Message to the community from Luren E. Dickinson:
Battles over state budgets have
been raging across the country and broke out last month in Ohio as the 129th
General Assembly began to grapple with its own budget deficit. At the top of
the list of concerns for librarians and library users is the status of the
Public Library Fund (PLF) and what will happen to it for the two-year period
beginning July 1, 2011.
The PLF replaced the Library and
Local Government Support Fund (LLGSF) in 2008.
The LLGSF was derived from a percentage of the individual state income
tax, whereas the PLF is derived from a percentage of the state’s general
revenue (the major portions of which are the sales tax and income tax). With weakness in the Ohio job market, it was
thought that the PLF might be a more stable funding source, but the overall
depressed economy has proven otherwise.
Shaker Library received 2% less in
2008 through the PLF than in 2007 through the LLGSF. The amount received in 2009 was 19% less than 2007 and the amount
received in 2010 was 24% lower than in 2007.
Actual dollars received from the state were virtually the same in 2010
as they were in 1993. During that time
period, inflation has risen 51% and the state budget has risen 67%!
The good news is that there are
some indications that the economy may be improving, but the worry is that the
need to reduce state expenditures will force legislators to cut library funding
further. The Library would appreciate your support! Please help us express our
need for stable state funding for public libraries. I have included a sample letter along with contact information for
State Representative Armond Budish and State Senator Nina Turner. Thank you for
raising your voice FOR stable library funding.
Representative
Budish: 614-466-5441 or district08@ohr.state.oh.us
Senator
Turner: 614-466-4583 or senatorturner@maild.sen.state.oh.us.
Despite the loss of state funding
and the threats of future reductions we are thankful for the sustained support
from our local taxpayers. If not for
that, we would have had to make even more drastic cuts in staffing, materials,
programs, and services.
We extend our thanks to our
faithful Friends who support us in many ways. Last month, they collaborated
with the Shaker Historical Society and shared the expenses of bringing in New
York author and historian, Anita Sanchez, who spoke at both the Historical
Society and the library.
We will celebrate our own March
Madness at 7 p.m. Wednesday, March 2, at Bertram Woods Branch, when PD
sportswriter Dan Coughlin, author of Crazy, With the Papers to Prove It, speaks
about the many memorable sports characters he has known in his 45 years
covering the Cleveland sports scene. Poetry in the Woods continues at Bertram
Woods with the Butcher Shop poets: Robert McDonough, Maril Nowak, P.K.
Saha, Jane N. Richmond, Suzanne Byerley, Keith Seher, Genevieve Jencson, Jack
McGuane, Jesse McGuiness, Evelyn Mavromichalis, Robert Lawry, and Rob Farmer.
Thanks to MyCom grant funds, teens
can take advantage of three interesting programs. March 7, 8, 9, 14 & 15,
they can design their own video games; March 23 in the Teen Center, they can
design their own jewelry, and March 31 they can make a duct tape beach bag at
Woods Branch. For children we will hold an American Girl Tea Party (Dolls are
optional.) at 3 p.m. Saturday, March 19, at Woods Branch.
If art is your interest, the library
will accept entries for the 12th Annual Barbara Luton Art
Competition from 3 to 5 p.m. Friday, March 4, and from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m.
Saturday, March 5, at the Main Library. Jurors for this year’s exhibit are Denise Stewart and
Leslie Edwards Huméz. Awards will be presented at the Gallery-Opening reception
from 2 to 4 p.m. on Sunday, March 27, and the exhibit will continue through
April 22.
Luren E. Dickinson, Director
dickinson@shakerlibrary.org