Last year leaders of the Lawrence Public Library were still lobbying for a new library building, larger staff size and a budget increase.
Now, during what’s shaping up to be one of the tightest city budgets in memory, library leaders are contemplating decreasing its collection size in an effort to make its building work better.
“We understand that we’re going to be in that building for the foreseeable future, but it is still the same inadequate building,” said Chris Burger, chair of the library’s board of directors. “We’re really going to start looking at reconfiguring the library space.”
City commissioners were briefed on library operations as part of city budget hearings on Wednesday.
Bruce Flanders, director of the library, said his staff is looking at reducing the overall size of the collection from about 260,000 items to about 220,000 to 230,000 items.
Flanders said staff members will look at what parts of the collection are the least used and try to reduce those areas. He said space would then be identified for additional public computers, meeting space and reading room space in the 36-year-old library building.
“Studies show that a smaller, well-weeded collection actually circulates better than a collection with a lot of deadwood in it,” Flanders said.
hard to say
I work at a medium sized PL and we are lucky enough to have a town that reads A LOT. We also get heavy use from neighboring towns (you can use the same card.)
Our collection is really larger than one would need for a town of our size, but it circulates.
However our trick is balancing the new and best stuff (which does circ. fast) and the chestnuts, rarities, oddities and obscurities that our patrons want, just not as often.
260,000 down to 220,000 doesn’t sound that awful. The 000 always have old computer books, the 200s have homelitics that are out of date and unread, etc.
I’ll bet they can do it and not be “butchers.”
It’s not the size of your collection…
There’s probably an endless number of punchlines to that one.
but what will bill knott
but what will bill knott think?