When I started working in libraries (well over 30 years ago) my working
hours started when the library opened & finished when it shut. That was
'official' working hours, of course - in reality one had to start earlier to
make sure everything was ready, & finish later after tidying up etc. &
'closing time' meant just that - the doors were locked, but there could
still be people getting their books stamped. After a particularly busy
Saturday or late night it could take an hour after closing to file the
issue, shelve returned books, tidy the shelves, count the takings, etc. etc.
(& we would have change out of a fiver after a slap-up meal & a show) (fades
out mumbling 'when I were a lad...' & 'librarians today don't know when
they're well off ...')
& the point is, it's not just 'current practice' - things were ever thus.
-----Original Message-----
From: Chartered Library and Information Professionals
[mailto:[log in to unmask]]On Behalf Of Mark Perkins lists
Sent: 28 November 2006 10:56
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Re: Guardian Article on CILIP
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One reason I prefer public access computers to
A) prevent users logging time that passes library closing
B) have automatic warnings
C) autoshutdown 5 minutes prior to closing
For some reason users tend to prefer computers telling them it is closing
time rather than librarians - sign of the times ;(
I hope the librarians were paid for time after closing for securing
premises, but somehow I doubt it. Current(?) commercial practice in
supermarkets (supposedly our role models) is to pay staff up to closing,
then expect them to stay to secure tills, etc
Mark
- -----Original Message-----
From: Chartered Library and Information Professionals
[mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of David Allen
Sent: Monday, November 27, 2006 6:51 PM
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Re: Guardian Article on CILIP
Ralph Adam wrote:
>
> Unfortunately, 'was' should have read 'is'!
>
> I was in a Kent library on Saturday and that's exactly what happened -
> but the 'readers' objected loudly claiming they still had time left on
> their PCs. They refused to knuckle-down shouting that they expected
> higher-quality service from librarians!
>
And while we as devoted servants of the public can't mention such sordid
things - of course the Kent staff were a) professional librarians and b)
paid for the time they spend securing the premises after closing time.
Of course they were.
- --
David Allen
London
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