Skip to main content

Two library stories

I'm in Elko, Nevada, for a gathering of Nevada Library Association folks. Tomorrow, I'm speaking on library advocacy. It happens that I got two emails today, one about a library in Illinois (where I come from), and one about the library I now direct in Douglas County, Colorado. The timing couldn't be better.

Here's the first article, with a snippet from the beginning, then the link:
Telling her mother that she wanted to come to the aid of a library under attack, 11-year-old Sydney Sabbagha stood at the podium before the Oak Brook village board.

"I used to go to the library knowing there were people there to help me find a book. Now there is no one to help me," Sydney said solemnly. "It will never be the same without the people you fired."

Sydney nestled back into her seat, but that didn't stop 69-year-old criminal attorney Constantine "Connie" Xinos from boldly putting her in her place.

"Those who come up here with tears in their eyes talking about the library, put your money where your mouth is," Xinos shot back. He told Sydney and others who spoke against the layoffs of the three full-time staffers (including the head librarian and children's librarian) and two part-timers to stop "whining" and raise the money themselves.

"I don't care that you guys miss the librarian, and she was nice, and she helped you find books," Xinos told them.

"Don't cry crocodile tears about people who are making $100,000 a year wiping tables and putting the books back on the shelves," Xinos smirked, apparently referencing the fired head librarian, who has advanced degrees and made $98,676 a year. He said Oak Brook had to "stop indulging people in their hobbies" and "their little, personal, private wants."

You can find the rest of this appalling tale here. (And thank you, B. Strand, for sending it to me.)

The second story starts like this:
More and more patrons are walking through the doors at libraries throughout Douglas County, but it’s not because of a sudden rise in avid readers.

Job hunters are coming in droves to utilize free resources offered by Douglas County Libraries — including employment databases, helpful workshops and Internet-ready computers.

Dozens of out-of-work residents have found employment by fine-tuning their resumes, browsing through the Douglas County Employment iGuide and drafting attention-grabbing cover letters.

Many of those who utilize library job-searching services do not have to go it alone. A team of reference librarians, along with a few volunteers, walk laid-off workers through a process that many have not experienced in several years.

And the rest of that, more uplifting tale, can be found here.

First story: libraries don't matter. Our perfect villain.

Second story: libraries matter a lot. With lots of heroes.

The second one, of course, would be advocacy. (And thank you, Chris Michlewicz, for writing it!)

Comments

Jen said…
Thank you for posting, especially about the Oak Brook Library. I am a librarian in Illinois in a suburb near Oak Brook, and am appalled at what's happening there (and so are my friends who live in Oak Brook).
FemGeek said…
It's people like the first person who are hurting this society. I want to be a librarian, it is the entire reason I went to college. So I could help people find the information they want. I can see our culture crumbling under our feet because people like him taking away the archives that keep said culture.
I went to the Oak Bridge story and read some of the comments... I was surprised to see that everyone referred to Xinos as a "conservative" or a "right winger"; he sounded like a Libertarian to me--much like that "ammouth" person who blathered on in your wonderful "Uncle Bobby's wedding" post that Neil Gaiman linked recently.

I don't understand people who argue that the Internet has made libraries obsolete. Don't they know that for many people, the public library is the only Internet access they have? I'm used to the ignorance that assumes that everyone can afford books, but who are these supremely unaware naifs who think that everyone can afford their own wi-fi enabled laptop of their own?

Our libraries are the safeguard of our liberty, because they are the safeguard of our literacy. I try to restrain myself from labeling people "evil," but it's pretty hard for me when they are actively trying to shut down libraries. And when they're Constantine Xinos, proudly bragging about making an 11-year-old cry and "lose sleep", my incentive to continue giving the benefit of the doubt just goes away.

Thank you for your blog and your good work, Jamie. I'm just up the road from you in Boulder, and it would be a pleasure to deliver my thanks in person one of these days. Reading your aforementioned "Uncle Bobby's Wedding" post, I could only mentally respond, "I want to be him when I grow up." Cheers.
Ms. Yingling said…
Thankfully, our school levy just passed. Librarians would have been some of the first people cut if it hadn't. I think I work really hard, but there are always people out there who don't. How sad that those are the ones society remembers and talks about. Thanks for the work you do in educating the public.

Popular posts from this blog

Uncle Bobby's Wedding

Recently, a library patron challenged (urged a reconsideration of the ownership or placement of) a book called "Uncle Bobby's Wedding." Honestly, I hadn't even heard of it until that complaint. But I did read the book, and responded to the patron, who challenged the item through email and requested that I respond online (not via snail-mail) about her concerns. I suspect the book will get a lot of challenges in 2008-2009. So I offer my response, purging the patron's name, for other librarians. Uncle Bobby's wedding June 27, 2008 Dear Ms. Patron: Thank you for working with my assistant to allow me to fit your concerns about “Uncle Bobby's Wedding,” by Sarah S. Brannen, into our “reconsideration” process. I have been assured that you have received and viewed our relevant policies: the Library Bill of Rights, the Freedom to Read, Free Access to Libraries for Minors, the Freedom to View, and our Reconsideration Policy. The intent of providing all tha...

Installing Linux on a 2011 Macbook Pro

I had two MacBook Pros, both 13" models from late 2011. One had 4 gigs of RAM, and the other 8. Both of them were intolerably slow. In the first case, I wound up installing CleanMyMac , which did arcane things to various files, and put up alerts to warn me about disappearing memory. But it made the machine useable again, albeit not exactly speedy. I changed some habits: Safari as browser rather than Firefox or Chrome. I tried to keep tabs down to four or five. The second Mac had bigger problems. Its charger was shot, but even with that replaced, the battery tapped out at 75%. More importantly, the whole disk had been wiped, which meant that it wouldn't boot. Recently, I had downloaded a couple of Linux distributions ("distros") on USB drives. Elementary OS 5.1 (Hera) was reputed to be a lightweight, beautiful distro that shared some aesthetics with the Mac OS. So I thought I'd give it a try. Ahead of time, I tried to read up on how difficult it might be to...

The First Year: 5 strategies for success

[The First Year: 5 Strategies for Success, 1 of 8] Over the past several years, I've had the pleasure of coaching several new public library directors. For a  variety of reasons, many directors are stepping into the role for the first time. Often, particularly in smaller or more rural libraries, they haven't even had a lot of supervisory experience. I tell new directors that the two big advantages of confidential access to someone who has walked in your shoes is that (a) you can ask the questions you might feel embarrassed to ask your board or staff, and (b) you have the advantage of someone else's mistakes. To be clear, everybody makes mistakes. It may be the most powerful learning tool we have. But I've thought about my mistakes, and I can help you identify the old ones, and with luck, make new ones. There's no good reason to make the same ones! I believe that there are five key constituencies the public library director must satisfy:  your boss  (usual...