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St. Louis Libraries are embracing 21st-century resources

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  • St. Louis Libraries are embracing 21st-century resources

    St. Louis Post-Dispatch (Missouri)
    November 17, 2012 Saturday
    THIRD EDITION

    Libraries are embracing 21st-century resources

    By Jane Henderson [email protected] 314-340-8107

    The photo of children listening to stories is clearly dated.
    Old-fashioned clothing is the giveaway.

    Although taken in 1912 at the St. Louis Public Library, the activity
    itself - children's storytime - has never gone out of style.
    "Storytimes are as busy as ever, and we still do them well," says
    Waller McGuire, who has hung the 100-year-old photo outside his office
    as executive director.

    In the 21st century, however, stories might be read from iPads, which
    hold dozens of books. Truck drivers download audio books to take on
    the road, and lawyers in Singapore email a Midwest librarian for
    information on trademarks.

    "We're like retail stores, banks, media," McGuire says, "trying to
    understand how we can best serve people using new technology."

    Curiously, however, studies show that residents are often unaware of
    the vast updates, and challenges, as libraries grapple with
    21st-century changes.

    As the city's historic Central Library finishes a $70 million
    renovation, celebrating with a fancy party this weekend, the St. Louis
    County Library begins planning its own construction projects.

    County voters this month approved a tax rate increase, signaling
    confidence in the future of their system's 20 buildings. It will be a
    "renaissance for libraries in the St. Louis region," says Charles
    Pace, the county library director.

    Both directors say updated facilities are essential - but they are not
    the only changes taking place in these public institutions.

    BEYOND BOOKS
    "I still get people who are surprised we have DVDs," Pace says.
    Not only do 21st-century public libraries have free movies, they also may:
    - Help people start small businesses.
    - Offer phone apps to download books from home.
    - Lend out e-readers or show patrons how to use various devices.
    - Offer free online courses or access to expensive genealogy databases.

    In addition, even though much conventional wisdom brays that children
    don't read, evidence shows that library usage among teens and young
    adults is strong.

    A study released last month showed that readers under age 30 are more
    likely to use public libraries. Sixty percent of those readers -
    compared with 49 percent of people over 64 - said they visited the
    public library at least once in the year before the survey, according
    to a Pew Research Center's Internet and American Life Project.

    Overall, library users told Pew that they want it all: e-books and
    print books, plus audiobooks, movies, magazines, newspapers, computers
    and wireless service.

    The Brentwood Public Library recently bought Kindle e-readers, which
    patrons may take home (they have tracking devices inside so they don't
    disappear). Some of the Kindles come pre-loaded with several books in
    a particular genre, such as mysteries or romances.

    When the city's Central Library reopens Dec. 9, it will have added
    about 50 iPads, which it plans to circulate. Phone apps are being
    developed to help patrons navigate the building.

    Today's public library is trying to be "nimble and stay in touch with
    the community," the county library's Pace says.

    In an email a week after voters approved the county tax increase, Pace
    said the revenue is important not only to make repairs, but to
    implement the "latest advances in the library industry."

    Although no final decisions have been made, Pace says the county
    library's future may include a "digital content creation lab,
    small-business incubator space, (and) Makerspaces, which incorporate
    3-D printing and other new technologies."

    The library is responding, as he says, to a world that has gone from
    "information scarcity to information abundance," and yet its
    community-driven mission isn't always that different from the one of
    libraries a century ago.

    THE CARNEGIE LEGACY
    Some of the first public libraries had not only books, but billiard
    rooms and basketball courts.

    The Carnegie Library of Homestead in Pennsylvania still rents out a
    heated indoor pool and holds concerts in its music hall.
    In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, steel baron Andrew Carnegie
    gave millions of dollars to help create thousands of public libraries.
    Among his gifts was $1 million to help build a new St. Louis Public
    Library and six branches. Central Library, a beautiful building
    designed by architect Cass Gilbert, opened in January 1912.

    Tonight, the library's sold-out fundraising gala celebrates the
    building's centennial and features an honorary chairman: Vartan
    Gregorian, current president of the Carnegie Corp. of New York and
    past president of the New York Public Library (and father of
    Post-Dispatch sports reporter Vahe Gregorian).

    Gregorian, who will talk at the black-tie party about the future of
    libraries, says he is coming to celebrate not only Carnegie's legacy,
    but St. Louis' library as a symbol of the city's "durability and
    memory."

    In a recent telephone conversation from his home in New York, he
    emphasized the grand, historical mission of America's free public
    libraries as a "symbol of lifelong learning" and a place providing
    every person with privacy and access to information.
    "They are the most democratic institutions," he says.

    Gregorian, born in Iran of Armenian heritage, recalls that when he
    became president of the New York Public Library, it had thousands of
    phone books from different countries. Rather than seeing these as
    crumbling relics, he says some, such as a 1939 Warsaw directory, are
    historic or legal documents.

    "Libraries are not just about books," Gregorian said. "They are about
    the memory of a society."

    Gregorian, an expert at talking up the value of libraries, raised
    hundreds of millions of dollars while head of the New York library,
    which had been virtually bankrupt.

    His fear is only that Americans today are more interested in
    entertainment than learning.

    He has an e-reader, which is used mostly by his wife. A self-described
    "reading junkie," he is always curious. But it doesn't matter to him
    whether people borrow print books or e-books: "The main thing is that
    people read."

    USAGE GROWS
    At the St. Louis County Library, usage has grown. Its 2011 report
    shows total visits to all locations at 5.7 million, with more than
    12.7 million items circulated.

    E-media circulation has almost doubled, and e-book growth is a goal,
    and a concern, for libraries across the country because some
    publishers will not sell new e-books to libraries. In addition, e-book
    versions sometimes cost libraries far more than a print book. (The
    American Library Association continues to ask publishers for better
    agreements.)

    The county library added Wi-Fi to all of its libraries only six years
    ago. Now it offers online classes to help patrons learn computer
    programs such as Excel or Photoshop. This year, the library also
    collaborated with the University of Missouri Extension office for
    meetings to support those running a small businesses.

    Even though 30 percent of the county library's circulation is actually
    people borrowing DVDs, library card holders also can go to the library
    for free access to Ancestry.com, a database that millions of people
    buy for genealogy research. Researchers can find rare genealogy
    records held at the county headquarters, which has more than 18,000
    family histories.

    When Central Library reopens, it will include far more powerful
    wireless service, power outlets on tables, a cafe, an auditorium and
    more public space.

    Eventually, the library may even rent out some of its space, although
    don't expect to book it for a wedding, like Carrie Bradshaw does the
    New York library in Hollywood's "Sex and the City."

    McGuire says that for at least the first six months, events there will
    be only library events. He is interested in making renovated spaces
    available for rent like those at the St. Louis Art Museum, but they
    likely will be for organizations and corporations, not personal
    parties.

    Although the county and city systems' renovations are the most visible
    in the area, many other library systems continue to change and grow.

    Maggie Preiss has been with the St. Charles City-County Library since
    1973. "We've been building or expanding every other year for 35
    years," she says.

    Like the other libraries, St. Charles' system aims to be both a place
    for people to meet and gather, and also to use remotely. The new
    Spencer Road branch in St. Peters has about 17 meeting spaces - which
    patrons go online to reserve.

    Presiss says the biggest challenge is "being ready for whatever is
    coming around the corner."

    The biggest surprise? "People still see the library as a place for books."


    From: Baghdasarian
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