Print

Print


DANGER: 1,000 LIBRARIES TO CLOSE

That's a full quarter of the total in England - all of them small

branches that cost peanuts to run, & are located where people need

them most.

 

HOW DO WE WORK OUT THIS FIGURE?

201 library service points were closed last year.

A further 336 are threatened with closure (to date) this year.

Arts Council England predicts a further cut of at least 40% by 2016.

 

WHY ISN'T THE GOVERNMENT TELLING YOU THIS?

These are figures you will not see on any official website or press

release. They are compiled by a librarian in his spare time* from

local press reports.

That's just one example of what is NOT being done by the bodies

responsible for public libraries - the government (DCMS, Department

for Culture, Media & Sport) and Arts Council England (ACE).

 

AND CLOSURES ARE NOT THE ONLY BAD NEWS

Many libraries have been dumped on to local communities, to run as

best they can.

Many more stay open under council control, but are losing books,

opening hours and skilled staff.

 

CRISIS? WHAT CRISIS?

Yet, say library campaigners, the government simply denies there is

any problem. It points to a handful of new library openings, as if

these compensate for mass closures and downgrading.

It ignores all evidence presented to it.

Even worse, it has powers to help - but chooses to do nothing.

 

WHAT'S REALLY HAPPENING

Many campaign groups and hundreds of reports in local media show that

the real situation is bleak. Check the website for yourself*.

For instance....

= Lincolnshire plans that 32 of its 45 libraries, plus an unspecified

number of mobile units, will either close or be passed on to

volunteers. That means losing 170 highly-trained staff (55 FTE) and

177 public access computers.

= Herefordshire decided to close ALL except its one central library -

and is now dealing with a huge outcry from the public.

These are only the latest to see their library service dismantled.

Mass closures have already taken place, from Newcastle to the Isle of

Wight, Gloucestershire to Brent. And about 3,000 professional

librarians have already lost their jobs.

QUOTE

Library campaigner Shirley Burnham says: 'The Minister, Ed Vaizey, was

vociferous in defence of  libraries when in Opposition. But he has

been frozen into inaction since coming into office.

'He and his officials are in denial, muttering "What crisis?" as

hundreds of libraries are closed, or the keys handed to volunteers -

with no support.'

QUOTE

The Library Campaign is the national group for library users.

Laura Swaffield, its chair, says: 'Library users have appealed time

and again to the minister to intervene against mass closures. He has a

legal duty to "superintend and improve" the service**. But he does

nothing.

'And he does nothing about libraries that stay open but now provide a

far worse service. Scotland and Wales have national minimum standards,

but not England.

'Finally, many communities are now trying to run their own libraries,

as the only way to save them. They get no national help or advice. Not

from the government, not from Arts Council England (ACE).'

At the recent Library Campaign conference in London, Jim Brooks of the

Little Chalfont volunteer-run library in Buckinghamshire reported that

130 volunteer groups have found their way to him, desperate for help.

Laura says: 'Jim is the only national resource giving advice. It's absurd!'

 

FUTURE? WHAT FUTURE?

Brian Ashley, who holds the libraries portfolio for ACE, admitted at

the Library Campaign meeting that libraries face a further 40% cut in

funding. But ACE has no shared plan to help local authorities manage

their resources - or focus on users' needs.At most risk are rural

areas and deprived urban areas. If a local library closes, travel to

another one is difficult and expensive. And few have the time, money

or skills to take it over themselves.

Yet libraries offer a lifeline to many people in need - especially to

those with no internet access, families with small children, those in

education and older people. Libraries are the last refuge of a

civilised society and cost next to nothing.

 

WHITEHALL FARCE

The government's refusal to intervene verges on the farcical. Bolton

campaigner, retired solicitor Geof Dron, says: 'The council did not

believe volunteer-run libraries would be sustainable, and simply

closed five libraries.

'Local campaigners and the Civic Trust asked the Minister to use his

legal powers (ii) to intervene. First his officials lost part of our

submission. Then they refused even to meet with us.

'The Minister, from the comfort of his Whitehall office, has refused

our request for an inquiry. He expresses no interest in the needs of

the young, the elderly and the disadvantaged of Bolton for literacy,

education and access to computers. He is not prepared even to talk to

us.'

WHAT'S MISSING?

At the same time, many libraries still under local authority control

have lost much of their bookstock, professional expertise and ethos as

cost-free, neutral places of study, reading for pleasure and access to

information (both physical and digital).  A multiplicity of

consultancy studies and official reports are gathering dust in

Whitehall.

What is missing, however, is any plan by government or its partners to

address the issues or to provide an iota of leadership.

This is despite pleas by the All Party Parliamentary Group, senior

politicians and the professional bodies that represent librarians.  As

a speaker at the recent Society of Chief Librarians' conference said,

the Minister 'needs to smell the coffee'.

WHAT'S NEEDED?

Campaigners say that much can - and should - be done to halt the

hollowing out or collapse of public libraries. Destroying libraries

signifies incompetence, not necessity.

Notably, a handful of local authorities are protecting or even

enhancing provision under the same economic constraints as others. The

DCMS ignores this evidence of best practice and refuses to contemplate

national standards for libraries, a postcode lottery of service

provision is inevitable. The minister (or ACE) should find out what

works, where and in what circumstances, and use his powers.

 

DIVIDENDS

Other countries are investing in libraries - from Australia and New

Zealand to China and South Korea.

A high quality public library service that serves the common good and

underpins the nation's literacy will, campaigners insist, reap

dividends for the national economy.

 

But only if those responsible for libraries take their heads out of the sand.

 

* www.publiclibrariesnews.com gives a daily breakdown of news reports,

and summaries by local authority area.

No official source does anything like this.

 

 

** The Public Libraries & Museums Act 1964 makes it a legal duty for

every council to provide a 'comprehensive and efficient' library

service. The Secretary of State at the DCMS has a legal duty to

'superintend and improve' this service - and legal powers to intervene

if council libraries are failing.

 

IF YOU WANT TO KNOW WHAT’S REALLY HAPPENING...

 

1. Laura Swaffield, 07914 491 145

Chair of The Library Campaign - the only national resource for library

users/campaigners.

www.librarycampaign.com (includes daily updated list of local campaign groups).

 

2. Public Libraries News

Unique daily breakdown of news reports, and summaries by local authority area.

www.publiclibrariesnews.com

 

3. Voices for the Library

Run by librarians, the only national website focused on promoting

librarians, libraries and explaining what they do.

http://voicesforthelibrary.org.uk

 

 

 

 

 

 

Frances Hendrix

Martin House Farm, Hilltop Lane, Whittle le Woods, Chorley, Lancs, PR6 7QR

Tel:  01257 274 833.   Mobile: 0777 55 888 03