What are Friends for?

Friends of the Library training is coming June 23 & 24 here in Utah. Register: http://library.utah.gov/workshops

When I think of Friends of the Library I think of collaboration. What are Friends of the Library groups for?

  • Public, academic. school, and special libraries. No one’s too obscure or too high powered to have Friends.
  • Supporting and benefiting the library community
  • Service
  • Connecting with others in the business world
  • Public relations
  • Advocacy
  • Community involvement
  • Literacy promotion, especially in school Friends groups
  • Fund raising

What can they sponsor?

  • Film festival
  • Storytelling contest
  • Book sales
  • Booth at the County Fair
  • Teachers’ tea
  • Bring shut-ins to the library during National Library week to meet the staff and the mayor
  • Special anniversary programs
  • More computers in the library
  • Job Fair at the library
  • Outreach program at the senior center
  • Provide funding for special library projects
  • Hospital book cart
  • Puppets, toys, and games for children
  • Promote literacy and reading
  • “Books for babies” kits
  • Making a new teen area in the library
  • Any activity that would benefit the library community

Google chrome

Just when I ditched ie as my default browser comes another strong defender…google chrome. It’s been around for awhile but is coming out strong all over the world it seems.

Stimulus $$$ and Utah libraries

Everyone’s wondering about stimulus money and how Utah librarians can get  it. Here’s my answer, and that’s just it, my answer. The thing is, we don’t want to miss out. Deseret News said that Salt Lake City and Salt Lake County will get most of the money. I don’t want it to slip by the rest of us.

The website to track is http://recovery.utah.gov/. It shows $ coming to Utah, $ being spent, and on what.

There is the Guide to the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act for Utah. Take a look at that.

Emily Sheketoff of ALA tells how libraries can benefit and what to do.  Remember when she came to Utah for ULA/MPLA in 2008?  She said recently:

Specific provisions libraries can benefit from in the stimulus include $13 billion for Title I, $650 million for Enhancing Education Through Technology, $7.2 billion for Broadband, $53.6 billion for the State Fiscal Stabilization Fund, an additional $120 million for the Senior Community Service Employment Program, an additional $130 million for the Rural Community Facilities Program, and $4.24 billion and $1.33 billion for Military Libraries to try to access. ALA has posted information on how these provisions can benefit libraries.

Here are ways that Utah libraries can use the money.

Broadband. This is the biggest fund for libraries. There is $7.2 billion set aside nationally: $4.5 billion  for the National Telecommunications and Information Administration (NTIA) and $2.5 billion for the Rural Utilities Service (RUS), which includes $200 million set aside for community computing centers, including public libraries and community colleges.

Enhancing Education Through Technology. The school librarian could use this money for computers in the library, databases, etc. The goal is to help all students become technologically literate by the end of the eighth grade.

Title 1: Title I schools (usually lower income) have extra money coming in to close the achievement gap. The funding is flexible and, for the most part, the control rests in the hands of local and state superintendents–and spending some of it on school libraries would be a wise investment, ALA asserts.” (Maya Prabhu of ALA).  Utah Title 1 school librarians should contact their local school officials and get the ball rolling.

State Fiscal Stabilization Fund. Governor Huntsman will decide how to spend this and school libraries should be the ones to benefit if we band together. The ARRA directs governors to use 81.8 percent of the state’s allocation to support elementary, secondary and higher education. This funding is flexible so school librarians should make their case and get into this pot of money.

The Senior Community Service Employment Program (SCSEP) works with eligible seniors to gain job training and employment.  It does not specifically apply to work in libraries, although library work would definitely be a legitimate application of the program.  Utah has an ongoing SCSEP program and received additional funding under the stimulus bill.  Libraries could recruit seniors to work for them under this program.  SCSEP pays their wages, not the library. Sweet! Free (to you) yet paid for (by others) employees.  A real win-win. See http://www.doleta.gov/seniors/

Rural Community Facilities Program. The Community Programs is a division of the Housing and Community Facilities Programs at the United States Department of Agriculture.  Community Programs includes the Community Facilities Guaranteed Loan Program, the Community Facilities Direct Loan Program, and the Community Facilities Grant Program. These programs help develop essential community facilities for public use in rural areas. These facilities include schools, libraries, childcare, hospitals, medical clinics, assisted living facilities, fire and rescue stations, police stations, community centers, public buildings and transportation. In Utah see http://www.rurdev.usda.gov/ut/. Go to the listing for your area and contact the person there.

Military Libraries. I don’t know much about this but if you do, please reply.

Web in a box value

This has been a super value to our library as we did not have a website until this project. We would not have had the money to hire a professional or even have our technician spend the time on creating one for us. This is something that we have control over and can update on our schedule- not have to wait for someone else or have to meet a deadline that doesn’t fit. We have had many comments from patrons on the value of our site. It is a great step in keeping up with the times. We are so grateful for the ability to do the work on our website ourselves and for the great service it is to the community.
Juliene Parrish
Richmond Public Library

Librarians at the Gate

I’m feeling chilled, nauseaus, and faint.  No, I don’t think it’s the swine flu.

Rather, I just listened to a portion of yesterday’s Democracy Now! interview with Internet Archive founder Brewster Kahle, Google Faces Antitrust Investigation for Agreement to Digitize Millions of Books Online.

I’ve always thought that we librarians were the heroes.  We were the ones out there on the front lines safeguarding the public’s right to free access to information.  We were the ones gathering, microfilming, digitizing, cataloging and otherwise preserving papers, documents, and books and making them available online for present and future generations.

In this great crusade, librarians were among the first adopters of computer technologies.  We have since embraced every search tool, database delivery system, open standard, digitization scheme, and Internet widget to come our way.

But we’ve let our guard down.  In opening wide the gate and in embracing geeks bearing gifts, we’ve discovered an enemy.  Our greater surprise is finding that this enemy is ourselves.

We’ve been lulled by the siren song that benevolent, enlightened library technology corporations can do the job better, cheaper, and more efficiently than armies of local librarians could ever have dreamed of doing.   Overwhelming evidence has convinced us that monopoly giants can do it better.

As a result, the question, once unthinkable:

AMY GOODMAN: Do you see the end of libraries as we know them?

Elicits a nightmarish possibility:

BREWSTER KAHLE: [Long pause]. Libraries as a physical place to go, I think will continue, but if this trend continues, if we let Google make a monopoly here, then we’ll lose what libraries are in terms of repositories of books, places that buy books, own them, be a guardian of them, will cease to exist. Libraries, going forward, may just be subscribers to a few monopoly corporations’ databases.

I wouldn’t have felt so alarmed listening to this had I not recently read Robert Darnton’s essay in The New York Review of BooksGoogle & the Future of Books“. Darnton, by the way, is the director of the Harvard University Library and was a trustee of the New York Public Library. Both institutions were among the first five enthusiastic contributors to the Google Book project when it began in 2004. They’re now having second thoughts.

This week has been unsettling all around. I’m still pondering OCLC’s announcement a few days ago of their cloud-based alternative to traditional library Integrated Library Systems and the merits of Tim Spaulding’s penetrating critiques in his LibraryThing blog.

I’ll let history can be the judge whether alarmists like Kahle, Darnton, and Spaulding are prescient or paranoid.

I need to get back to monitoring my swine flu “twittertape.”

Editorial by Ray Matthews
Government Information Coordinator
Utah State Library

- opinions expressed here are his own -

Making this site more 2 point Oh! ey

I am thinking of ways to get this site even cooler than it is. I want to make it so it’s smoother, easier to use. Any ideas from you 2.0 gurus out there? I just joined Library 2.0 on ning and am thinking of some of those features.

Help me obi wan kanobi, you’re my only hope.


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