Rebane's Ruminations
January 2015
S M T W T F S
 123
45678910
11121314151617
18192021222324
25262728293031

ARCHIVES


OUR LINKS


YubaNet
White House Blog
Watts Up With That?
The Union
Sierra Thread
RL “Bob” Crabb
Barry Pruett Blog

[Nevada County Librarian Ms Laura Pappani sent me the following byline to inform RR readers of the current goings on with the library regarding its funding and renewal of Measure C.  Our library is transforming itself to serve the community in the age of internet connectivity, providing citizens expanded opportunities to study, communicate, retrieve information, learn, … .  It deserves your support.  gjr]

Laura Pappani 

As one of my colleagues is fond of saying, “The bunheads are dead.” That old stereotype of a mousy, shushing librarian, peering over her glasses in prim disapproval? So last century. Today’s libraries are vibrant and vital community centers, providing a bridge to information and entertainment. In 2014, we received more than 350,000 visits as people walked across that bridge to enter a Nevada County Public Library and utilize our free materials, resources, and services. We are efficient, responsive, and constantly keeping our ear to the ground to anticipate our community’s needs.

Funding for the Nevada County Public Libraries comes from a variety of sources, but the biggest chunk – more than 65% – comes from 0.125% of each penny of sales tax collected in Nevada County, designated for the Library by voters in 1998 and renewed by Measure C in 2002. Every dollar that comes to the Library through Measure C is monitored by the Citizen’s Oversight Committee, a group of volunteers who meet several times a year to ensure accountability and public transparency. The Library is responsive to public input on programs and services and seeks to provide measurable outcomes. In addition to lending books, movies, and music, we provide literacy tutoring for adults, research assistance, a variety of programs for children and teens including a popular Summer Reading Program, classes on technology, research, and job search strategies, and programs and lectures on a variety of topics.

The Library is constantly striving to anticipate the needs of the people of Nevada County through publicly-informed strategic planning. We are responsive to citizen input and are partners in business development and job skills training, as much as for reading and enrichment. I hope you will come visit one of the Nevada County Public Libraries – the Madelyn Helling Library and the Doris Foley Library for Historical Research in Nevada City, the Grass Valley Library – Royce Branch (which celebrates its 100th birthday next year), the Truckee Library, the Penn Valley Station, or the Bear River Station – and see for yourself how we are contributing to a vibrant and dynamic Nevada County.

[Addendum – I have added a paragraph from the cover email she sent me.  It amplifies the words above.  gjr]

"… If the Measure C renewal is not passed by voters, we would either need approximately $2,000,000 from the County’s General Fund to continue to provide Library services at current levels, or would suffer cuts to library hours, services, and facilities that would be so severe that I get nightmares just thinking about it. Our County libraries are well-loved and well-used by people across socio-economic and political lines, so I’m hoping I will find widespread support from the community."

 

Posted in , ,

12 responses to “County Library Needs Your Support”

  1. Gregory Avatar
    Gregory

    OK, it’s time for the latest installment of “vote for this tax or we kill the library”.
    Can we put county employee salary and retirement funding on separate funding mechanisms, too?

    Like

  2. Russ Steele Avatar

    I think it is time too take a hard look at rural libraries like ours, before we invest anymore taxes. The number of books and videos being checked out in rural libraries is dropping, while the number of people going online at the library is increasing. Our Library now has a Tech Center with lots of computer terminals and broadband access for iPads and laptops, but the access is limited to library hours. Hour that do not fit with many community needs.
    Sierra Economics and Science Foundation looked into using the Library for some technical seminars for students in the evening and on weekends, however, the Tech Center was not open. A valuable community resource is often just sitting there in the dark.
    I think the Library could become a “learning hub” for “massive open online courses” (MOOCs). Create some more classrooms, beyond the Community Room which is always booked, and some lab space offering regular technical training courses. Partner with Curious Forge and Maker organization in Grass Valley. Team with Coursera to provide test proctoring.
    One of the downsides of MOOCs is the lack of interaction with other students in online courses. In addition to making the computers, 3-D printers, and labs available to MOOC students, providing an area for social gatherings to discuss topics and share online education experiences would be a real educational asset. Coffee bar would be nice.
    Evening hours would be ideal for this MOOC activity, but the Library is not open in the later evening hours. That needs to change before I can support more taxes for a 20th Century library in the 21sd Century world.

    Like

  3. Todd Juvinall Avatar

    They have plenty of money. It is all about priority.

    Like

  4. Joe Koyote Avatar
    Joe Koyote

    I think a public tech center, as Russ suggests, is a great idea. Like it or not, print is the equivalent of stereo cassette tapes or sooner rather than later CDs despite the fact that good old vinyl is still the best quality. Recent studies at UCLA have discovered that the brain uses different areas to process video than print and that retention seemed to be better with the print group than with the video group (both were given the same information with different delivery systems). Be that as it may, our planet’s plunge into the digital world will not be denied. Therefore, a tech center would be a valuable tool especially for those without the financial means to acquire their own technology.

    Like

  5. JeffPelline Avatar
    JeffPelline

    “They have plenty of money. It is all about priority.
    Posted by: Todd Juvinall | 29 January 2015 at 02:02 PM”
    Same goes for you, pal. So why not pay your long overdue property taxes?

    Like

  6. Todd Juvinall Avatar

    I see those chili fries are affecting your noggin again Pelline. Give them up. ROTFLMAO!

    Like

  7. JeffPelline Avatar
    JeffPelline

    No, just observing your behavior.

    Like

  8. Gregory Avatar
    Gregory

    Jeff Pelline, tax collection in Nevada County is by law, not browbeating by a self appointed posse.
    How painful it must be to be you.

    Like

  9. fish Avatar
    fish

    One of the downsides of MOOCs is the lack of interaction with other students in online courses. In addition to making the computers, 3-D printers, and labs available to MOOC students, providing an area for social gatherings to discuss topics and share online education experiences would be a real educational asset. Coffee bar would be nice.
    ….lack of interaction? Presumably the internet available would be fast enough to allow Skype (or whatever the latest flavor of the month for face to face communication is), texting, course or subject based chat rooms…..!
    I don’t think a lack of interaction with other students is the stumbling block it once was! Labs are problematic too….you’re starting to encroach onto community college territory now! Liability concerns unless they are “properly” staffed….a run of the mill docent would be lawsuit bait!
    I think the biggest hurdle will be getting the hours right so the facility has the greatest accessibility.
    Coffee bar?

    Like

  10. joe smith Avatar
    joe smith

    The concept of lending libraries has been around since the late 1500’s. This was long before media was available to a wide swath of society. Today, with radio, television and the internet, libraries have an identity crises. Mission creep has morphed lending libraries into de-facto homeless shelters, pre-school gathering areas, low rent museums of art, and inexpensive venues for NGO’s to show case their causes via posters, exhibits and lectures. Like any government institution, libraries need to be examined for their value. Free public Wi-Fi hot spots disseminated throughout the community might better approach the 15th century model of a lending library in this 21st century.

    Like

  11. Brad C. Avatar
    Brad C.

    Fish, I like the idea of a coffee bar in a library (possible income stream?). Borders in Roseville was like that. I would see lots of folks perusing books and magazines in Borders coffee lounge. Maybe that is why they went out of business – people were just reading the mags over coffee and not purchasing them.
    The Doris Foley Library is a neat old library in downtown Nevada City and would make a cool community center/ coffee bar/ library – if only we had more room for all the documents currently housed there – could probably scan them all to disk to free up some space.

    Like

  12. fish Avatar
    fish

    Posted by: Brad C. | 30 January 2015 at 09:46 AM
    Brad, the coffee bar comment was more in jest than in earnest. It’s probably not a bad idea.

    Like

Leave a comment