Why does it HAVE to be the destination of choice? Why do you assume that
library issues are decreasing because we are doing something wrong? I'm
afraid I'm with Archibald MacLeish when he says:
"What is more important in a library than anything else - than everything
else - is the fact that it exists."
We've been enlightened enough for 150 years to understand that. What's
changed?
> Are issues the bee all and end all of what a 21st century library is all
> about
>
> The competition out there for reading material is quite severe, it is
> easy to go else where. How are we going to make libraries the
> destination of choice?
>
> Library staff have had the decisions for 150 years, and we are where we
> are?
> f
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: lis-pub-libs: UK Public Libraries
> [mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of Peter Hebdon
> Sent: 20 July 2007 15:00
> To: [log in to unmask]
> Subject: Re: Audio Visual Supplier Selection
>
> I have followed this thread with interest, and now have some questions:
>
> Some libraries may still have large staffing budgets but others have
> already made savings in this area and increased opening hours, so on
> what basis are these 'savings' going to be made.
>
> How can someone based somewhere in the country buy not just for 149
> library authorities but all their service points, without simply making
> us another branch of Borders or Waterstones, you can write as many
> profiles as you want it will never replace the knowledge and expertise
> of the people on the spot.
>
> Given that we are all trying to raise issues, what evidence that this
> centralised buying will increase issues?
> Experiments with fiction via 'Branching Out' do not appear conclusive in
> this area.
>
> I would suggest that the MLA and others should for once actually let
> the library staff, librarians etc decide for themselves how we will
> deliver our service to our communities, as many of the ideas come from
> people with little or no knowledge of how libraries work and interact
> with their communities.
>
> Peter Hebdon
> Senior Librarian, Fiction & Reader Development
>
> Wallsend Library
> Ferndale Road
> Wallsend
> NE28 7NB
>
> Tel: 0191 200 6968
> Fax: 0191 200 6967
> Email: [log in to unmask]
>
> Unless otherwise stated, opinions, conclusions and other information
> expressed in this message are personal and not those of North Tyneside
> Council
>
>
>
>
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