$2 Million Sought by March 24 for Charlotte Mecklenburg Library


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The movement grows to  save Charlotte Mecklenburg  libraries.

Hickory Grove Library rally announcement. Photo by Stephanie Williams


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By Beverly Goldberg

Frantic messages with hashtags of #cmlibrary and #2millioninoneweek are dotting the twitterverse about efforts to avert—or at least allay—sudden plans to close 12 branches of the Charlotte Mecklenburg (N.C.) Library and lay off 148 library workers April 3. The startling March 17 announcement was followed the next day by a library board meeting at which trustees revealed which of the library’s 24 locations were slated to be shuttered.

Among the libraries listed for closure are several that were recently renovated and a brand-new facility, the Hickory Hills branch, that opened earlier this year.

The sudden crisis stems from Mecklenburg County officials scrambling to close a $13.2-million budget gap for the current fiscal year by reducing funds already allocated to county departments; the library is being forced to return $2 million, or 6.3% of its current-year budget, only three months before the June 30 end of the fiscal year.

“I’m feeling kind of numb,” library Director Charles Brown told American Libraries about the massive cuts, which are the worst since the Great Depression when the library closed altogether. “To lose $2 million in the last quarter and to have only three months to absorb that is what has driven the layoffs, and the layoffs have driven the library closings,” he explained, adding that Mecklenburg County provides 88% of the library’s funding. The reduction comes on top of $4 million in reductions since January 2009 that the library board absorbed through salary and benefit concessions, cutting the collection budget, and “behind-the-scenes” operations, he said.

Brown went on to laud the staff’s dedication despite the crisis. “As you can imagine, many staff members are absolutely distraught, but a far larger number have really not missed a beat in terms of a very positive attitude and a commitment to a high degree of service to the community even in the face of all of this. That’s also been heartbreaking—in a different kind of way.”

Staff morale was bolstered, Brown said,  by Friends President Harriet Smith urging county residents to swiftly donate the needed $2 million prior to the library board’s March 18 approval of the cutback plan. Smith’s plea motivated board Chair Robin Branstrom to modify the language of employee termination notices by adding the hopeful phrase “unless circumstances change.” In addition to the online fundraising drive, donation boxes have been placed in every branch, and a grassroots Facebook page “$2 million in one week“ has been established.  Charlotte Mecklenburg’s Learning and Development Coordinator Lori Reed tweeted March 19 that more than $35,000 had been raised online as of 4 p.m. Eastern time.

Although the March 19 Charlotte Observer reported that Brown has indicated some library jobs and branches could be restored July 1 if the budget bounces back, the odds in favor of such a comeback seem slender. Mecklenburg County commissioners alerted library officials March 16 that there is an $85-million deficit projected for FY2011; if that becomes a reality, commissioners have indicated they would cut the library budget by another 50%, or $17.5 million. That scenario would leave only two facilities open—the Main Library and the children’s Imaginon Library.

American Libraries, Fri, 03/19/2010 - 13:36

Comments

What a horrible tragedy. I

What a horrible tragedy. I would like to hold on to hope and pray that the amount needed is raised but the article itself seems to convey that the possibilities of that happening are slim. I remember when one of the libraries In our vicinity was shut down, how traumatic it was. Yes I use the word traumatic. It was heart wrenching to see how the books were strewn about and I also knew that those that got to the other public libraries would be manhandled by people who didn’t know the value of them.

re: What a Horrible Tragedy

FYI, Charlotte Mecklenburg Library managed a partial one-year reprieve, although the community is currently looking to reinventing the library’s funding model.

See: http://americanlibrariesmagazine.org/content/public-library-funding-and-…

Closings are a sign of the times...

Charlotte has been in denial for several years and now the first hints of reality are creeping into this fantasyland of a city where banking has numbed the average public into thinking that the luxury days would keep going ad infinitem. 
Now, libraries and public parks are the easy targets to shudder, and the public, both affluent and not so affluent are getting a jolt when their favorite branches are being affected.  I say, shut down the main library, keep the costly but important Imaginon open, and close 6 branches instead of 12; and the six remaining open reduce hours by 1/3.   

Charlotte and other cities like it are in for a rude awakening and a rough couple of years ahead.  When I lived in PA, the state would always come in on a white horse and save the Philadelphia Library system at the last hour.  I don’t see that happening in NC, despite the current political party in office.  

We are on our own.  Parterning is the only solution that creates sustainability.  Partner with businesses, find solutions with volunteers, join with other county agencies.  Let’s go back to simpler times, when we had adequate facilities, not "architectural wonders" for libraries.  Let’s face it, we need some books, places to study, and lots of computing stations.  The glory days of "super libraries" are over.  Let’s get to work on building the next generation of libraries-community centers that are sustainable and practical.

We all feel your pain

It is truly unfortunate that the libraries are to be closed because of the lack of funds.  This actually is indicative to what most of are citizens are going through in these tough economic times.  Many families who seen their family income significantly reduced are forced to make decisions as to what are "got to haves"  such as food, shelter, transportation, utilities, and what things are "nice to haves" such as cable TV, cell phones, entertainment, going out to eat, etc.  While families are forced to cut back, government must also.  The libraries that are closing can always be "moth balled" and re-openned at a later time when finances come back so I do not view the closings as a loss of assets.  Of course nobody likes to see the library closest to them closed, there still are other facilities that those people can go.

At least our leadership is being fiscally responsible in stead of sticking their heads in the sand and over spending.

Good Luck in raising private donations.

Charlotte Homes

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