Report showcases how
libraries stay vital to their communities
Public Libraries: 4.18.2014
“Lives change @ your Library”
is the official theme for this year’s National Library Week. To kick off the
event, on Monday, April 14, the American Library Association (ALA) released its
“2014 State of America’s Libraries Report.” The 79-page report covers all
things “library,” including politics, technology, laws, and even architecture.
But maybe the most important
news – and a top priority of the ALA – is how libraries are transforming in
order to remain vital and integral to their communities. Many of today’s public
libraries are more than just warehouses of books and information. They are
focusing on how to serve and provide for the ever-changing needs of society.
Before the Affordable
Healthcare Act rolled out last fall, the federal government enlisted 17,000
public libraries across the country to help provide information to the public
concerning the new health insurance options. Librarians were instructed on how
to help patrons find the resources they needed to sign up for coverage. The
Westchester Library system in New York held meetings to explain the new laws to
small business owners.
Public libraries provide
assistance where it is needed in other ways as well. Public libraries in San
Francisco are serving their homeless population with an outreach program. The
staff is comprised of a psychiatric social worker (employed full-time) and five
peer counselors – who were all once homeless themselves. New York Public
Library branches in underserved neighborhoods have installed programs to combat
poverty and promote education by providing social and academic support to
at-risk children in grades 8 through 12. READ MORE !
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