Wednesday, August 28, 2019

Sunday, August 25, 2019

Admin and Collection Services find new home

It's official. Library staff working in administration and collection services will create a new home on south Sheridan in the building currently used by Shalom Center for its food pantry. Shalom will break ground shortly to construct an addition on the shelter on 39th Ave that will house the new pantry.
One CS and Admin are settled in, we'll be configuring space to relocate Outreach Services to the same location. The layout of the 12,000 square foot building includes tall garage bays and enough room to comfortably house both the bookmobile, the book truck, and a tall book van we'll be purchasing this year. It will take some time to design and construct the bookmobile platform at the new location, but we hope to transition by next summer.
The large garage on the building also allows us to move the donations and weeded books out of branch garages and into one storage area. Friends of the Library will have the option to hold one large public sale annually at the Sheridan location. Maintenance will also have room to store seasonal equipment like mowers and plows. Empty library garages mean more space for YFS storage and inside parking for our maintenance vehicles. Empty Outreach offices at Northside mean the crowded NS staff can spread out and offer more study rooms for the public.
We hope to make the move by the end of the year.
CNS is happily moving into the lower level at Simmons where they will have the best data connection for our server equipment.
We'll keep you posted as we make progress.
Barb




Interesting news for public libraries

Wall Street Journal "Library e-book lending poses rising problem for publishing industry" 
Interesting headline aside, Macmillan plans to change the way it sells e-books to libraries by limiting each library system to only one digital copy of each new book it publishes in the first eight weeks of the book’s release – the delay, known in publishing circles as “windowing,” is intended to boost the sale of new books by pushing readers to buy the book instead of dealing with long waiting periods that are likely to develop if libraries have only one digital copy. See also ALA's e-books landing page for more information about these developments and sample messages for an #eBooksForAllcampaign on social media.

GeekWire “University of Washington lands $5 million to study fake news and misinformation” 
The University of Washington announced a $5 million investment from the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation that will fund a new Center for an Informed Public to study “how and why fake news, misinformation, and disinformation are created” – the Center will live at the UW Information School and is scheduled to open in the fall of 2019.

Friday, August 16, 2019

News for the Week

Thanks to everyone for your generous and enthusiastic send off for Jill. What a lovely way to send off our friend toward the next phase of a long and happy life. She will be missed!

Do you know we've switched our WE Energies consumption to wind power? KPL's energy footprint just went renewable. One more way we're contributing to the health and sustainability of our community.

We're in the thick of budget season, which means we're finalizing KPL's operating budget, capital budget, and the county library systems's budget. Next steps are meetings with city administration to discuss our needs and plans for 2020. Budgets will continue to be scrutinized until late October when the approval process moves to Common Council and the County Board of Supervisors.

Happening Next Week:

  • Northside parking lot repaved Monday and Tuesday
  • KPD discussion with staff regarding incidents Northside Tuesday 9am (remember to park on the street or in the Pig parking lot)
  • Architect Friday 1pm @CCB
Have a terrific weekend, everyone!

Thursday, August 1, 2019

New Mythbuster Segment

Sometimes we get questions from patrons that make me realize there are some common myths that cause confusion, and sometimes undue blame. For instance, we periodically get questions (or pushback) about events scheduled in library park. We don't have jurisdiction over Library Park, even though Simmons sits in the middle. If the grass isn't mowed on time for a public event, or if a controversial demonstration is held in the park, people are quick to complain to us. So I'll be including a new short segment in our weekly newsletters titles Mythbusters. I thought KPL staff would appreciate the same "internal mythbuster" Q&A.

So here's a couple short mythbusters for you.

1. Myth: The Library owns Library Park
The library doesn't own any real estate and under Wisconsin law, we can't. The city owns our buildings and our grounds and we are a city department. The understanding between us is that the library will maintain the buildings and grounds where the library sits. That includes parking lots and lawns around library buildings. Library Park is owned by the city and the parks department decides who can use the park for events. We take care of the snow out to the first perimeter sidewalk and we mow all the grass simply because the parks dept doesn't keep up with it and its embarrassing. We also tend the bushes and gardens near the terrace. Parks takes care of tree issues and lighting further away than the parking lot and terrace areas. So we share responsibility for upkeep of library park.
Here are more details:

  • The park at the end of the SW parking lot is a city park. If patrons are banned from library premises, they can be in that park.
  • The access roads around Northside behind the library parking lot and between the library and Piggly Wiggly do not belong to the city. The new stop sign at the back of the Northside parking lot is a warning. If people don't stop, the police can't enforce it. It isn't technically a city road. 
  • Sidewalk and curb strips are city maintained.
2. Myth: KPL has authority over Community Library 
You will hear people often refer to KPL as the Kenosha Public Library System. Typically libraries with multiple branches are referred to as systems, but in Wisconsin, a system means something different. Library systems were set up by the state back in the 1970s in order to provide technology, delivery, ILL, and reference support to all libraries, large and small. It was an attempt at equalization of services, and the structure still exists today. There are 17 systems in Wisconsin, many of them serving a very wide multi-county district. Kenosha County has its own one-county system and Community Library and Kenosha Public Library are its only members. The money for the services provided by the system comes from Kenosha County and the state and buys things like our Overdrive electronic books and the internet lines that feed our libraries. Since KPL is the larger of the two libraries, we serve as the system's Resource Library, meaning we agree to provide the reference and ILL support to CL which doesn't have as many trained librarians on staff. Michelle advises CL on HR matters, and I help advise on legal and financial issues. We purchase training for both libraries. We also arrange for delivery services for all the system locations, prepare budgets, keep our system board, appointed by the County Executive, informed, and calculate reimbursements for service to libraries in Racine and Walworth counties. There's a bunch of planning and state reporting involved. This is much more responsibility than most Resource Libraries. In fact, KPL serves as the administration for the county system and I serve as the system's director in addition to my position as the KPL director.
That's where our legal relationship with Community Library ends. CL is independently funded by four municipalities: Salem Lakes, Twin Lakes, Randall, and Paddock Lake. It's called a joint library. They have their own board, their own budget, and make their own decisions.

So this hopefully clarifies two very confusing questions. If you have other questions you'd like me to clarify, please send them my way and I'll highlight the answer in a future edition of the KPL Staff News.
Enjoy the beautiful weekend. See you at Tall ships!
Barb
Barb







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