Posts tagged advocacy
Save Libraries by Jo Knowles
Apr 23rd
When I was growing up, my public library had special bags just for books. Everyone got one.
You could fill it.
I had my own card. My number was 141.
The librarian squealed when we came. She ran out from behind the big desk and hugged us.
The books in the library were covered in clear film and smelled like tape.
They crinkled when you opened them, like some ancient, priceless tome.
I thought they were just for me. But they were for everyone.
Because anyone could go to the library.
You didn’t have to be rich. You didn’t have to be a certain age. Anyone.
Later, when my mom worked at the library, she used to tell us that a man would come and wash in the bathroom. Then he would spend the day in the warm reading room, catching up on the news. Sometimes he was loud. But they just asked him to talk more quietly. They didn’t ask him to leave.
Because anyone could go to the library.
My mother was the children’s librarian way up in the renovated attic.
She read to the kids at story hour. And all the young mothers.
Sometimes, the moms talked too loud. But it was OK. This was the one place they could come throughout the year where they didn’t have to buy coffee or a book in order to stay. In fact, they could leave with a huge stack of books to read to their kids until the next story hour. And it was free!
Young, young single moms. Grandparents becoming parents again. Moms the third time around. Tired, tired dads. It didn’t matter. Everyone was welcome.
Because anyone could go to the library.
And even later, when I got a job in a tiny public library, I would wait for the after school crowd to show up. All the kids who didn’t play sports. Or have a parent waiting at pick-up to bring them home. Kids who could go home to a cold, empty house, or come to the library instead.
Which would you choose?
So I waited and made piles of books I thought each kid would like. And I’d hand them over and sometimes help with homework. And give my library “shush” when they got too loud. But they didn’t mind. They were at Hogwarts and Terabithia and Narnia. Inside books that I knew would change and shape their lives just like they did mine. All for free. Sometimes they didn’t return them on time. Sometimes they’d come back smelling like peanut butter and jelly. Sometimes like cigarette smoke. Sometimes I’d cringe. But I’d still be so glad to know the words of that book were now in the soul of that child. That child that probably didn’t own a single book, and yet, owned thousands.
Because anyone could go to the library.
And then later still, when I had my own baby, I would take him to the library in town. He wanted to chew on the board books. He wanted to check out all the Thomas the Tank Engine movies we’d already watched a hundred times. I’d chat with the librarian about YA books that we both loved while E happily crawled on the floor, then toddled, then walked. I made friends with other moms. We started a book group. Anyone could go.
Because anyone could go to the library.
Only now. Now I read about budget cuts. School libraries laying off their librarians. Closing the library doors altogether. City libraries shutting down. Library systems disappearing. New York. New Jersey. California. Pennsylvania. No more free books for people desperate to put a picture book in their child’s hand. No more computer access to the kids who don’t have them at home. No more wireless for the people who’ve lost their jobs and need a place to hook up to job search. No more free access to newspapers for the people who don’t have TV and can’t afford the paper. But want to know what’s happening in the world, in their state, in their town. Who want to make informed voting decisions. Who want to understand what’s going on.
Libraries aren’t just about book lending. They are the heart of most communities. They are the one place in any community that you can go all year, rain or shine, rich or penniless. They are the one place in communities that provide fair and equal access. They don’t discriminate. They don’t judge. They give over and over and over.
And now is when they are needed most desperately. Now is when they provide the most valuable services. Now is when, even if a state or county is so far in the red they feel they’ll never get out, now is when libraries should be getting the green light to extend their hours, not have them taken away. Without libraries, the economic divide in our communities grows even wider. Please. If the library in your community is in danger, speak up. If you can help any library that’s in trouble, please do it. This is about kids, babies, new moms and dads, unemployed parents, a lonely retired person who needs weekly or daily interaction and reading material to get them through the week. It’s about keeping communities intact. Your community. My community. It matters.
About Jo Knowles
Jo Knowles is the author of Lessons from a Dead Girl and Jumping Off Swings (Candlewick Press). She teaches writing for children in the MFA program at Simmons College.
This post originally appeared on Jo’s website http://jbknowles.livejournal.com where more than 50 comments appeared on the original post.
The Importance of Libraries by Tony Bandy
Apr 23rd
Awash in technology and social communications, there are many today who argue against the library as an antiquated thought from another time and place. Politically, libraries are seen as an easy target for cuts, non-essential to a functioning city, town or state—after all, it’s only the library. Yet nothing could be farther from the truth…
The library has many roles to play in today’s society and remains an important part to all of us, no matter our stage in life. To children, it’s a magical place, of learning and reading as well as talking and having fun. It’s a place for summer programs, for after school knowledge, for growing up and getting older.
To the patron out of work, the library is a lifeline to a bright future of hope, with programs for training, re-training and something as simple as learning how to write a resume. On a personal level, it’s a librarian helping them day after day to rebuild a career gone astray.
For the busy mom, or the manager on lunch break, the library is a place of momentary rest, of meeting others and finding that latest best seller to take home. For the DIY’er, it’s a place to learn how to build a patio or keep the yard in shape. Yes, a library is many things to all of us, but most of all, a library is important, essential to our society today.
Libraries also are meeting the criticism of those who would argue that technology has made them obsolete. Morphing into the local information hubs for many of our communities, the library is a place to stay connected with ever-increasing amounts of data, both digital and analog in nature. Computer training, eBooks, databases and managing to find the kernel of knowledge in the ever-increasing flood of data, our libraries are essential to our community. But a library is more than a building and more than an organization. It’s the people inside of it, the librarians and other staff, making the difference and offering level of services unheard of in today’s fast paced society. Teaching, listening, finding–these describe best the people working in your local library.
Beyond just a job, they’re adept, tough and coming to grips with the challenges faced by libraries today, walking the tightrope and balancing between the continuous budget cuts and those that would argue against the relevancy of the library. Yes, at the heart of libraries, people like you and me still remain committed to the ideals of knowledge and service to all.
That’s me, I’m your librarian.
Don’t take the easy way out and give in to the current thinking! Support your library—support yourself.
About Tony Bandy
A professional librarian with 14 plus years of experience, Tony currently consults with libraries through his company, Library Knowledge, helping them to achieve their organizational goals through training and leading-edge information technology. Besides computers, he is a published freelance author for TeleRead, Internet Genealogy and other magazines/blogs. Learn more about Tony at http://www.libraryknowledge.com.
Larry Adams, Library Volunteer
Apr 23rd
Larry Adams describes his love of libraries and of being a library volunteer.
IT Changes Everything
Apr 23rd
Here’s a great 31-second commercial that shows how libraries can help people.









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