle, Neath Port Talbot council donated a mobile library that had reached the end of its life transporting books”
- Episode 82 Ian Anstice – Public Library News UK – Library Pros. Podcast. “Joining the podcast from across “The Pond” in Wales, UK is Ian Anstice, who publishes Public Libraries News, an online publication sharing what libraries are doing in the UK. Ian was so much fun to speak with. We talked about the origins of PLN as a blog and how it developed over time. We also talk about the forced evolution of digital programming because of the pandemic and whether it is sustainable or part of the “new normal” and how we quantify attendance and satisfaction.”
“Public libraries are also a vital component in tackling digital exclusion at all ages. There are around 2,900 public libraries in England, providing a trusted network of accessible locations offering free Wi-Fi, computers and other technology. The library staff, supported by volunteers, have been trained to enable them to provide library users with support in using digital skills. Libraries help tackle the combined barriers of skills, confidence and motivation by offering skills training, helping people to understand the benefits that using the internet and accessing online services can bring. Their vital role has been recognised during the current lockdown, with the new regulations enabling libraries to continue some services during this lockdown period including access to public PCs for essential purposes.”
Gillian Keegan The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Education
- How do we reach and empower children though imaginative programming? – A perspective from Seven Stories – Living Knowledge Network. Webinar, 25 February.
- The side-effects of not getting COVID – LinkedIn / Jon Davis. “I got extraordinarily upset, so much so that I even had a little cry. I’ll be 60 in a couple of years – I honestly can’t recall the last time I cried, but I think it was my aunt’s funeral – 15 years ago. I didn’t cry at all at my mum’s send-off.”
International news
- India – Books vs batons: After Shaheen Bagh, ‘protest site libraries’ recreated by farmers at Delhi’s borders – National Herald. “These libraries are not just aesthetic add-ons to the artistically rich protest sites which have developed into mini-cities. Rather, they are symbols of protest, resistance and assertion”
- Ireland – Libraries need help to lend a bigger hand to authors – Times. “Irish libraries pay 4.39c per loan — but those cents can add up. The UK rate is significantly higher, 9.55p (10.8c) per loan, and Irish authors can sign up to the British scheme. For many, this is a better source of income.”
- USA – Library association awards Carnegie medals to McBride, Giggs – Independent. ““I work from libraries a lot, and my wallet is full of library cards,” says Rebecca Giggs an Australian author whose “Fathoms: The World in the Whale” received the nonfiction prize Thursday.”
- Police in Libraries: What the Cop-Free Library Movement Wants – Teen Vogue. “What they found, in pouring over city documents, shocked them: the library’s security budget grew from $1.1 million in 2013 to a proposed $10.4 million — 5% of the total library budget — in 2020.”
Local news by authority
- Bradford – Free digital ‘yoga extravaganza’ planned for half term – Telegraph and Argus. “The Yoga Extravaganza is being hosted by Bradford Libraries during the week of February 15-19 and will include story times, yoga poses and live online yoga sessions.”
- Croydon – Library group helps residents speak up in Croydon Council consultation – SW Londoner. “Libby Hamilton, South Norwood mum, 41, chair of Friends of South Norwood Library and editorial director of picture books at Andersen Press, is advising people on filling out the online consultation survey.”
- Cumbria – Workshop will help make the most of Cumbria’s library service – News and Star. “It will introduce participants to the range of resources available to access for free through a library membership. The session will be delivered via Zoom and will explain how to download free eBooks and magazines and show how you can practice for your driving theory test.”
- Devon – How your local library can help your lockdown mental health – In Your Area. “Libraries Unlimited, which also runs services across Devon, is launching the Reading Friends initiative to promote the use of books and reading to help mental health.”
- Ottery Library’s message of support through postcards – Sidmouth Herald. “The idea is that people making use of the library’s Choose and Collect service will find one of the postcards in their collection bags – and then fill it in and send it to someone they love, such as a care home resident or someone who is self-isolating.”
- East Riding – Easy to use home schooling resources available on East Riding Libraries website – Bridlington Free Press. Section on website with e-resources.
- Flintshire – Aura Libraries Flintshire: happy National Storytelling Week – The Leader. “As part of our National Storytelling Week celebrations, local storyteller Fiona Collins will be joining us for an extra special Family Storytelling session”
- Glasgow – Glasgow Life helping people in Glasgow get help from Macmillan Cancer Support – Glasgow Times. “Delivered by the team behind the innovative cancer support programme, Macmillan @ Glasgow Libraries, the service provides emotional and practical support.”
- Hampshire – Library backgrounds for virtual meetings – Hampshire Libraries. Genius.
- Inverclyde – Inverclyde Libraries book group still running despite lockdown – Greenock Telegraph. Online.
- Leicester – Leicester libraries to offer free online storytelling sessions – In Your Area. Zoom.
- Norfolk – New service from Norfolk Libraries will help west Norfolk families learn from home – Lynn News. “Norfolk Libraries has set up a phone line which serves as a first stop for parents and carers in the county using new devices to teach their children.”
- Northamptonshire – Transformation of Kettering gallery, library and museum approved – Business Link East Midlands. “The unified site will provide a dedicated business support area to expand the existing British Library led Business & IP Centre Northamptonshire, which provides entrepreneurs and small and medium sized enterprises (SMEs) with free access to a wide range of support. The community will enjoy new and upgraded facilities, flexible events and workshop space.”
- North Yorkshire – Libraries awarded £10,000 in Read, Talk, Share campaign – North Yorkshire County Council. “The Reading Agency is running the Read, Talk, Share campaign, enabled by £3.5m funding from the Department for Digital, Culture, Media & Sport.”
- Harrogate library launches celebrity story times – North Yorkshire County Council. “The first story time was hosted by Channel 5’s Traffic Cops star and North Yorkshire Roads Policing Sergeant Paul Cording, who read Ducktective Quack and the Cake Crimewave.”
- Pembrokeshire – Pembrokeshire Libraries Order and Collect service available in Fishguard, Haverfordwest, Milford Haven, Narberth, Newport, Neyland, Pembroke, Pembroke Dock, Saundersfoot and Tenby – Western Telegraph. “In line with Welsh Government guidance, Pembrokeshire Libraries continues to offer its popular Order and Collect service.”
- St Helens – St Helens library opens for residents who need essential internet access – The Reporter. “St Helens Council’s award-winning Library Service has opened Chester Lane Library for anyone needing essential computer and internet access during national lockdown.”
- Sheffield – Council opens consultation on new proposals for library enhancements – Sheff News. “We have launched a public consultation about improvements to libraries, after we announced last year that each community hub library would benefit from a £10,000 cash boost. The investment means that each library in Sheffield, including volunteer-run libraries, will have extra money to enhance their space and the services they offer. Now we’re asking local residents for their opinions on how our libraries should use this vital funding to best serve the community and library users’ needs.”
- Sheffield Readathon will still go-ahead in the school half term, despite the pandemic – The Star. “Sheffield’s independent libraries group, Volunteer Libraries in Sheffield, has a strong track record of providing creative half-term activities for young people.”. Online.
- Tuck in to the past with an Anglo Saxon themed digital dinner party organised by Sheffield Libraries – The Star. “A collaboration between Poet in the City and Sheffield Libraries will be bringing people across the city a chance to step back in time to the Anglo Saxons and learn more about the culture, the dialect and the food.”
- Shropshire – Libraries in Ludlow and Church Stretton to allow people to book a machine in an emergency – Ludlow Advertiser. “The access is being offered in the larger libraries only, where spaces can be managed safely with Covid-19-secure measures in place.”
- Stockport – Change of use approved for former Argos store at the centre of row over library services – Manchester Evening News. “A change of use has been approved for a former Argos store at the centre of a row over library services. The empty unit at Stockport’s Merseyway shopping centre can now be used more ‘flexibly’ – including as a museum, library or exhibition space – following the decision. It paves the way for the launch of the One Stockport hub, which is intended as a ‘cultural and community’ centre in the town centre.”
- Swindon – Four of five council-run Swindon libraries closed for eight weeks – Swindon Advertiser. “Only Central Library will be open over the next seven weeks for reservation collections and returns as well as the click, call and collect service. Its opening hours have been extended to six days a week to cope with the extra demand. Meanwhile, the libraries in Highworth, West Swindon, North Swindon and the Parks will be temporarily shut…”
- Warrington – LiveWire Libraries receive £1,000 grant to further boost digital offer – Warrington Worldwide. “A £1,000 grant from Arts Council England will help LiveWire further develop the library service’s e-books and e-audio services – which are helping to keep adults and children reading during the current pandemic.”
- West Berkshire – Books chosen just for you – new library service – Kennet Radio. “A brand-new scheme, the Order & Collect service at West Berkshire Libraries, is quickly proving very popular for customers of all ages, who are discovering books and reading in a new way during lockdown.”
- Windsor and Maidenhead – Viewpoint: Bus gates, libraries and free school meals – Maidenhead Advertiser. About the proposed library closure. Partial paywall.
- Maidenhead resident pleads to council not to close ‘well used’ library – Royal Borough Observer. “Boyn Hill resident Andrew Hill launched a petition – which has garnered over 260 signatures – urging leading Conservative councillors not to shut down the ‘well used and well located’ library. Speaking at the cabinet meeting, he said it was “astonishing” it could close considering its ‘high level of book borrowing’ and the library is ‘well used’ by dementia and learning disability groups as well as school groups.”
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about 3 years ago
Regarding “…unappealing websites…”. This can be addressed. There’s a new generation of library technology, now being rolled out, that allows libraries to create an engaging experience!