Trafford threatens 5 out of 15
Dec 6th
- Write about your views on public libraries to the Select Committee on Culture Media and Sport. Email cmsev@parliament.uk with “library closures” in subject line. Emails stand more chance of being effective if they give your views on (1) “what constitutes a comprehensive and efficient library service for the 21st Century“, (2) to what extent library closures are compatible with the law and the Charteris Report, (3) the impact closures have on communities and (4) the effectiveness of the secretary of state’s powers of interviention. Deadline: 12th January 2012. NB full details on how to submit your views are here. More guidance on giving written and verbal evidence is here.
- Please sign the national petition in support of public libraries.
- Email Justin Tomlinson MP for Swindon about your concerns. He is the chair of the new All-Party Parliamentary Group for libraries to be launched in December.
News
“Caroline Nokes: To ask the Secretary of State for Culture, Olympics, Media and Sport how many county councils charge for the borrowing of audio books from libraries. [84869] Mr Vaizey: The Public Libraries and Museums Act 1964 prevents libraries from charging for the loan of material in a form which is readable without the use of electronic apparatus. Library authorities can therefore lawfully charge to lend audio books and other audio-visual material (music, films etc.).” Hansard: 5th December. [This also, alarmingly, means that there is no protection for ebooks and, indeed, one library authority has already started charging for them – Ed]
“Dan Jarvis: To ask the Secretary of State for Culture, Olympics, Media and Sport how many (a) museums and art galleries, (b) music teachers and schools, (c) ballet and dance schools, (d) theatres and concert halls, (e) drama schools and (f) libraries he expects to be operational in each of the English regions in each of the next four years. [84492] Mr Vaizey: The Department has not made any estimate of future numbers of museums and art galleries; music teachers and schools; ballet and dance schools; theatre and concert halls; drama schools and libraries.” Hansard, 5th December.
- Give a child a book for Christmas: the gift is solace and companionship – Independent (Terence Blacker). “Owning a physical printed book can provide escape, solace and companionship to a child: the right book, given for Christmas, will be remembered down the years. As for those children with no books on the shelves at home, the adult world can provide a simple, lasting gift for Christmas: an end to the destruction of our libraries.”
- To the residents of Simi Valley – Save Santa Clarita Libraries (USA). “Yes it is privatization ! : “It has not been easy and we’re still waiting to see if the UK is ready yet for the idea of library privatisation,” said its chief executive Brad King, who also admitted the UK apparently is not ready, although LSSI is,… for profits that is….This website was created to show the lack of transparency by our city leaders in Santa Clarita regarding its library privatization and to expose the rushed, almost silent process, by which our libraries were handed over to LSSI by a $19 million contract.”
Changes
Brent – Council has spent £154k on legal costs trying to close librraies. Cost of redundancy of sacked staff was £258k.
Telford & Wrekin – £330k cut by 2014, parish councils being asked for donations. Cuts in opening hours.
Trafford – 5 (out of 15) – Mobile library service to be stopped (previously to be run by volunteers) and Bowfell and Greatstone libraries to be entirely unstaffed (self-service only), Hale and Old Trafford libraries to be run by volunteers (Old Trafford has 2011 had major refurbishment of children’s library). CDs lending to be stopped. Ebooks to be introduced. Talking books to become free.
Local News
- Bath and North East Somerset – Somerset residents to save mobile libraries – BBC. “Bath and North East Somerset (Banes) Council is proposing to scrap all mobile services from April 2012 as part of its planned £12m spending cuts.But local residents are “shocked” by plans to end the “valuable” service and are campaigning to save it.”
- Brent – Council’s library legal costs double – Press release from Lib Dem group, Brent. “Brent Council has now clocked up legal costs of £154,837.04 as a result of its decision to close half of Brent’s libraries. The sum has more than doubled in the three months since September when the council announced it has spent £70,532.60. Liberal Democrat group Leader and libraries campaigner Paul Lorber said: “This is a shocking. It is a huge waste of public money which could have been avoided if Cllr Ann John and her fellow Labour councillors had been prepared to act reasonably. They could have sat down with the local community and discussed how best to work in partnership. Instead they chose to force through their plan to axe half our libraries and only the intervention of a judge will make them listen.”In October the council admitted that the cost of sacking library staff and paying redundancy costs was a staggering £258,411.89.”
- Four legged friend joins Kensal Rise library campaign – Harrow Observer. “A content cat has joined the swathes of local residents fighting to save the library, which is under threat along with five others in the borough. The pet, who is thought to be called ‘Rusty’ and lives on College Road, has been going to the pop-up library every day when its owners to go work, in a bid to keep volunteers warm.”
- Gloucestershire – Briefing note from Public Interest Lawyers: Gloucestershire libraries ruling – FoGL. Excellent legal briefing on the court judgement, too long to summarise here. “In quashing all relevant decisions, they have been made a nullity. It is as if the decisions were never made in the first place. That is the position that prevails now. In the absence of these decisions, library services in Gloucestershire must be run in accordance with the Council’s previous decisions – as to budget, opening hours, range of services, number of fixed and mobile facilities, ownership etc.This doesn’t of course insulate libraries from future decisions.”
- Hampshire – Public consultation: changes to library opening hours – About My Area. “Hampshire’s Library Service is holding a public consultation into changes to library opening hours as part of the next phase of its restructure and we would like you to help shape future decisions. Anyone wishing to comment about these proposed changes should do so before the consultation ends on Wednesday 28 December. You can do this online or at your local library.”
- Lewisham – “Catastrophic” plunge in lending at Lewisham’s community libraries – BookSeller. “Lewisham library campaigner Peter Richardson said: “We’re shocked at the paucity of the issues in these community libraries. We were anticipating a drop but such a drop is catastrophic and has implications for the service as a whole. We’re concerned about the two-tier system now extant, which is a breach of the 1964 Act.”
- Telford & Wrekin – Libraries face cuts to hours – Shropshire Star. “The borough council is now approaching parish councils for money to bridge the gap but bosses were turned away by councillors in Donnington at a meeting last night after asking for more than £7,000.”
- Trafford – Looking forward: options for the future of Trafford’s libraries – Trafford Council. Age UK taking over home library service, mobile library to be stopped, Bowfell and Greatstone: “The proposal is to withdraw the staffing from these two libraries and have them on self service all the time. We will ensure that some staff time is spent maintaining the stock and self service machines but there will be no set time when this is done.”. Hale and Old Trafford: “Trafford Council would still support the organisations by buying and maintaining the stock, maintaining the buildings and providing training to the groups that took on responsibility for the running of the library.”.
- Council to axe 100 jobs, and replace staff with unpaid volunteers – Manchester Evening News. “Town hall bosses say they want to put in place a ‘volunteer army’ of unpaid workers to replace staff in areas such as libraries and parks in a bid to save over £16m next year.”. See comments too.
National Libraries Day 4th February 2012
Dec 6th
Flickr: National Libraries Day, with images by Phil Bradley.
Song “We need Libraries” (new version) to be launched by One Man And His Beard. A playable, older, version is here.
Love Libraries is aiming to list all National Libraries Day details on its site.
Full press release:
£9.99 hardback ISBN 9781781250051
* An all-star lineup of top writers in support of the Reading Agency’s library programmes.
* Includes original pieces by Julian Barnes, Stephen Fry, Tom Holland and many more.
* Published for National Libraries Day on 4 February 2012
programmes: our popular ‘six book challenge’ schemes for children and adults – meaning that, despite the cuts, libraries can continue to use them in their communities”
“Good morning. In less than an hour, campaigners from here will join others from around the country. And you will be launching the largest poltitical battle in the history of libraries. Libraries – that word should have new meaning for all of us today. We can’t be consumed by our petty differences anymore. We will be united in our common interests.
Perhaps its fate that today is the 4th of February, and you will once again be fighting for our freedom, not from tyranny, oppression, or persecution – but from annihilation of a vital service. We’re fighting for our right to borrow books, to use internet and other vital library services for free.
And should we win the day, the 4th of February will no longer be known as simply a Saturday, but as the day when the UK declared in one voice:
“We will not go quietly out of the library!
We will not vanish without a fight!
We’re going to borrow on!
Our libraries are going to survive!”
Today, we celebrate our National Libraries Day!”
Who needs libraries?
Dec 5th
- Write about your views on public libraries to the Select Committee on Culture Media and Sport. Email cmsev@parliament.uk with “library closures” in subject line. Emails stand more chance of being effective if they give your views on (1) “what constitutes a comprehensive and efficient library service for the 21st Century“, (2) to what extent library closures are compatible with the law and the Charteris Report, (3) the impact closures have on communities and (4) the effectiveness of the secretary of state’s powers of interviention. Deadline: 12th January 2012. NB full details on how to submit your views are here. More guidance on giving written and verbal evidence is here.
- Please sign the national petition in support of public libraries.
- Email Justin Tomlinson MP for Swindon about your concerns. He is the chair of the new All-Party Parliamentary Group for libraries to be launched in December.
News
- Cartoon: Who needs libraries – Guardian. “Trying to compensate for library closures”.
- Council spends £21,000 on leaflets asking how to save money – Telegraph. Sheffield sending out 230,000 forms (9p per leaflet) checking up on council services. ““Is it important to cut the grass in parks on a weekly basis or would it be acceptable to cut them fortnightly, so we can keep libraries open more than we would? “It’s those sorts of choices that we’re expecting people to tell us about.”
- Head for the library! Libraries are in trouble, but the book trade could help and if you like our Christmas selection … head for the library – Times. Erica Wagner [Behind paywall].
- National Literacy Trust highlights book-free millions – BBC. “The proportion of children without books is increasing, the charity said. It is now one in three, compared with one in 10 in 2005…. Poorer children and boys were less likely to have books, it added… That translates to 3.8m children UK-wide.”
“About a fifth of children said they had never been to a book shop or a library. But the survey also showed that reading any type of material, for example magazines, outside class at least once a month was also associated with greater reading attainment.”
- Almost 4m children in Britain do not own a book, poll finds – Guardian. “The charity said the findings were very worrying because book ownership was linked to children’s future success in life. Children who read well can often overcome other hurdles that lock their peers into a cycle of disadvantage, it said.”
- New Lakeshore Library to open this month with untraditional style – Nola (USA). New building opens in aftermath of Hurricane Katrina. This one does without (gasp) Dewey.
- We’re still in love with books – Chronicle of Higher Education (USA). “Contrary to many futuristic projections—even from bibliophiles who, as a group, enjoy melancholy reveries—the recent technological revolution has only deepened the affection that many scholars have for books and libraries, and highlighted the need for the preservation, study, and cherishing of both.”
Local News
- Gloucestershire – County Council leaders consult human rights experts over library closures – Gazette. “Gloucestershire County Council is currently reviewing its position with regard to libraries and a new consultation and equalities assessment will be carried out in the near future. In the meantime the authority has said it will continue working with community groups who are keen to take over library services themselves.”
- Leicestershire – Fines waived in bid to get library items back across Leicestershire – This is Leicestershire. “Sometime in 1998, the children’s book Old Hat, New Hat was taken out of a county library – and 13 years later it still has not been returned. It is one of 161,225 overdue books, DVDs and CDs missing from Leicester and Leicestershire’s libraries.” … “City library members who have not used the service in the past 12 months can return overdue items without facing charges. An earlier city amnesty, held in October, saw £11,200 of fines wiped clean during the seven-day period.”
- Oxfordshire – Compromises on library staff – BookSeller. “The scheme marks a concession from the council’s earlier proposal, put out to consultation in May, which had proposed that 16 libraries be staffed by only one third council employees. Local campaigner Neil Clark said he welcomed the change. “These are trained librarians. It’s not the sort of work that can easily be taken on by volunteers,” he commented. However fellow campaigner Julia Drown labelled the compromise as just “crumbs”.”
- Southwark – In pictures: Southwark’s new £14m “super library” – BBC. Everyone can salivate at these pictures, me included.
- Swindon – Banned from library at tender age of 12 – Swindon Advertiser. “ALMOST 50 unruly children have been banned from libraries and leisure centres in the town in the past three years.” … “One incident, which happened in a North Swindon library last year, was so bad that the police were called and the three culprits, aged between 14 and 16, were given life-long bans. But, the true picture could actually be much worse as some libraries work with Wiltshire Police to contribute evidence to enable anti-social behaviour orders, which includes being banned from the library, but these are not recorded by the council.”
- Torfaen – Libraries fortnight is a great success – Free Press. Hundreds of new joiners and many different events to won the right ot be part of the Olympics 2012 Inspire program. “Councillor Lewis Jones, Torfaen Council’s deputy leader, said: “Libraries Fortnight was a huge success and we had a superb response from Torfaen citizens who came out in force to support the diverse programme of events which really showcased the broad range of services on offer in our libraries.”
- Wokingham – Campaigners win pledge to review library “privatisation” – Henley Standard. “It was agreed that a review would be held after the competitive dialogue process has taken place to take account of public feeling.” … “A decision will be made in the new year whether to proceed with an invitation to tender. The tendering process would take several months. The successful bidder for the contract would be paid annually and its performance would be reviewed regularly.”
“However, any private company to come in on a contract with the council would be looking to make a profit and if it hasn’t the control to close libraries then it will look for other ways to save money. This, I suspect, will mean reducing opening hours, increasing fines and fees and cutting staff wages or staff themselves. Any of these would result in an inferior service. If a company finds that a profit is impossible to make, it will walk away from the contract, leaving the council with an extra financial burden to take over it again.”
Lewisham usage collapses
Dec 4th
- Write about your views on public libraries to the Select Committee on Culture Media and Sport. Email cmsev@parliament.uk with “library closures” in subject line. Emails stand more chance of being effective if they give your views on (1) “what constitutes a comprehensive and efficient library service for the 21st Century“, (2) to what extent library closures are compatible with the law and the Charteris Report, (3) the impact closures have on communities and (4) the effectiveness of the secretary of state’s powers of interviention. Deadline: 12th January 2012. NB full details on how to submit your views are here. More guidance on giving written and verbal evidence is here.
- Please sign the national petition in support of public libraries.
- Email Justin Tomlinson MP for Swindon about your concerns. He is the chair of the new All-Party Parliamentary Group for libraries to be launched in December.
News
- Biteback – Sunday Times. Richard Brooks: “In the new year, the culture media and sports committee (yes, the one looking into phone hacking) turns its attention to libraries. I am sure they will summon either Jeremy Hunt or Ed Vaizey as witnesses – they have for too long sat silently on their hands. Yet I recall Vaizey, as shadow arts minister in 2009, publicly condemning the closure of libraries in the Wirral. What now, Ed, about Brent, Somerset et al?” … “Vaizey has been chatting to the Big Lottery Fund about community funding for libraries. Hang on – lottery bodies are supposed to stick to the “additionality rule”, giving cash only to organisations that do not receive any from government. No wonder the Big Lottery has questioned Ed about his eager hands on handouts.”.
- Commission to work with two local councils on spending decisions around library closures – Equalities and Human Rights Commission. “I’m pleased to be working with both Somerset and Gloucestershire County Councils to help them comply with equality legislation. Policies based on a sound knowledge of how decisions may impact on vulnerable groups will help ensure these service users don’t lose out as budgets are tightened, as well saving time and money for the councils themselves as they avoid costly and time-consuming legal challenges.”
- Future of libraries – Da Vinci Institute (USA). Long article, the most relevant bits being at the end where the writer suggests that libraries will more from a centre of information towards being a centre of culture.
- Upheaval at the New York Public Library – The Nation (USA). Even one of the greatest public libraries in the world is facing problems, with the closure of reading rooms, loss of staff, despite an increase in usage.
Local News
- Bolton – Community archive plan to save library building – Bolton News. “The proposal, which will include a community archive, will not retain the library service and relies on council bosses to keep funding the building for the next three years.”
- Doncaster – Library – Epworth Bells. Denaby library confirmed as closing. “Outside the library, pensioner Margaret Bond, 76, told the Times: “It’s disgusting – It’s not just us adults who are losing a valuable amenity, it’s the children. When you go there on an evening it’s full of them doing homework. Some parents can’t afford a computer at home. They are on about education and they close Denaby Library. How can they educate themselves?” … “It is one of 14 libraries to be axed under plans by the authority to save £784,000 from its budget. While other services are expected to become community-led services, Denaby is to have mobile and outreach provision only.”
- Gloucestershire – Public meeting: libraries going forward – FoGL. “At the request of library users and community groups across the county we have organised an open public meeting to discuss ways forward for our libraries and the implications of the judicial review ruling. To encourage fair representation it will be held in a neutral environment with a neutral chair. We feel that bridges need to be built and an open dialogue facilitated….”
- Oxfordshire – Results of consultation – Friends of Benson Library. Volunteers will be needed to run library but they have not been costed. Also, RAF Benson will lose a valuable service and local businesses fear loss of trade.
- More paid staff to stay at libraries – Oxford Mail. “Neil Clark campaigned to save Botley Library – one of the 22 core libraries which will retain its staff. He said: “These are trained librarians. It’s not the sort of work that can easily be taken on by volunteers. We welcome this very much.” But Julia Drown, a campaigner for Old Marston Library, labelled the compromise as just ‘crumbs’.”
- Libraries could be save by new proposal – Banbury Guardian. “Nearly 5,000 people responded to the four month public consultation into the future of Oxfordshire’s libraries which came to a close last week. The public outrage stirred by the possibility of library closures in the region has caused Oxfordshire County Council to rethink their original plan to dramatically cut funding and staff remaining libraries with volunteers.” (stub)
- Southwark – Canada Water Library: a review – Observer. “OMG! It’s a library! An absolutely new one, with books in it, too! Aren’t such things supposed to be dinosaurs, driven to extinction by the cuts of George Osborne and the inventions of the late Steve Jobs? Not in the London Borough of Southwark, apparently, where they have decided to keep all 12 of their existing libraries, as well as build this new one. And not, according to its architect, Piers Gough, for whom “books haven’t gone away. Libraries still hold these magic realms of invention, realms of ideas. They’re places where you’re not told what to think; they’re also places where you can stay and stop and spend as long as you like.”
Filling the voids
Dec 2nd
- Write about your views on public libraries to the Select Committee on Culture Media and Sport. Email cmsev@parliament.uk with “library closures” in subject line. Emails stand more chance of being effective if they give your views on (1) “what constitutes a comprehensive and efficient library service for the 21st Century“, (2) to what extent library closures are compatible with the law and the Charteris Report, (3) the impact closures have on communities and (4) the effectiveness of the secretary of state’s powers of interviention. Deadline: 12th January 2012. NB full details on how to submit your views are here. More guidance on giving written and verbal evidence is here.
- Please sign the national petition in support of public libraries.
- Email Justin Tomlinson MP for Swindon about your concerns. He is the chair of the new All-Party Parliamentary Group for libraries to be launched in December.
News
- Boyd Tonkin: Flagships and hulks – Independent. Collaboration between booksellers and libraries is starting, promoting the good news about libraries and the new ones opening. Concerns that such collaboration may be insufficient if more closures mean a confrontation with politicians. Also, danger that big ego-boosting new libraries will have money spent on them while the others are left to rot.
“Beware, especially, every bid to wield those 40 openings as proof that protesters have cried wolf over cuts. In many authorities, the campaigns turn specifically on plans to replace or downgrade local branches in favour of shiny town-centre monuments to municipal pride, located miles from users’ homes.”
- CILIP electon results announced – CILIP. Keith Wilson, Liz McGettigan, Mike Hosking and Maria Cotera elected. See what they said about public libraries during the hustings debate here.
- Coates to launch Bilbary e-book site – BookSeller. Ex-Waterstones boss and library campaigner Tim Coates has announced an ebook selling/lending enterprise with a bookseller and librarian mix of staff and offer. Site will charge 25% of book cover price for a 28 day loan [available online, ePub or PDF format – Ed.]. Comments show mixed feelings.
“A long-time library campaigner, Coates said Bilbary would aid public libraries. “Trade publishers don’t want to lend at present. There has been huge sales growth in e-books this year and nobody wants to damage that. In time, we think there will be lending, and here is a space where they can experiment. The public library service doesn’t have to create its own e-digital library by buying speculatively, they can use this as a service. Publishers will be paid for every loan. It could solve the problem, [currently causing a stalemate on e-lending], and then the library service would have an e-book solution. “
- Tim Coates to launch international e-bookstore, Bilbary – Publishers Weekly. “Coates is certainly aware of e-bookstore powerhouses Amazon and BN.com, but he believes the e-book market, particularly outside of America, is only in its infancy with room for new players. He is also positioning Bilbary to be publisher, customer, and library friendly. Publishers can set their own prices and change them whenever they want.”. Aiming to supply as many formats as possible, taking 20% commission (publishers 80%).
- Help CILIP respond to select committee inquiry into public library closures (in England) – CILIP. “In our response CILIP will be taking the opportunity to set out the value of the public library service and the knowledge and skills of the library staff that are vital in designing and delivering a service that meets the needs of its communities – the service is so much more than just the buildings! The ideas and examples provided by members will help inform and enrich the CILIP evidence to the Inquiry. We appreciate the very tight timetable (set by the Select Committee) but nevertheless would welcome greatly the contribution of CILIP members. It would be helpful if this included comments specifically addressing the issues raised by the Inquiry. You have until 23 December 2011 to feed your views into CILIP’s response which has to be with the Select Committee by 12 January 2012.”
- How libraries are about more than books – Huffington Post (USA). “When visitors walk into the Minneapolis building, the first collection they see is about 300 computers, each of which is in use about 90 percent of the time. Nationwide, the number of physical books borrowed from libraries is slowly declining, although books remain a core reason why people visit their libraries. The staff in Minneapolis estimates that computer access is the primary reason that most patrons, especially low-income and unemployed people, visit.”. [See the very polarised comments at end of article for a worrying view of all that is wrong about the current political and social situation in the USA. Homelessness and the evil of paying taxes seem key issues – Ed.]
“Edwin S. Clay III, the director of libraries since 1982, said that libraries have “never been more relevant,” but that they are increasingly filling the voids left by other public institutions. “We’re becoming lots of folks’ offices, especially as they look for work,” Clay said. “We’re not the school system, but we’re focusing on childhood literacy. We’re teaching people how to use computers. We’re stepping up and saying, ‘How can we help?'”
- Library phantom returns – NPR (USA). Superb artist celebrating books, writing and libraries in Scotland has a big fan in America. Central Station has the most complete collection of pictures of the wonderful anonymous artists’ work who has now finished dotting sculptures made of books around Edinburgh.
- Michael Moore: end wars, fund libraries – Books for Walls (USA). Celebrity supports libraries and inspires further campaigning.
Changes
Local News
- Barnet – Deadline looms for library plan – Barnet Today. “The [Save Friern Barnet] group will be contributing financial plans and details of the campaign’s formal constitution, their governance arrangements and bank accounts, alongside additional documentation. The council’s cabinet previously approved a strategy to close the library, merge it with North Finchley Library and reopen in the artsdepot at Tally Ho Corner. However, following a campaign by residents, a three-month reprieve was granted to provide time for consideration of alternative solutions.”
- Bracknell Forest – Fun booked for Bracknell libraries – Get Bracknell. List of Christmas events.
- Edinburgh – Library cuts “a mistake” says Labour – Scotsman. “Councillor Ricky Henderson, finance spokesman for the Labour group on the city council, said it was “very sad” to see the city’s 26 libraries bear the brunt of budget cuts.”. Wide service offered by libraries will be reduced by cuts in hours.
- Gloucestershire – Report of first council meeting since library plans ruled unlawful – FoGL. Glos Council still apparently believes it did everything lawful, regardless of court judgement ruling against them, with the Leader saying that the judge had given a “subjective” view and repeating that the defeat (with the council being ordered to pay full costs) was a “small technicality”. Council also appears to believe that mobile libraries are not libraries. “All in all, the GCC response was depressing and most unpromising. The County Council and especially Cllr Hawthorne gave no indication they are going to put things right in our libraries. I came away with a strong impression that the County Council may well be about to waste a lot more of our time and money before they restore our library service.”
- Dear Library Santa – FoGL. Stonehouse Library campaigners invite Santa along to gain public support against cuts. ““We got around 200 signed in 4 hours in Stonehouse on Saturday afternoon. The idea proved popular and the letter could be changed to suit other localities.”
- Council to work with top equalities body – Gloucestershire Council. “Both Gloucestershire and Somerset Councils will be working with the Commission to ensure that their revised plans for libraries comply with new equality legislation, which was updated this year. Discussions have already taken place between both council chief executives and the EHRC’s chief executive to confirm their involvement. The move follows a judge’s ruling which overturned the councils’ decisions on changes to library services on equality grounds.”
“Gloucestershire is reviewing its position with regards to libraries and a new consultation and equalities assessment will be carried out in the near future. In the mean time [sic] the authority will continue working with community groups who are keen to take over library services themselves.”
- Oxfordshire – Hope on horizon for Chinnor Library? – Thame Gazette. Chinnor may be staffed two-third by paid and one-third by volunteer. ““Unfortunately we in Oxfordshire, like all areas of the country, are faced with having to make significant financial cutbacks across almost all areas of the services that we provide. It is impossible to exempt the Library Service from this, however we have proposed a plan that would see all our libraries remain operational.””
- Library volunteers cut – Oxford Mail. Council reduces proportion of volunteers to paid staff in new proposals although 21 out of 43 will still have paid staff cut by up to one-half.
- Missing costs from proposals – Question Everything. Analysis of new proposals suggests that the council has not been working out costs of volunteers or self-service machines and so the cuts may end up costing more money than leaving the service alone.
- Wakefield – Petition handed over against Wakefield library closures – BBC. 200-name petition against withdrawal from 12 out of 25 libraries. “The council said that, since 1992, visitor numbers at its library had fallen by 43% compared to 15% nationally.” [and choose to cut them further rather than investigate reasons for a fall three times worse than expected – Ed.]
Running the library is a “backs against the wall” option for us
Dec 1st
Comment
“We think libraries should be free, public and staffed by librarians and trained staff.
Running the library is a ‘backs against the wall’ option for us. We don’t want the library to close and at the moment if running it ourselves is the only option we have then we will try and do it, but it is not our preferred option.
Our Pop up Library was a spontaneous action by the community here after the Judicial Review was lost in October. We wanted to keep the library going and prevent the council from boarding it up and taking out the contents. A 24 hour vigil to prevent this turned into the pop up library. Not ideal but better than no library and a boarded up library is a pretty shocking sight. After we were granted leave to appeal the idea took root and it has been manned ever since by volunteers. Symbolic, maybe, but it gives an idea of how important the library is to this community.”
- Write about your views on public libraries to the Select Committee on Culture Media and Sport. Email cmsev@parliament.uk with “library closures” in subject line. Emails stand more chance of being effective if they give your views on (1) “what constitutes a comprehensive and efficient library service for the 21st Century“, (2) to what extent library closures are compatible with the law and the Charteris Report, (3) the impact closures have on communities and (4) the effectiveness of the secretary of state’s powers of interviention. Deadline: 12th January 2012. NB full details on how to submit your views are here. More guidance on giving written and verbal evidence is here.
- Please sign the national petition in support of public libraries.
- Email Justin Tomlinson MP for Swindon about your concerns. He is the chair of the new All-Party Parliamentary Group for libraries to be launched in December.
News
- Area libraries offer more than just books – Northwest Herald (USA). “Part of the success of these libraries, as well as the others in McHenry County, no doubt has been due to a concerted effort to provide programming that appeals to the whole community. And they’ve embraced the very technology that was supposed to be their undoing. For instance, the Huntley library has added Nook and Sony e-readers that are available for checkout. It also has Wii, PlayStation3 and Xbox360 games.”.
- Canadian library usage up 45% thanks to ebooks – Good E Reader (Canada). “Lumos Research for the Canadian Urban Libraries Council has released new reports that are encouraging to the sustainability of the public library system in Canada. Across the country, library usage is up 45 per cent over the past decade, from 16.6 to 24.1 transactions on average per capita.” … “Despite the fact libraries are seeing record usage because of ebook lending, people are still visiting the actual location. The Grande Bibliotheque, like many new megalibraries across the globe, was designed to serve as a central meeting place.Not just to read, but to hold study groups, exhibitions and lectures. Berthiaume calls libraries one of those rare “third places” that is free to the public, and away from work and home.”
- Checked out: big cuts in spending are forcing councils to re-examine how libraries work – Economist. “Of all the cuts to public services, few have provoked such loud protests as proposals to close libraries” which has shocked councils including Oxfordshire. 6.7% decline in past five years masks 80% of population who consider libraries “very important” or “essential”. So, stopped from closing libraries, councils are “stealthily” cutting them instead. Other methods include giving libraries to trusts or using volunteers. Merging managements of libraries looks promising. Alternatively, some authorities are concentrating on one big library e.g. Birmingham, Norwich. Cutting management and incrasing income has made Hillingdon popular. “Libraries are not dead—just a little dusty”.
- eHustings fro CILIP councillors 2012 – Wordshore. “Question threads where the least number of candidates (in both cases, 3 out of the 6) replied: 1.What should a public library do or offer?, 2.e-books in libraries”
“My library life started on a bookmobile and so I have never thought of libraries as buildings. They are a spirit in the community, a pervasive energy that touches everyone who acknowledges its presence.” Post on LinkedIn.
Changes
- Bath and North East Somerset – Mobile library service (at least 2 so counted as such in the headline count) may end (£180k cut). Paulton library may be relocated (at cost of £170k).
- Bedfordshire – £229 cost of self-service will cut £43k staff per year. Staff cuts inc. three front line posts and 2.75 full time equivalent posts.
- Highland – Invergordon library may council information point moved into it (rather than previous suggestion of the other way around).
- Northamptonshire – Campaign group: Friends of Irchester Library.
Local news
- Bath and North East Somerset – Mobile libraries could be cut as council aims to save £12 million – This is Bath. Report “recommends consulting on cutting all mobile library services from April, because it would cost £180,000 to replace them.” … “However, the authority wants to invest in other library services, including £170,000 worth of funding for the relocation of Paulton Library”
- Bedfordshire – Money saving tech to cost library jobs – Bedford Today. Bedford Central Library being converted to self-service. “Dough McMurdo, portfolio holder for leisure and culture at Borough Hall said: “Many local authorities have been forced to make library closures, but despite severe budget constraints we are investing in our library service and have not closed any of our libraries.”
- Cambridgeshire – Wisbech Library to host ten authors for book fair – Cambs Time 24. “Alison Sutton, community and service co-ordinator at Wisbech Library, said: “Join us for a cup of tea and a mince pie, and have a look at the work of 10 authors, who will be available to sign what you buy. “There will also be a second-hand book sale if you want to stock up on your holiday reading.”
- Camden – Hopes soar in battle to keep Chalk Farm, Belsize and Heath libraries open – Camden New Journal. “All three libraries had “expressions of interest” lodged at the Town Hall by Monday’s deadline. The groups will be told if their bids are successful on December 20, but it now looks increasingly likely the three branches will remain open beyond April next year when council funding dries up.”
- Conwy – Conwy’s libraries could be put in hands of the community – North Wales Weekly News. “The council has approved recommendations that would see services in smaller communities move into schools or community centres. Volunteers would then be required to help run these facilities to keep services going.” … “I’m very delighted that Conwy’s councillors have decided to throw local libraries a lifeline after what has been a hard fought campaign,” he said. “Both Kinmel Bay and Cerrigydrudion have been defined as deprived areas in terms of educational attainment and income levels and it is therefore essential that these libraries receive extra protection from closure.””. Welsh Government may intervene if Conwy does not improve soon… “If a decision is not made by July 2012, the [Welsh] government may use its powers under the Public Libraries and Museums Act 1964 to take over the management of Conwy’s library service.”
- Highland – Service point to move to library – North Star. “Highland Council looks set to do an about-turn with its plans to move Invergordon library into the town’s service point. The council has revisited the proposal and is now recommending that the High Street service point relocates to the library.”
- Northamptonshire – Library supporters want answers to budget plans – Herald & Post. “The Friends of Irchester Library want some answers from the County Council. Today, a group of officers will meet a delegation from the group who want to know what funding is in place for the village facility during the 2012/13 financial year.” …”“It would be nice to know some sort of idea what they were expecting from the friends group.””
- Surrey – Libraries announcement nothing but spin – Surrey Libraries Action Movement. “The original library plan says that progress of the first tranche of volunteer libraries would be reviewed in April 2013, and then the second tranche would be subject to the same volunteer-run model. In his announcement, Hodge has given himself the perfect excuse (when the foreseeable Council Tax freeze is announced) to carry out the original plan to press on with the second tranche.”. 20% paid staffing for withdrawn libraries is old news too. “It is very clear, therefore, that David Hodges announcement is simply a restatement of what is already in the plan. Hodge has misled Surrey residents in claiming that he has offered something new because he has “listened and learned”; he has done nothing of the sort.”
- Wandsworth/Croydon – Council library services out to tender – This is Local London. “Each proposal will be benchmarked against the service levels offered by the existing library teams. The move aims to generate savings through sharing overheads and buying power.” … ““Five years ago our options were limited but now there is a developing and competitive marketplace out there with a lot to offer. If an outsider can do a better job at a lower cost then we won’t be afraid to take the first step.”
“Unfortunately, Wandsworth Council “forgot” to inform or consult those who are reluctantly volunteering at the York Gardens Library in order to keep it open. If the Council give the contract to a profit making organisation, someone will be making a profit from those volunteer hours. So much for the “big society” – it could be big profits from poor suckers.”
- Worcestershire – Details for Pershore Library plan released – Evesham Journal. “Refurbishment works, originally thought to be about £130,000, could in fact be far higher with estimates topping out at about £500,000. But this cost incorporates a complete overhaul which will see the library also house Pershore’s Visitor Information Service.”
If you want to free an oppressed people, then build a library and leave the door open
Nov 30th
Actions
- Write about your views on public libraries to the Select Committee on Culture Media and Sport. Email cmsev@parliament.uk with “library closures” in subject line. Emails stand more chance of being effective if they give your views on (1) “what constitutes a comprehensive and efficient library service for the 21st Century“, (2) to what extent library closures are compatible with the law and the Charteris Report, (3) the impact closures have on communities and (4) the effectiveness of the secretary of state’s powers of interviention. Deadline: 12th January 2012. NB full details on how to submit your views are here. More guidance on giving written and verbal evidence is here.
- Please sign the national petition in support of public libraries.
- Email Justin Tomlinson MP for Swindon about your concerns. He is the chair of the new All-Party Parliamentary Group for libraries to be launched in December.
News
- 1100 jobs to go in Tyneside council spending cuts – Chronicle Live. Includes coverage of cuts in North Tyneside, Newcastle and Gateshead. “Services are to be slashed back, fees and charges hiked up and some libraries closed down as £85m worth of cuts are announced at three councils.”.
- “Cheers Edinburgh it’s been fun”: Series of mystery book sculptures come to an end – STV. “An accompanying note read: “‘You need to know when to end a story,’ she thought. Often a good story ends where it begins. This would mean a return to the Poetry Library. The very place where she had left the first of the ten.” However, only eight of the pro-library/reading artworks have been found.
- Jeremy Hunt: “The government is committed to championing the public library service” – We Heart Libraries. Letter sent to Select Committee but standard reply received instead from DCMS, so standard in fact that it answers questions not raised in original letter (e.g. Brent). ” Somebody at the DCMS either isn’t reading correspondence very thoroughly or doesn’t care either way…”
“The government has shown no commitment whatsoever to championing public libraries. Its attitude is better described as craven and supine in the face of protests in every kind of community from deprived to wealthy, urban to rural, working-class to upper-middle class. It has seen three different authorities taken to judicial review (with more court cases inevitably on the way) and still it has not intervened. How can this possibly be said to represent a commitment to championing public libraries?”
- MPs back Wakefield’s drama library – Wakefield Express. “A motion has been tabled in parliament calling on the culture secretary to protect a popular music and drama library in Wakefield. MPs in the Midlands, where 80 amateur orchestras and drama groups use the collection at Balne Lane Library, tabled the Early Day Motion last week.”
- Online Information 2011 Day One – Walk You Home. “We need to go to where our users/audience want to be and take our content to them (and it’s not that much of an effort to do so using a few different platforms); We need to be brave and take risks with social media and communicating with our users online; It can be very worthwhile to set something up and then ask for permission and forgiveness later! (Heck, if Westminster Abbey and the EU are going to take this kind of risk, then surely libraries can too)…” … “Librarians/Information Professionals have the opportunity to position ourselves as experts in the field of information retrieval, fact-checking and democratisation of information. We need to make ourselves useful, sell ourselves and gain recognition for this”
- Privacy of the library patron, and mental illness – Wordshore. Examines the great importance of public libraries to those suffering from depression and other mental illness. Those who think that a pound spent on libraries is a pound lost on social care should read this article. Good comments too [apart from that useless one near the beginning from me – Ed.]
- Public libraries turn up the volume (literally) – Huffington Post (USA). Looking at ways libraries are avoiding the “shhh” stereotype. “A makeover at the Chicago Public Library has turned one room into a teen-heaven, stacking the “YOUMedia” lab on the ground floor with video game systems”. “In the UK, they’ve been cranking up the volume even more. The award-winning Get It Loud In Libraries program has been active since 2005, aiming to showcase up-and-coming bands in libraries across Lancashire. Their mission: to allow “kids from 5 to 65 to check out bands at close quarters in a book clad feelgood venue before they hit the proverbial big time.” See also Louder libraries for a digital age – Education Week (USA).
- Public Library News man wins IWR award – Information World Review. “Presenting the award at Online Information, editor of IWR Peter Williams said: “Ian’s work is a stirring story of how much can be achieved and how knowledge and information really is power. A well deserved winner. I would urge you to go take a look at his work.” [Gosh – Ed.]
- Ian Anstice named as Information Professional of the Year – Voices for the Library. [Double gosh – Ed.]
- Save the UK libraries? It’s beyond me, admits US guru – Independent. LSSI: “A slug of judicial reviews and lack of tenders by local authorities, which are nervous of outsourcing their library services to independent providers, were among the reasons cited.”. Interesting comments.
- LSSI “revises UK targets” – BookSeller. Definitive targets not set for UK business, 15% target announced earlier this year now scrapped.
- Should libraries stick to books? – The Star (Canada). “Toronto’s budget chief questioned Tuesday whether the Toronto Public Library should be in the business of offering popular movies and material not in the English language.” Calls DVDs and non-English material and becoming a community centre “program creep”.
“I guess it depends what you think a library is,” she said. “A library is no longer a room full of books. It’s the computers where people can come to get jobs, improve their education. Some of the videos are how-to videos. We’ve got the newspapers, we’ve got magazines. We’re working to get more e-books. Doucette said she sees the library as “a hub of a community. It’s a cooling centre in the summer, it’s somewhere you can go in the winter. You go to study. It allows students to do better in school, which gets them better jobs in the long run.”
- Star writers to add “glamour” to library drive – London Evening Standard. “Despite the closure of many libraries as spending cuts bite, an analysis by the Society of Chief Librarians estimates at least 40 new or significantly refurbished libraries will open next year including the Idea Store at Watney Market in Tower Hamlets. Tony Durcan, the society’s president, said libraries remained a positive service even if their staff were “stressed” by the demand for savings. “Those funding them deserve to see that there is a huge public demand for our reading role,” he said.” … “Joanna Prior, managing director of Penguin’s general division, said: “In 2012, we will stitch libraries into the fabric of our big industry reading promotions, push library membership and help tell a positive PR story about the importance of libraries to a healthy reading nation.”
- Tell Bali Rai what you want to read, and talk, about – Guardian. “Are you sick of vampires? Do you care about libraries or riots? What are you reading? Booktrust’s new writer in residence Bali Rai wants to know what’s important to you” … “At a time of great uncertainty and change for education and libraries (both school and public) I want to focus on the positive things that are being done to promote reading by Booktrust and others. I also want to highlight the incredible work being done to challenge library closures by campaigners like Alan Gibbons, whose Campaign For The Book I wholeheartedly endorse.”
- Victory for the libraries in the High Court – LeftLion. Reports on Glos/Somerset court case. “…raise the question that there is a greater need for libraries to be involved in communities to help support schools in reducing this shameful statistic. Let us not forget that the library is not just about supporting literacy. It’s a place of ideas. The real challenge is getting this across to the public so that it becomes an invaluable commodity.”
Changes
- Angus – New mobile library to replace Edzell library closed in 2010 has been delayed until Jan 2012.
- Conwy – Five under threat. Abergele, Colwyn Bay, Llandudno and Llanrwst, and a new or refurbished library which would serve the communities of Llandudno Junction, Deganwy and Conwy. Increased opening hours at these branches. Volunteers are hoped for to take over at Kinmel Bay, Cerrigydrudion, Penmaenmawr, Llanfaifechan and Penrhyn Bay for 15 hours per week opening.
- Cumbria – DVD provision restored to smallest branches.
- Gateshead – Staffing cuts.
- Hertfordshire – Borehamwood Library gains £12k town council grant to increase hours by 3 per week.
- Neath Port Talbot – £202k bookfund slightly more than in 2010 (£47k less than Welsh standard).
- Newcastle – Opening hours to be cut in 12 libraries, volunteers to be used as staff cuts, increased booksale.
- North Tyneside – Some libraries may close as sites “merge”. North Shields Central Library closed due to delayed decision on spending for repairs, temporary library set up while service awaits go ahead for £2.7m refurbishment.
- North Yorkshire – Volunteer group: Boroughbridge Area Community Library Association.
- Southwark – £14m Canada Water library opened.
- Surrey – Volunteers may no longer be essential for running of Ash, Caterham Hill, Frimley Green, Hersham, Horsley, Knaphill, Lightwater, Shepperton and West Byfleet libraries. Decision in December 2012. Ten volunteer libraries still to go ahead (Bagshot, Bramley, Byfleet, Ewell Court, Lingfield, New Haw, Stoneleigh, Tattenhams, Virginia Water and Warlingham) will run with at least 20% paid library staffing plus dedicated helpline for library volunteers.
Local News
- Angus – Concerns over library provision – Brechin Advertiser. Mobile library that replaced Edzell library closed in 2010 has been off the road, the new vans being promised to replace old ones not having been bought with the purchase date now pushed back to January 2012.
- Edzell locals say library promised have turned out to be fiction – Courier. “”As far as Edzell is concerned, ELAG feel strongly that the village has hardly been treated equitably. Staff hours in Brechin Library amount to 157.75 hours per week, while we have had only two hours per week in a decrepit library van — when it has been able to come — parked outside the A-listed Inglis Memorial Hall.”
- Brent – Pop up library flooded with book donations as community continues campaign to save Kensal Rise Library – Save Kensal Rise Library. “The pop-up library outside Kensal Rise Library has been flooded with books, as residents continue the campaign. Volunteers are maintaining a presence outside the library every day, symbolising its importance within the community.”
- Monday 5th December: Pub Quiz Fundraiser – Save Kensal Rise Library.
- Buckinghamshire – Major boost for Little Chalfont Library – Buckinghamshire Examiner. “The charity entered a competition run by NatWest Bank called CommunityForce. Community Groups and charities registered projects, the public then voted for the project or projects of their choice and the three in each region with the most votes received a cash prize of at least £6000. Little Chalfont Library received £6275 after being named in the top three in the Chiltern region.”
“I would like to thank everybody who voted for our project. We were overwhelmed by the public support that not only gained us a much needed cash prize but also demonstrated the community support for a library that is entirely managed and run by unpaid community volunteers.”
- Calderdale – MP slams council for not consulting over new library – Halifax Courier. “… council is risking a huge public backlash by rushing into building a new library in Halifax without fully consulting users, the town’s MP has warned.”. Lots of comments.
- FoTL Freedom of Information request – Book buying budget cuts – Friends of Todmorden Library. Currently waiting for a response according to “What do they know”. Email sent to author suggest bookfund cut by £150k (100%).
- Camden – Volunteers raise £60,000 to save library – London Evening Standard. “More than £60,000 has been raised in a week including “around 10″ four-figure pledges and one offer of £35,000. The aim is to raise a £1.2 million endowment fund so that the interest and other money from letting and activities will provide enough to guarantee the future annual income.”
- Conwy – Public libraries might be sited in schools – North Wales Pioneer. “Schools, community centres and volunteers could be asked to help pitch in with library services. A report to Conwy County Borough Council’s Customers Overview and Scrutiny Comittee today (Wednesday), suggests the council widens its library services from its standard sites to schools and colleges, as suggested by the public.
- Libraries ot be overhauled – Daily Post. “..after a damning report revealed Conwy Council only achieves six of 14 Welsh Public Library Standards (WPLS), due to poor staffing and inefficient use of floor space.”.
- School and volunteer idea for libraries – BBC.
- Croydon – Schools, libraries and hospital all affected by strike action in Croydon – Croydon Guardian. “The council expects libraries, including the central library in Katharine Street, Thornton Heath, South Norwood and Bradmore Green to be open but could run a reduced service.”
- Cumbria – DVDs return to smaller Cumbrian libraries – News & Star. “The u-turn comes following public feedback on the withdrawal of the service around 12 months ago when the county council said it was concentrating on developing it in the larger ones. It has decided to bring the service back, following more than 4,000 responses from the public.”
- Dorset – Hope remains for library supporters – Dorset Echo. ““Now, at long last, the parliamentary committee which oversees his [Jeremy Hunt’s] department [DCMS] has taken action. It has called for a review of the way in which the minister exercises his powers to safeguard libraries.”Ad Lib is now urging supporters of Dorset’s threatened libraries to have their say in the inquiry by emailing cmsev@parliament.uk to demand that the law is strengthened to protect people in rural areas.”
- Gloucestershire – Peter Arnold: “Closing any our libraries is a sin“ – FoGL. “To close the door on any one of [our libraries] is a sin, and a blow to our society and to civilisation itself” “Libraries are a great repository of knowledge, and therefore of learning. If you want to know anything about anything you can learn it, with a little help, via your local library, and this is especially so since the introduction of computers”
It was Terry Pratchett who wrote that, “if you want to free an oppressed people, then build a library and leave the door open.” He was right”
- Hertfordshire – Borehamwood library gets grant to extend opening hours – This is Local London. “It is hoped the extra opening hours will help literacy levels in the area and encourage parents to bring their children to the library to read together.”
- Neath Port Talbot – Library service turning over a new leaf – This is South Wales. “Head of partnership and community development Russell Ward said the council spent £202,000 on stock, £47,000 less than required, though it had made small but significant increases to its book fund. Mr Ward said the authority was also taking action to address the matter of staffing.”
- North Tyneside – Plans put on hold yet again – News Guardian. “Councillors had been asked to approved plans to borrow £2.7m to spend on refurbishing North Shields Central Library and creating a joint service centre.”
- North Yorkshire – Secure future for libraries one step closer after vote – Ripon Gazette. “LIbraries in Boroughbridge and Masham are one step closer to a secure future after county councillors approved proposals for volunteers to play a part in running the facilities.” … “In Masham the library is set to move from its current home to a room in the community office, where it will be run by the community office staff and team of volunteers with support and some funding from the county council.”
- Northern Ireland – Library cuts “not done deal”: chief executive – Carrick Times. Greenisland and Whitehead opening hours may be cut but consultation may still stop this.
- Northumberland – Mobile library service under review – Berwick Advertiser. “Coun Neil Bradbury, executive member responsible for libraries, said: “We are suggesting some proposed changes to the service, with the ultimate aim of creating a better, and more consistent service for all of its users and safeguarding the long term future of the mobile library service.“We feel there is scope to revise the timetable and make the savings required, without detriment to the service,” he added.”
- Southwark – “Super library” in Southwark opens its doors – BBC. “The £14m Canada Water Library, opened by Southwark Council, will hold 40,000 books, CDs and films. It will also be host to theatre performances, meetings and evening courses. Council bosses claim the library is the “shape of libraries to come”.
“Our libraries have been well managed over a long period of time and what we’ve managed to do is listen to people. Over 6,000 people said they would rather we did things like reduce hours or use volunteers than close libraries. That was enough people saying libraries were important.”
- Surrey – Plan for more community-run libraries is scrapped – Get Surrey. “Cllr Hodge said he had listened to people’s views since being elected as leader at the beginning of October, and speaking about the libraries announcements, he said: “I believe this will help those people out in the community who may have some concerns [and] will give us a much better plan going forward.” … “Cllr John Orrick, the Liberal Democrat communities spokesperson on SCC, said: “The Conservative county council has effectively admitted, by their U-turn on the plans for the second tranche of libraries, that the idea is disastrous. They should go further and announce that the whole plan is going to be scrapped.”
- County Council drop second phase of library plan – BBC.
- Scales back on volunteer-run library plans – BookSeller. “Hodge referred to the “world [economic] situation” and added “if at times we are being asked at some stage in the future to cut back on what we have already planned we may have to revisit things again”
- Library set for community partnership reprieve? – Elmbridge Today. “The authority is creating a Strategic Library Network, consisting of council-managed branches and others run by volunteers in “community partnerships”.”
- Improving libraries: temporary closures – Surrey Council. Woking and Stanwell are being converted to self-service.
- Libraries, include Hersham, win reprieve – Guardian Series. “Roy Green of Hersham Village Society, who was fiercely fighting the proposals with the Friends of Hersham Library, said it was good news – for the time being. He said: I think we need to tread very carefully because we’ve fought closure for the past 25 years and we think everything is ok and then a few years go by and we have to starts fighting again.”
- Campaigners welcome library u-turn – Guardian Series. Lib Dems: ““We have argued against two tiers of library, with no second class libraries, and we want professionals at the heart of Surrey’s library network.” … Comment: “I think that the idea of engaging willing volunteers to supplement professional library staff is good, but it should be grown naturally, with support, and not imposed at the end of a gun-barrel.”
- Wandsworth/Croydon – Councils to hive off library contracts – 24dash.com. “Bidders are being asked to pitch new ideas on how to improve local libraries and the additional services they could offer – like coffee bars, career advice or online movie streaming.” Also see if external company/trust can gain more funding. Wandsworth’s current management is bidding to run both councils’ services.
“We’ve been through this process in other areas like leisure centres, refuse collection and meals on wheels. The results have been improved services, new ideas and better value for money.”
- Warwickshire – Shipston residents asked to give their views on opening hours – Cotswold journal. “library consultation is in full swing with more than 1,000 residents expressing their views on the future opening hours of the county’s libraries. So far, the four-week consultation period has attracted almost 700 online survey responses and nearly 500 written survey responses.”
- Whitnash urged to vote in library poll – Courier. “At Whitnash town council last week, county councillor Bernard Kirton described the consultation as “inconspicuous” while Cllr Tony Heath said it was “offensive” that only 100 forms had been provided. Cllr Siobhan Mulherin said they should be given out at schools and elderly people’s clubs to increase the response.”
“What constitutes a comprehensive and efficient library service for the 21st Century?”
Nov 27th
- Libraries improve literacy. A vital target for this government and one which it has been shown libraries are crucial for.
- Libraries create wealth. Every pound spent on libraries creates money later on. For every one pound spent on libraries, the country gains perhaps four pounds back in terms of better education, opportunities, social welfare savings, positive impact on house prices and the local economy, etc.
- Libraries have a benefit disproportionate to their cost. The one billion pound cost per year may sound a lot but it is six times less than that simply mislaid by the Ministry of Defence earlier this year.
- The internet is now an essential part of life and libraries provide free, and often the only, access to it for around a fifth of the population.
- Any one, or combination of the other reasons detailed here.
422 libraries (332 buildings and 90 mobiles) currently under threat or closed/left council control since 1/4/11 out of c.4612 in the UK, complete list below. Librarian professional body CILIP forecasts 600 libraries are under threat (inc. 20% of English libraries). The Public Libraries News figure is obtained from counting up all reports about public libraries in the media each day.
Actions
- Write about your views on public libraries to the Select Committee on Culture Media and Sport. Email cmsev@parliament.uk with “library closures” in subject line. Emails stand more chance of being effective if they give your views on (1) “what constitutes a comprehensive and efficient library service for the 21st Century”, (2) to what extent library closures are compatible with the law and the Charteris Report, (3) the impact closures have on communities and (4) the effectiveness of the secretary of state’s powers of interviention. Deadline: 12th January 2012. NB full details on how to submit your views are here. More guidance on giving written and verbal evidence is here.
- Please sign the national petition in support of public libraries.
- Email Justin Tomlinson MP for Swindon about your concerns. He is the chair of the new All-Party Parliamentary Group for libraries to be launched in December.
News
- Alan Bennett Drops in for tear with Occupy London protesters – Guardian. “The playwright took tea with activists on Friday, and left two signed copies of his work at the camp’s library tent.”
- Christmas Gifts 2011: Julie Myerson – Guardian. “the book I’d most like to be given is anything bought at one of the two independent bookshops in Southwold, Suffolk. Except both have now closed down. Which makes membership of Southwold Library – now ludicrously also under threat – the best free gift you could give anyone there this Christmas.”
- I love Hawaii Libraries – Valdezign (USA). “Our family loves the library. Every week, our house is replenished with new books to read, CDs to listen to, and movies and TV shows on DVD to watch, all for free (and just $1 for DVDs)! But because of a more than $3,000,000 dollar budget reduction, Hawaii’s public libraries have been forced to slash hours and staff, with some branches even threatening to close. Friends of the Library Hawaii has already raised over $100,000 dollars in donations with their “Keep The Doors Open!” campaign but are far from reaching their goal of $3 million. How can you help? With a personalized Hawaii library t-shirt!”
- In fight with Amazon, libraries caught in the crossfire – Publishers Weekly. “But, librarians note, it is publishers that have changed the game. Unlike print books, which libraries own, e-books are licensed and access is managed, an expansion of power for publishers. Where a publisher would never be permitted to pull its physical books off a library shelf, or limit lends, publishers in the e-book world can now decide whether to allow access to an e-book at all, how to do it, and under what terms. “Loaning e-books is like playing with some other kid’s ball on the playground,” explained Christopher Harris on the ALA blog. “There is always a risk that the other kid will take back his or her ball and go home. This is a game libraries have to play.” Harris added, “I just wish we could bring our own ball.”
- Launch event – The Network. “The Network is an opportunity for LIS workers from all sectors at all stages of their career – from students to senior professionals to meet, develop and learn.”
- Library envy – Reader. Mayor of Chicago is cutting library budgets, although his hometown has a fantastic library service and Chicago’s libraries are, if anything, over used. “At the front desk, one incredibly harried librarian tried to work her way through a long line of patrons while the nearby pile of books and CDs in need of reshelving grew higher.”
- Public libraries a free resource for any age – Kid Companions (USA). Very pro public library article. “Make the public library your place for Information, Imagination, and Inspiration! And if you want to open doors for your child, open the library doors!”
- Public libraries lure more users – Menafn (Africa). Ghana/Kenya libraries doing well, with Ugandan libraries catching up. Often a vital source of health, agriculture and employment.
- Question raised in the House of Commons regarding the government’s museums and librarians budgets – They Work For You. Dan Jarvis MP asks Ed Vaizey about funding, Mr Vaizey provides the tables. Figures are almost entirely from museums and for the British Library (BL reduced from £105m 2010/11 to £93.4m 2014/15: if inflation stays at 5% this would mean budget to £78m in real spending power). Public libraries largely excluded from figures apart from note that “MLA’s responsibility for libraries was transferred to Arts Council England (ACE) and on 9 November ACE launched a second Libraries Development Initiative. It will run between March 2012 and March 2013 supporting around 10 projects with a maximum of £20,000 per project to create vibrant, sustainable 21(st) century library service.” [MLA budget for libraries was £13m, ACE budget for libraries is now £3m – Mr Vaizey fails to mention this – Ed.].
This Week in Libraries: “What is a library?” from Jaap van de Geer.
Local News
- Brent – Kensal Rise vicar: “We are praying for our libraries” – Save Kensal Rise Library. “…we have been praying and will continue to pray, for both the library campaign and Brent Council, that a positive and peaceful solution would be found for the future of all our libraries and the overall welfare of the borough. A number of my congregation are passionate about trying to find a way forward to keep local services available for local people.”
- Classical concert for libraries – Save Kensal Rise Library. “The Razumovsky Ensemble and Academy, Artistic Director: Oleg Kogan”
- Gloucestershire – Library friends to help with inquiry – This is Gloucestershire. ““The DCMS has been like a rabbit caught in the headlights and is now reacting, so let’s hope it will do this review properly and library users’ views will really be listened to. She said the group had received hundreds of letters from vulnerable people who use libraries as a lifeline.”
- Lib Dems to question council’s stance on libraries – This is Gloucestershire. “Liberal Democrats are once again challenging Gloucestershire County Council’s stance on libraries after their views were previously dismissed in “a cavalier fashion”. Council leader accuses Lib Dems of jumping on a bandwagon.
- Kirklees – Volunteers wanted to save libraries council can’t afford to run – Yorkshire Post. “As a minimum, the community-run libraries would offer self-service books and other media loans, public access computers for accessing the internet, word processing and library-based events. Book reservation and inquiries would be provided through a free phone access to the nearby council-staffed library and information centre.”
Be thankful for your local library
Nov 25th
Actions
- Write about your views on public libraries to the Select Committee on Culture Media and Sport. Email cmsev@parliament.uk with “library closures” in subject line. Emails stand more chance of being effective if they give your views on (1) “what constitutes a comprehensive and efficient library service for the 21st Century”, (2) to what extent library closures are compatible with the law and the Charteris Report, (3) the impact closures have on communities and (4) the effectiveness of the secretary of state’s powers of interviention. Deadline: 12th January 2012. NB full details on how to submit your views are here. More guidance on giving written and verbal evidence is here.
- Please sign the national petition in support of public libraries.
- Email Justin Tomlinson MP for Swindon about your concerns. He is the chair of the new All-Party Parliamentary Group for libraries to be launched in December.
News
- Be thankful for your local library – BookRiot. ” I hope. Despite my frustration about not having a bookstore, I can’t complain when I’m reminded that my local libraries are always an option.”
- Consider the library – “Consider The Library is a simple Chrome Plug In that gently reminds those browsing for books on websites like Amazon or Waterstones that their local library* often has a copy of the book available on their shelves.”
- Could ebooks kill off our libraries? – Metro. The online link to story covered yesterday.
- Library control still an open book – Simi Valley Acorn (USA). LSSI may take over system causing wide protest. “Residents worry: Will employees lose their jobs or see a loss in benefits and wages? Will the collections be depleted without access to the county’s interlibrary loan system? Will programs like adult literacy tutoring cease to exist?”
- MPs probe threat to libraries – London Evening Standard. “Tory member Louise Mensch, a best-selling novelist under the name Louise Bagshawe, said: “Reading is so fundamental to education that it is right to look at how cuts are affecting provision and what the service should look like in the modern age.”
- Select Committee launches inquiry into library closures – Ventnor Blog. “We understand that library campaigners on the Island are discussing whether they’ll be responding to the invitation for written submissions on the inquiry.”
- Occupy London Library spreads its wings – Guardian. “The library at Finsbury Square is little more than a couple of shelves and a sofa in a tent, while around the corner at the Bank of Ideas there’s a fair amount of shelving, though not much in the way of actual books. But according to the Bank’s poet in residence – or maybe that should be “poet in occupation” – Pete the Temp, these are early days.”
- Open letter to Michael Gove MP, Secretary of State for Education – Campaign for the Book (Alan Gibbons). “In your peroration, you praise Willy Russell’s Educating Rita, but where will future Ritas find that pathway to literature, art and philosophy if the school and public libraries are closed and the book-gifting schemes are starved of funds?”
- When libraries forget their mission – Roger Pearse. Article is (a) disgusted that there are sessions for preschool children in libraries, that (b) a book ordered from central store is not sent [ultra-expensively] via Royal Mail but is sent by a van instead, that (c) the library does not charge for full cost (£15) for British Library requests, that (d) budget cuts have led to a lack of staff and thus delay, (e) that “a woman” is assumed to be in charge. From this, writer decides that libraries should all be closed down as they are failing in their mission to supply him with books on “Mithras: the secret god”. [The user is actually pro library and understands their place in supplying books to those who cannot afford them: but comes to the conclusion that because libraries are underfunded and inefficient that they should be closed down rather than the more obvious one that they should be sufficiently funded and more efficient – Ed.]
Changes
- Cumbria – Seaton and Moorclose libraries to be partially funded/run by friends groups.
- Kent – £2.3m cuts in 2011 and before, with an extra £2m cuts to be made by 2014, leading to replacement of paid staff by volunteers, possible closures and merging libraries with town councils/shops.
- Kirklees – Volunteers to run libraries (with some assistance inc self-service and library computer system ) at Slaithwaite, Golcar, Honley, Lepton, Kirkheaton, Denby Dale and Shepley. “No libraries are going to close“.
- Wiltshire – Full update from council: Bookfund “relatively healthy” and not just buying top ten bestsellers (cf. this), 9 (not as previously stated) 10 branches run by volunteers, 28% cut over two years (not four years as previously thought), volunteer-run libraries have stock/IT/training/support/5 hours staff-time pw from council. 6% reduction on opening hours (on average of non-volunteer libraries), none reduced to three hours per week (previously this reported on PLN due to this article), staff uniforms for libraries in 2009 (but cost than £40k). £32k further cut in bookfund 2012/3,
- Worcestershire – Town Council to buy Pershore Library, with £500k refurbishment (reduced by hoped use of volunteers), County Council to pay rent. Information Centre to merge with library.
Local News
- Cumbria – This could be a new chapter for libraries – Times and Star. “The key was for communities to show that libraries in this day and age can be about so much more than book lending; that there was a social aspect beyond the dwindling numbers of books being borrowed. So we witnessed school pupils staging a protest march to save Distington village library, public meetings in Seaton and Moorclose, petitions and letters being fired off to the Prime Minister. The communities spoke with a single voice, explaining how their local libraries were vital social hubs.”
- Isle of Wight – Protesters cheered by court ruling over library closures – IWCP. “Dave Quigley, from the Friends of the Isle of Wight Library Service, said the latest ruling gave fresh hope to campaigners. He added the group was looking at joining forces with mainland groups to try to reverse closures. He said: “There are moves on a national basis to get the government into court for a judicial review.” In a separate move, Parliament’s Culture, Media and Sport scrutiny committee is to hold an inquiry into library closures. The cross-party committee will have the power to call local authorities to give evidence. Isle of Wight Council cabinet member for libraries Cllr Barry Abraham said the challenges against the mainland councils were against their procedures, which were done correctly on the Island.”
- Kent – Set for library shake-up – BookSeller. “While details of the shake-up are as yet unclear, cabinet member with responsibility for libraries Mike Hill said the council’s proposal “balances the need to modernise services, work with communities to find innovative and efficient ways to maintain a local library service and meet our statutory responsibilities while delivering further revenue savings.”
- Desperate villagers try to cling on to library – This is Kent. “The prospect of losing their library has left people living in Borough Green distraught…ane Alberine, 39, of Western Road, said: “I would be devastated if it closed. I go there for books and DVDs and my daughter sometimes does her homework there. I run a beginners’ drawing group and we display our work in the library, so we would have nowhere to exhibit the work.”. Fear also that local shops would lose trade.
- Kirklees – Volunteers asked to take over seven Kirkless Council libraries to help avoid axe: find out which are affected here and have your say – Huddersfield Daily Examiner. “Clr Pandor added that volunteer-run libraries would offer self-service books and public access computers as a minimum. The change would allow the seven libraries to have different opening times.”
- Clear plan needed on Kirklees libraries – Huddersfield Daily Examiner. Council unclear on if staff will be cut and how services will be delivered with the key skills of library staff. Unclear also how effecitiveness of volunteers will be monitored. “Libraries have long helped people broaden their horizons, brush up their skills and acquire new ones. In essence, our libraries offer a key support network where people can realise their potential and if they chose, become more connected to their community. Little wonder then that as libraries continue to have such a key role in our towns and villages, there is concern that changes are looming.”
- Northumberland – Changes planned to Northumberland mobile libraries in bid to save £50,000 – Journal Live. “Although the fleet of vans is being cut from four to three, a new vehicle has recently been bought, which council bosses believe will make the service more reliable and less prone to breakdowns.”
- Wiltshire – Council launches new website to help people get online – Chippenham People. Council thinks people who have difficulty getting online will look online for help. Comment below article points out libraries may be a more sensible place, although they have been cut in the county.
- Keeping libraries open at a cost – Alan Gibbons. Response from Wiltshire Libraries to details taken from the tally page of Public Libraries News. “It is true that the changes have meant a reduction in the number of staff, and in opening hours, but all libraries are still open and all mobile libraries are still on the road. This was our main objective – and something our lead members considered important.”
- Wokingham – Council to review libraries decision – Get Wokingham. “Following debate, Wokingham Borough Council approved a recommendation to review its decision to outsource control of the borough’s libraries after a competitive tender process, to take account of public feeling.”. First ever council debate forced by petition (2300 names). Council denies giving council to a private company is privatisation and says it would retain right to increase charges. Also denies that expected 10% cut in libraries budget (plus profit for the private company concerned) would result in any staff losing their jobs and accuse petition’s backers (Lib Dems) of scaremongering.
- Worcestershire – Pershore residents support library plan – Evesham Journal. Public protests led to town and county council working together to keep library in current location and to refurbish it. ” More than 100 residents turned out to hear how both authorities have been working together in recent months to develop the idea which could also see a full refurbishment of the current building”
“The City of London does not have funds” to help with a cut library
Nov 24th
Actions
- Write about your views on public libraries to the Select Committee on Culture Media and Sport. Email cmsev@parliament.uk with “library closures” in subject line. Emails stand more chance of being effective if they give your views on (1) “what constitutes a comprehensive and efficient library service for the 21st Century”, (2) to what extent library closures are compatible with the law and the Charteris Report, (3) the impact closures have on communities and (4) the effectiveness of the secretary of state’s powers of interviention. Deadline: 12th January 2012. NB full details on how to submit your views are here. More guidance on giving written and verbal evidence is here.
- Please sign the national petition in support of public libraries.
- Email Justin Tomlinson MP for Swindon about your concerns. He is the chair of the new All-Party Parliamentary Group for libraries to be launched in December.
News
- Could ebooks kill off our libraries? – Metro. Discusses Penguin’s decision not to allow lending of its ebooks. Librarians keen to provide ebooks. Problems with publishers effectively selling their wares for free if this happens is unresolved.
- Craze for political language – Spectator. “In related news, libraries are a growing issue at Westminster. The Bookseller reports that the Culture, Media and Sport committee, made famous by the phonehacking saga, is to investigate library closures.”
- MP’s to investigate library closures – Guardian. Campaigners give mixed response. On the one side, a worry that committee may suggest an even weaker Act to replace the 1964 one and that the committee will only really listen to the detractors of libraries. On the other side, happy that the matter is being looked at and that library users can make their voices heard.
- Campaign for the Book response to the Select Committee on Libraries – Alan Gibbons. “We believe that it is incumbent upon the DCMS, in line with its duties to superintend the public library service, to order a moratorium on library closures.”
- Save all teh libraries lol – Wordshore. Very readable piece on the inquiry into library closures and on the use of volunteers in libraries. Gives twitter links for most of the Inquiry MPs and other strategies for talking to them.
- Downton Abbey’s creator Julian Fellowes charms locals with talk on library closures – Mail. “Downton Abbey’s fruity creator, the theatrical Julian Fellowes, 62 – elevated to the peerage to the delight of tout le monde – visited Hampstead to talk about library closures. He charmed local folk by observing: ‘Libraries are very important for people who don’t have a place to think or work quietly. We must keep them open wherever we can.’ To which his brilliant Downton Abbey creation butler Carson might respond: ‘Quite so, m’lord. Will that be all?’
- Occupy for the word – BookSeller. “And next to this wall of noise, reminiscent of dissident fly-posting in an authoritarian state, is the OSX library. At first glance, this tentful of bookcases and old books looks much the same as a second-hand stall at a literary festival. Books are being widely donated to the library, and cover a broad spectrum of interest. And I found myself thinking, not for the first time, what happens if/when all these books just . . . go away?” … “Closed public libraries and restricted digital access are two sides of two different coins, but any change that limits contact with ideas and inspiration – for everyone – fills me with concern.”
“The fact that libraries have become a central part of the Occupy… protests around the world attests to their importance in an informed society. ”
- PA [Publisher’s Association] supports Penguin e-lending bar – BookSeller. “Penguin UK announced this morning [24th November] that it would be withholding new e-books from UK library suppliers, saying that it supported libraries but wanted “to strike the right balance between access to our content and the protection of our authors’ copyright.”. Librarians not happy, calling it “a bit devastating” and hopes that decision can be changed.
- Successful challenge to library closures: lip service not enough for equality duties: Shaheen Rahman – UK Human Rights Blog. “Both councils had purported to carry out equality impact assessments but the mere fact that such an assessment had been conducted did not demonstrate that due regard had been given to the public sector equality duty.”. 1964 Act beyond powers of the court to invoke. “However, the court could only intervene where something had gone seriously wrong in the information-gathering process. Otherwise, it was a matter for the Secretary of State to consider whether to undertake an inquiry pursuant under s.10 of the Act.”
“Despite the success of this challenge, it is questionable whether it will have much effect in stemming the tide of library closures. The court’s observations on resources clearly leave a lot of scope for councils to move on with plans to withdraw funding for libraries, notwithstanding the impact on the local community.”
- Why do we advocate for libraries? – WordShore. “No one knows how the remaining eight years of this decade will play out, with respect to libraries. Anyone who predicts what libraries will be like, and what information services they will offer, in 2020 is either not serious, a hopeless optimist, or getting a nice speakers fee for something with no evidence behind it.” … “I haven’t a clue. And neither do you. Might as well ride the sandworm of advocacy, and see where it takes us.”
Changes
Local News
- Brent – Local children plea for library – Preston Library Campaign. School children’s letters about what the library means to them.
- Camden – £60,000 raised in a week for Chalk Farm branch! Cash pours in for “Save Our Library” appeal – Camden New Journal. “Donations have been coming in thick and fast in support of Primrose Hill Community Association’s bid to save Chalk Farm Library. The steering group has received “around ten” four-figure pledges as well as the £35,000 from a donor who wishes to remain anonymous.” … “Meanwhile, Belsize Library, in Antrim Grove, could be saved by the intervention of The Winch community centre in Swiss Cottage – though no plans have yet been finalised. The Winch chief executive Paul Perkins says the plan would see the library stay open – partially paid for by offering other, unspecified services.”.
“The Heath branch, in Keats Grove, looks likely to be run by a new charity, The Phoenix Group, formed by library users, members of the library’s Friends group and the Heath and Hampstead Society. It has been in talks with the City of London, which owns the library building … The City of London does not have funds to do this, nor sees it as its role to run a library service outside its boundaries.”
- Doncaster – Campaigners look to judicial review – BookSeller. “Doncaster campaigners are considering applying for judicial review over library closures, following approval by the council’s cabinet yesterday (23rd November) of plans to close two of the borough’s libraries and hand a further 12 over to communities to run.”
- Libraries will close as pleas for re-think thrown out – Epworth Bells. “We believe the whole closure consultation process has been flawed and whole communities will be damaged. There has been a distinct lack of transparency and it’s a scandal that everything can be done at the whim of one person.”. Mayor Peter Davies says ““The number of active protestors on this issue have been minimal. No-one has approached me in the street and told me I’m doing a bad thing here”… to which the response is ” If only the 16,000+ people who have signed petitions against the plans had known that their views did not count as an expression of disagreement, and that they should approach the Mayor in the street instead!”
- Gloucestershire – Continuing threat to libraries will not deter Bourton bid – Cotswold Journal. ““Providing we are successful in turning Moore Cottage Hospital into a community hub then we will be providing a library facility that will be larger and will operate more hours. I don’t see why the library lobby will have any effect on Bourton. What we are offering was for greater services than we have already got.”
- Kent – Council employs debt collector for library fines – BBC. “From January, a list of the people who fail to respond to reminder letters will be passed to [USA owned] Unique Management collection agency.”. Council has not revealed how much attempted debt recovery of £100k will cost them.
- North Yorkshire – Blueprint for library closures – Gazette & Herald. “Under the proposals, North Yorkshire’s existing 42 branch libraries would be retained with the exception of Malton and Norton libraries. The proposals envisage the creation of a new branch convenient for both communities.The 41 libraries would be run either by the county council’s library service, volunteers, or by a combination of both.”
- Council ready to hand over its libraries – Yorkshire Post. “But it emerged earlier this month that more than a fifth of the library service’s workforce is due to be axed with 36 posts going from 177 full-time staff, while opening hours in many branches are to be cut. All North Yorkshire’s branches will be retained, with the exception of Malton and Norton libraries which will be merged into one. The 41 remaining branches will be run either by the county council’s library service, volunteers, or a combination of both.”
- Somerset – Library service saved, but what’s the real cost? – Glastonbury People. “Many wrote to councillors, several thousands of people signed petitions demanding a rethink. The pages of this newspaper were filled with letters decrying the decision. Then the public donated several thousand pounds to afford a legal challenge, and after a court case costing the general tax payer hundreds of thousands of pounds more, the council got the message.”
- South Petherton Library praised – This is the West Country. ““When I was campaigning for the South Petherton county by-election in the summer, I didn’t meet anyone who supported the closure of the library, so this ruling is the right one.”. Cost of legal action deplored.
- Wakefield – One-stop council shop on course for Wakefield – Wakefield Express. “Wakefield One will provide customers with access to services ranging from benefits and tax to planning when it opens at Merchant Gate in September next year. Wakefield Museum and the Drury Lane and Balne Lane libraries will all move into the new building, which has been paid for through the selling of other council sites.” … “Balne Library will close in January 2012 with key services being moved to a temporary home in Drury Lane Library until the opening of Wakefield One.”








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