New Friday Notes:
notes for next week
The life
so short, the craft so long to learn
Merry
Christmas, Happy Hanukkah, Boxing Day & Kwanzaa
From
"the staff" Eunice, Ken & Denise
Reminder December 22 is
the first day of winter.
ANNOUNCEMENTS:
Critical Connectors
During
emergencies, citizens and even some disaster workers depend on
libraries for Internet connections to the world.
They
don’t pilot boats down hurricane-flooded streets or pull people
from second-story windows. Nor do they wear uniforms, carry
firearms or direct emergency vehicles. But library employees have
been first responders nevertheless. People in coastal states who
lost their homes to the wind and water of hurricanes Katrina and
Rita flocked to public computers housed in libraries. They filed
insurance claims, connected with the Federal Emergency Management
Agency, contacted family members and found out via the Internet
what was happening in the communities they’d had to flee.
”For
most people in the community, a public library represents a safe
place,” says Sharman Smith, executive director of the
Mississippi Library Commission. And that’s literally true.
Libraries usually are housed in solid, well-constructed
buildings, less likely than some other structures to be affected
by Mother Nature. And virtually everyone in the community knows
where they are. Moreover, a whopping 70 percent of library
computer users depend on libraries as their primary access to the
electronic world. So it’s not surprising that libraries are a
natural place citizens turn to during a local emergency.
But
while library personnel have, in effect, become de facto first
responders, they don’t get any additional help to do the job.
Recognition of this additional community role that libraries play
— beyond books and reading rooms — seems to be missing.
Nearly half of U.S. public libraries either lost funding or
received no additional funding in 2006, according to “Public
Libraries and the Internet 2006,” a recently released report
funded by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. Despite that
discouraging fiscal trend, “public libraries,” says John
Carlo Bertot, a professor at Florida State University and
co-author of the 2006 report, “are taking on additional roles
at their own expense.”
One of
those roles is as advisers. Last year, for instance, many seniors
flummoxed by the complexity of Medicare Part D flocked to
libraries to sit at a computer, pull up Medicare Part D
information and ask library employees for help. Even those who
had computers at home were turning up at libraries for assistance
in filling out online forms, picking plans and answering
questions. “Where else are people going to go for help?”
Bertot asks. “It’s not like other government agencies open up
their building and say, ’On the first floor, we have a lab and
someone there to answer questions.’ The rubber is hitting the
road somewhere and it’s the public library.”
Nor do
libraries get much recognition for providing technological aid
and assistance to disaster workers. During a local emergency in
Florida, a bookmobile with wireless access was commandeered by
local emergency workers: They didn’t have their own wireless
vehicle and needed to make contact with resources.
In
Pasco County, Florida, library staff are literally emergency
responders. They organize and run the resident information center
that gets activated during storms. They share a room in the
emergency management office, which has phone banks and computers,
taking calls from residents if the volume of those calls
overwhelms emergency services personnel.
Library
staff give callers timely information and referrals, such as
where they can get water and ice, which hotels are pet friendly,
whether there will be an evacuation, where the sandbags are
available. It was the library staff that developed a database for
this purpose, and it is updated from storm to storm. “We have
at our fingertips as much information as possible to give to
people on a timely basis when they’re in a stressful situation,
says Stephen Kershner, assistant libraries director for public
services with the Pasco County Library System.
It’s
a natural fit for library workers who are used to answering
questions and giving information and customer service. The only
unnatural part: The staff has no emergency training.
If
governments are relying on library staffs to be purveyors of
e-government and to engage in disaster-relief efforts, they
should include library personnel in emergency planning
conversations and exercises — to say nothing of offering
courses in how to prepare for their roles in a disaster. “We’re
trained to be information professionals,” Bertot says. “We’re
not trained as first responders.”
©
2006, Congressional Quarterly, Inc. Reproduction in any form
without the written permission of the publisher is prohibited.
Governing,
City & State
and Governing.com are registered trademarks of Congressional
Quarterly, Inc. FROM: http://www.governing.com/articles/12talk.htm
Check out the NEILSA main page at: http://neilsa.org
THE LSA:
NEILSA closed
dates: 12/25 & 26, 1/1/2007
Consortia members
had best check the Consortia Blog at: http://www.neilsa.org/cblog/index.cfm
Next year will be to late
AIR books are all in and ready for your
groups to schedulecall or email Denise at the LSA.
"Cars" at the James Kennedy
Public Library
FROM: NEILSA Announcements
Looking for something to do over the Christmas
break? Why not bring your family to the James Kennedy Public
Library in Dyersville on Saturday, December 30, 2006 to see
"Cars". This wonderful animated film will be shown at
2:00 pm in the Hoffman Community Room using the large screen,
projector and surround sound. Popcorn and punch will be
provided. This free event is sponsored by the Friends of the
Library.
IN case you missed it.
LIBRARY ASSISTANT: Northeast Iowa
Library Service Area. Full-Time salaried position, 40 hrs/wk.
Salary: $17,000 to $21,000, depending on experience, with
benefits including health/dental insurance.
For job description/application visit:
http://www.neilsa.org/searchcomm/index.html
MINIMUM QUALIFICATIONS:
- Legal
resident of Iowa with valid Iowa drivers license,
- Ability
to lift and move 50 pound packages;
- This
position requires significant computer use;
- Detail
work is major responsibility, bookkeeping
experience/training a strong asset, this is the single
most important job skill or personality trait for the
position;
- Propensity
for placing things in alphabetical and numerical order,
you have to love filing
- One year
paid full-time public contact work experience, public
library/teaching experience a plus.
DUTIES: In conjunction with other
agency personnel, answer phones; assist Library Consultant in
day-to-day operations. 6 hours a week are on the road making
deliveries. About 30 hours a week are involved with significant
detail work including, filing, organizing, tracking and assisting
people on the phone or via e-mail/IM.
Application package on line at http://www.neilsa.org/searchcomm/index.html
Skill & knowledge tests may be required.
Deadline: Until filled.
Application forms received before Jan 12,
2007 will be given highest priority.
An Equal Opportunity Employer.
Application
package on line.
Your application
must contain the following elements:
NEILSA Application
– 4 pages
Resume – 1 or 2
pages
Cover letter
outlining strong points as related to duties in the posted job
description – one sheet
NOTE:
Incomplete applications will not be considered.
Mail
Application to:
NEILSA – System
Support I
415 Commercial St
Waterloo, IA50701-1317
CE
Dates for the PLOW class, Getting Your Web Site
Started.
| Date |
Location |
| January 9 |
Des
Moines |
| January 10 |
Des
Moines |
| January 17 |
Waterloo |
| January 18 |
Fayette |
| January 19 |
Fayette |
| January 22 |
Waterloo |
| January 23 |
Council
Bluffs |
| January 24 |
Kalona |
| January 25 |
Marshalltown |
| January 26 |
Ottumwa |
| January 29 |
Cedar
Rapids |
| January 30 |
Storm
Lake |
| January 31 |
Storm
Lake |
| February 1 |
DeWitt |
| February 2 |
Burlington |
| February 5 |
Cedar
Rapids |
| February 6 |
Sioux
City |
| February 12 |
Carroll |
| February 13 |
Clear
Lake |
| February 14 |
Clear
Lake |
| February 19 |
Creston |
| February 20 |
Fort
Dodge |
| February 22 |
Emmettsburg |
| February 23 |
Emmettsburg |
| February 27 |
Dubuque |
| February 28 |
Spencer |
| March 1 |
Sheldon |
| March 2 |
Sheldon |
UW-Madison SLIS, Continuing Education Services announces their
Winter/Spring 2007 Online Courses. Complete course information
and registration instructions may be found on their website, http://www.slis.wisc.edu/continueed
Questions? Contact Anna Palmer (ahpalmer@wisc.edu) or
608-263-4452
Parents of Literacy Partners - Overview March
19 & 26, 2007 -- Locations & Fee TBD
Parents are critical to children's readiness for reading,
learning, and school. Public librarians have a key role in
helping parents learn how to help their children prepare. Mary
Cameron will take participants through an overview of a
parent-training model that librarians can use with teachers to
train parents on early literacy strategies. A more detailed
training will be scheduled for those making a commitmentto
participate in the project at a later date.
Grow Your Own @ your library grants PLA is
now accepting applications for its popular Grow Your Own @ your
library institutional scholarship. This year, PLA will award nine
public libraries with grants of $8,000 each to be distributed to
staff members who are working to obtain a master's degree in
library and information science. One library from each of the
nine Public Library Data Service (PLDS) population categories
will be selected....
Great CE delivered right to your desktop!
Registration for YALSA's fall session of e-courses opened Aug.
21st. The session will run from Oct. 2-30. The courses are meant
to be the equivalent of a full day workshop. The cost is $135 for
YALSA members, $175 for ALA members, and $195 for non members. To
register go to www.ala.org/yalsa.
Three courses will be offered, full discriptions in New Friday
Notes of 08/25/2006:
PLA announces new start dates for e-learning courses
E-Learning @ PLA, the online education program of the Public
Library Association, will offer five new start dates for two of
its popular courses. New Planning for Results and Creating
Policies for Results will each be offered five times between
September 2006 and April 2007....
OPAL: Online Programming for All Libraries--And All Library
Users NEW: Streaming Audio Preview of OPAL online events coming
in July (playback time: 6 minutes) NEW: Streaming Video
Introduction to OPAL (Windows Media Video file; playback time 2
minutes, 39 seconds) FROM: http://www.opal-online.org/
STUFF:
Innovative
reading idea grabs attention Dangling around
students’ necks at the West Hernando Middle School cafeteria in
Brooksville, Florida, are book titles. Katelyn McDow, 11, was
advertising Can You Feel the Thunder? while her friend
Cynthia McDowell sported The Lion, the Witch and the
Wardrobe. Reading teacher Kathy Eppley asked students and
adults to wear cards around their necks with the titles of the
books they’re reading. National reading experts are vowing to
steal the idea.... St. Petersburg
(Fla.) Times, Dec. 1
Felines
fail to qualify for top cat position A
Dallas-area CPA’s offer to give the Spencer (Iowa) Public
Library a new cat has been turned down by Librarian Vicki Myron,
who says she has also turned down more than 100 other offers from
all over the country. Since longtime library kitty Dewey Readmore
Books died in November, Myron says she has had more than 500
e-mailed messages of condolence.... Sioux City
(Iowa) Journal, Dec. 17
Financially
strapped library sets fines, cuts staff With the
failure of two library millage proposals in 2006, Lapeer (Mich.)
District Library customers will find five fewer branches, books,
hours, and employees in 2007, Director Kate Pohjola said. And for
the first time in the library district’s history, there will be
fines for overdue books and materials. The cuts also involve
laying off 33 part-time employees, reducing hours for 15
full-time employees, and closing five branches (including the
Goodland branch, above) January 1.... Flint (Mich.)
Journal, Dec. 19
Glitch
releases library user data As Chris
VanOosterhout updated his account with the Hackley Public Library
in Muskegon, Michigan, this week, he stumbled upon the personal
information of more than 15,000 western Michigan library users.
Officials with the Lakeland Library Cooperative—a service used
by about 80 libraries in eight counties—say they have secured
the data that included names, phone numbers, e-mail addresses,
street addresses, and library card numbers of library patrons
registered on its website.... Grand Rapids
(Mich.) Press, Dec. 20
Free
Library of Philadelphia partners to help the homeless A group
that helps homeless people get back on their feet is posting
once-homeless “attendants” in the restrooms of a downtown
library in an effort to help manage the masses who flock there
looking for shelter or a bathroom. Project HOME and the Free
Library of Philadelphia hope the project, which started in
mid-December, will prevent loitering and unsanitary conditions.
But they also see the six-month pilot as a unique way to reach
out to the homeless.... Associated Press,
Dec. 15
Vermont
librarian a youthful 85 Marybelle Mason
Singer has been director of the Alburgh (Vt.) Public Library for
the past 15 years, and at 85 she has no intention of quitting.
But there has been nothing more unusual than the way this
granddaughter of the first white child born in Abilene, Kansas,
has, without seeming to expend any energy, made the library of
this town (renamed Alburgh from Alburg last April) into a
thriving community center.... Worcester
(Mass.) Telegram and Gazette, Dec. 17
Cow
stars in ad filmed at Aurora University library A
commercial for Oberweis Dairy was shot at Aurora (Ill.)
University December 18 because the remodeled library offered more
room for 1,700-pound Bridget the Cow and a film crew than
corporate headquarters. Outside the reference room, librarians
and a handful of students ruminated over their work as usual....
Naperville (Ill.) Sun, Dec. 20
Australian
library offers speed-dating A 150-year old
Australian public library has a new true-romance section after
introducing speed-dating nights for lovers of classic texts. The
State Library of Victoria in Melbourne introduced dating with a
literary twist after the idea was raised at a staff party. Those
who attend must bring a book they either love or loathe as a
conversation starter, ensuring there are no uneasy silences
during the series of five-minute encounters.... Reuters,
Dec. 20
Trawling
for patrons in Gloucestershire pubs
Gloucestershire County Council’s library service hopes to
convert UK binge drinkers into bookworms by handing out 20,000
beer mats in pubs across the county. The coasters give the Oxford
English Dictionary definition of lager lout, “noun,
a rowdy or aggressive male,” and read, “Fill your head with
something you’ll remember tomorrow.” On the reverse of the
mat is a picture of a man flipping the top of his head open and
pouring in a bottle of lager.... London Times,
Dec. 14
Google
Library Project triggers debate Already facing a
legal challenge for alleged copyright infringement, Google’s
crusade to build a digital library has triggered a philosophical
debate with an alternative project promising better online access
to the world’s books, art, and historical documents. The latest
tensions revolve around Google’s insistence on chaining the
digital content to its internet-leading search engine and the
nine major libraries that have aligned themselves with the
Mountain View-based company....
Associated Press,
Dec. 20
One-stop
book printer After several years
in development, the Espresso—a $50,000 vending machine with a
conceivably infinite library—is nearly consumer-ready and will
debut in 10–25 libraries and bookstores in 2007. The New York
Public Library is scheduled to receive its machine in February.
The machine, built by On Demand Books, can print, align, mill,
glue, and bind two books simultaneously in less than seven
minutes, including full-color laminated covers. Prices for the
finished product will vary depending on locations, but the
production cost is about a penny per page. Watch a video of the
machine in action.... Fortune Small
Business magazine, Dec. 14
A
guide to anonymous blogging
Ethan Zuckerman offers some advice on security measures for
hiding your blog-contribution identity online: “I decided to
write a quick technical guide to anonymous blogging, trying to
approach the problem from the perspective of a government
whistle-blower in a country with a less-than-transparent
government.”... TechSoup blog, Dec.
15
LC
launches RSS feeds
The Library of Congress launched December 18 a series of news
feeds using RSS technology. The feeds offer updates on LC news,
upcoming events, new on the web, new webcasts, news from the John
W. Kluge Center, and what’s new in science reference.... Library of
Congress, Dec. 18
Report
on RFID meeting in Washington OITP Technology
Policy Analyst Mark Bard attended a December 14 roundtable hosted
by the Congressional Internet Caucus Advisory Committee that
focused on RFID chips for use in passports and driver’s
licenses and offers a brief summary of the discussion. Audio is
available on the committee’s website.... District Dispatch
blog, Dec. 14
Libraries
as sanctuaries for criminals? (PDF file) “In
October, several Illinois libraries received FOIA requests for
incident reports and records concerning patron and staff
complaints about crimes and disturbing behavior taking place in
the library,” writes Illinois Library Association Executive
Director Robert Doyle. “ILA recommended that libraries seek
legal advice in complying.” This article is in response to
those developments.... ILA Reporter
24, no. 6 (Dec.), pp. 12–17
YouTube
opens an untamed copyright frontier Larry
Richard is one of the millions to have discovered the world of
YouTube, the free website that allows people to post, watch, and
share video clips. But is it legal, given that at least some of
what he’s watching is copyrighted material being disseminated
by individuals who clearly do not hold the copyright? The law on
this matter is murky and likely to get murkier before it gets
clearer, say experts in intellectual property law....
Christian Science Monitor, Dec. 18
DoE
wants LSL proposal reviewers The U.S. Department
of Education is in the planning stages for a possible 2007
funding competition for the Improving Literacy through School
Libraries (LSL) program, and there is a need for proposal
reviewers to assist with the peer review process. As many as 700
applications are expected this year. The program will be using
the U.S. Department of Education’s e-Reader
system. Reviewers will be
sent hard copies of proposals to discuss with fellow peer
reviewers during conference calls.... ALA Washington
Office, Dec. 20
Happy
birthday, Bill of Rights! The Bill of Rights
to the U.S. Constitution was ratified on December 15, 1791. “The
very purpose of a Bill of Rights was to withdraw certain subjects
from the vicissitudes of political controversy, to place them
beyond the reach of majorities and officials and to establish
them as legal principles to be applied by the courts. One’s
right to life, liberty, and property, to free speech, a free
press, freedom of worship and assembly, and other fundamental
rights may not be submitted to vote; they depend on the outcome
of no elections.”—Supreme Court Justice Robert
Jackson.... Don Wood’s
Library 2.0 blog, Dec. 15
Mozart
catalog available online Mozart maniacs,
enthusiasts, students, and scholars can now access the immortal
composer’s entire catalog through a free online database, launched
December 11, which contains more than 8,000 pages of critical
commentary published since 1954. Ulrich Leisinger, head of
research at the International Mozart Foundation in Salzburg,
Austria, said site users can search for a specific work using key
words and a scroll-down menu. They also have the option of
printing out individual movements.... Associated Press,
Dec. 13
Polar
Express pulls into San Francisco The
electric train layout featuring the Polar Express and Thomas the
Tank Engine trains has been a hit this winter with visitors to
San Francisco’s Main Library. Kids and adults delight in
pushing the buttons that activate the trains, a ski gondola,
animated sledders, and the village lights. A Lionel O scale
replica of the Polar Express, which starred in Chris Van Allsburg’s
1985 holiday classic and in a subsequent 2004 movie adaptation of
the same name, is the highlight of the display.... San
Francisco Public Library, Dec. 12
Google
Patent Search Google’s new
search engine for patents, launched December 13, covers the
entire collection of patents made available by the U.S. Patent
and Trademark Office, from the 1790s to the present. The company
has converted the entire patent image database into a format,
like Google Book Search, that on its advanced page is easy to
search by details, classification, inventor, assignee, or
date.... Google
Search
for a library Marshall Breeding’s
worldwide directory of libraries and their websites and catalogs,
lib-web-cats, now has an advanced
search engine designed to help
identify libraries according to the library automation system
used, collection size, and affiliations.... Marshall Breeding
IFLA
approves new code of ethics The governing board
of the International Federation of Library Associations and
Institutions approved a Code of Ethics in December that outlines
a set of fundamental principles in order to help the board define
what is right, fair, just, and good for the organization in
meeting its mission and purpose.... International
Federation of Library Associations and Institutions, Dec. 18
REPEATS:
County Library
Association Presidents/Chairs PLEASE send Ken a list of your meetings for 2007 and any
spcial activities in which you will be participating, such as
county fair, Supervisors Round Robin, Legislative Days et. al.
Reminder: as libraries move to new email
addresses with the PLOW project, they need to let NEILSA know of
the change
VAN Service:
AEA 267 last delivery date will be Thursday
& Friday, December 21 & 22, 2006. They will resume
delivery on Thursday & Friday, January 4 & 5, 2007.
AEA 1 last delivery date will be Monday
& Tuesday, December 18 & 19, 2006. They will resume
deliver on Thursday & Friday, January 4 & 5, 2007
Dear Friends of
North-eastern Iowa Libraries,
Greetings from the Friends of the Decorah
Public Library. We have for some time thought that we all should
be sharing more ideas of what good things we are doing and
examples we might take from each other that could strengthen our
various endeavours. While there are many activities that we have
done over the past several years one production we would be
willing to share that we are excited about and has proven helpful
to our work is a power point program that we have developed to
present both the work of our Library and our Friends group to the
community at various groups and clubs. If you would be interested
to see our presentation as a possible model which you might
develop for your Library and community feel free to contact Lois
Roberts, 506 Mound Street Decorah, IA 52101 or Lorraine Borowski,
Decorah Public Library
202 Winnebago Street, Decorah IA 52101.
Jim Dale Decorah Friends of the Library
Chair
Send us an e-photo of your library
[flicker it] to post on the NELISA web site, we would like to
promote every one of our libraries.
Whats New blog - this
is for your use and comments. Let us know what you have been up
to. New programs, old programs that worked well, announcements,
changes in personell, all the kinds of things that many of you
share at county association meetings when you do your Round Robin
sessions (some do some don't). The link: http://neilsa.org/weblogs/announcement.php
Send announcements to Eunice for inclusion/posting at: riesberg@neilsa.org
Model Trustee By-Laws are at: http://neilsa.org/consulting/boardbylaws.htm
The Independence
Public Library is in the midst of fundraising for their
new library building. Recently they were awarded with a
$550,000 grant from the CAT (Community Attraction and Tourism)
Board, which is part of Vision Iowa. The fundraising total has
just passed $2.5 million of the $3 million goal. The library
will start to go through the formal process that leads to bidding
and plans on breaking ground in the spring. The planned
completion for the new Independence Public Library, which will
give them six times the space they have now, is spring of '08!!
LINKS:
Learning Activity Written Summary: http://www.statelibraryofiowa.org/ld/continuing-ed/learnactform/?searchterm=Learning%20Activity
LSA web site: http://www.ilsa.lib.ia.us/siteindex.htm
NEILSA continuing education http://www.neilsa.org/classes/current.html
NEILSA e-rate Consortia Blog http://www.neilsa.org/cblog/index.cfm
NEILSA monthly calendar - http://www.neilsa.org/ncalendar/ncalendarmonth.cfm
NEILSA web site: http://neilsa.org
NEILSA yearly calendar - http://www.neilsa.org/ncalendar/ncalendar_results.cfm
NEILSA Friday Notes archives at: http://www.neilsa.org/fridays/friday.html
NWILSA Blog: http://nwilsblog.blogspot.com
State Calendar - http://www.silo.lib.ia.us/news/calendars/2005calendar.pdf
State Library CE web site at: http://www.silo.lib.ia.us/for-ia-libraries/continuing-ed/index.html
USAC (e-rate): http://www.sl.universalservice.org/
DUE DATES:
County Library Association Presidents/Chairs PLEASE send Ken a list of
your meetings for 2007 and any spcial activities in which you
will be participating, such as county fair, Supervisors Round
Robin, Legislative Days et. al.
- December 25 & 26 NEILSA Closed for Christmas
January 27th Fayette
CLA Legislative Day is Saturday, from 9:00-10:30
April 3 at Shell Rock, Benny
Gambiani Library Butler County Library Association Meeting
April 17 7:30 Sumner Bremer County
Meeting
April 19th Fayette
Spring Meeting is at 9:30 at the Arlington Public Library
June 21- 27 ALA 2007 Annual Conference in
Washington D.C.
September 19th
Fayette Fall Meeting is at the Clermont Public Library at
6:00 p.m
Oct. 2 at Allison Public
LibraryButler County Library Association Meeting
The State Library's calendar http://www.silo.lib.ia.us
Traffic Counter available on loan from the NEILSA
Experts agree that accurately counting patron traffic with a
people counter is the way you can make sound strategic
decisions. With help from a Sensource counter, your library can
easily evaluate staffing needs, hours and more. With hard data
you can be confident that your decisions are based on facts not
guesswork.
If you are interested in using the counter, contact Ken at
NEILSA to reserve a time slot. If you would like to learn more
about how you can use the readings from the counter to better
manage the library and to explain to Boards/City Councils your
staffing/use decisions we can arrange that at the same time.
The fine print stuff
blog - Friday Notes 2 AT - http://radio.weblogs.com/0108327/
EDITORS NOTES:
"x" & "xx" are catalogers shorthand for:
x = See & xx = See also
Edited by:
Ken Davenport - NEILSA Consultant davenport@neilsa.org
COPYLEFT NOTICE 2002:
THE INFORMATION IN THIS PUBLICATION IS FREE.
It may be copied, distributed and/or modified under the
conditions set down in the Design Science License published by
Michael A at http://dsl.org/copyleft/dsl.txt
COPYRIGHT
Please note: material found on the web should be assumed to be
under copyright and is presented here for purposes of education
and research only.
NOTE: If credited [via ???] or [from so & so] it is their
material and not covered by my "Copyleft" notice. Ken
LIBRARY SERVICE AREA BOARD Meeting
The public is encouraged and welcome to attend.
Next meeting Jan. 13, 2007 2:00 p.m., ICN (sites tba)
12:06:33 PM
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