Libraries in the News
Montclair Library to ask that funding be restored for hours, materials
http://www.northjersey.com/news/134367828_Montclair_Library_to_ask_that_funding_be_restored_for_hours__materials.html?page=all
November 22, 2011
BY T.D. SHOUDY
STAFF WRITER
The Montclair Times
The Montclair Public Library Board of Trustees will ask that funding be restored for hours at the Bellevue Avenue Branch, materials, and facility maintenance when they give a budget presentation next week before the township manager.
Libraries become job-search resource centers
http://www.northjersey.com
November 18, 2011
BY JOHN A. GAVIN
STAFF WRITER
The Record
Across North Jersey and throughout the state, libraries are becoming a bridge to help the unemployed and underemployed develop basic computer skills needed to find a job in today's high-tech market.
Libraries become job-search resource centers
http://www.northjersey.com
November 18, 2011
BY JOHN A. GAVIN,STAFF WRITER
The Record
Across North Jersey and throughout the state, libraries are becoming a bridge to help the unemployed and underemployed develop basic computer skills needed to find a job in today's high-tech market.
JOHN A. GAVIN/STAFF
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Regina Imperato, left, helping a job seeker send e-mail to a prospective employer. Financed by a federal grant, the computer classes help residents learn basic skills such as filling out job applications on the Internet and drafting and sending résumés as attachments – skills that were not as essential a decade ago.
Cost of funding county libraries becoming larger issue for municipalities
Posted: Friday, November 18, 2011 8:19 pm
Press of Atlantic City
Nov. 19, 2011
By STEVEN LEMONGELLO,
The vote was close - a margin of just 12 votes - but a referendum in Longport this month ended in defeat for those who wanted to break away from the Atlantic County Library System and form their own library.
Bridgeton library to temporarily close for overdue repairs
NJ.com November 07, 2011,
By Greg Adomaitis/The News of Cumberland County The News of Cumberland County
BRIDGETON — Be advised, bookworms. The Bridgeton Free Public Library will be temporarily closed from Nov. 14 to Dec. 5 for overdue repairs.
Gazebo considered at Washington Township library
WASHINGTON TWP. – State officials are considering a long range plan for capital projects at the Washington Township Public Library while some officials are concerned with the cost of the plan.
Mayor Kenneth Short said a meeting held on Thursday, Oct. 13 with library director Jacqueline Zuzzi was “cordial”” and “non-confrontational.”
Library Opened As An Emergency Shelter For Elderly
http://www.tewksbury.patch.com
By Bill Gilman
October 30, 2011
With word that it may take days rather than hours to restore power, the _Tewksbury Public Library_ has been opened up as an emergency shelter for elderly residents.
Normally, the Senior Center is used as a shelter in emergency situations. However, the emergency generators at the center are not functioning.
Warren County freeholders approve nearly $10 million in capital improvement plan but with opposition
Warren County freeholders gave final approval Wednesday to spending nearly $10 million for two new buildings and other capital improvements.
Part of the $9,867,000 plan would be used to for a new library headquarters in White Township to alleviate overcrowding at its 11,000-square-foot Belvidere location.
In embattled First Ward, a library's saga
http://www.northjersey.com
October 28, 2011
By BRUCE LOWRY
RECORD COLUMNIST
Anyone who has read this column with regularity knows I have a soft spot for public libraries. In fact, I can think of nothing that gets my blood boiling quicker than when I read where some nitwit politician thinks it's a good idea to close a library.
You see, I'm biased. Some of the best times of my life, indeed some of my greatest adventures, began in a library.
They are among the last of our public spaces, and as far as I'm concerned they are sacred.
So it is with a heavy heart today that I grieve for the present condition of the First Ward Branch Library at 54 North Main St., Paterson, and to those residents who have made good use of it.
According to Cynthia Czesak, the city's library director, the branch library was "seriously damaged" by floodwaters from Hurricane Irene, which ravaged the city's 1st Ward like few other places in North Jersey.
Czesak says a total of 10,174 books were lost in the flood. Those that weren't soaked were damaged from moisture that emanated from several days of standing water of 2 to 3 feet. Czesak says the entire collection was damaged, though the site's computers were somehow spared.
Anthony Davis, both the 1st Ward councilman and the City Council president in this tumultuous time in Paterson history, would like to see the library moved to another location. He says it receives good foot traffic and has described it as a "safe haven for the neighborhood."
Old bank building
Indeed, the library, an old bank building apparently once known as the Bertha Hinton Memorial Library, is within easy walking distance of two elementary schools, School 28 and Frank Napier Jr. School 4. (Of course, the latter school was also heavily damaged in the flood. It's students are now being bused to two other locations in the city. Davis is hopeful it will re-open by the first of the year.)
After talking to Davis Thursday, I felt like shipping the guy a case of aspirin. He's got headaches galore.
He's trying to help families in the 1st Ward sign up for possible FEMA relief funds from the late August flooding. He's trying to get people back in their houses, and he's also working with families seeking to go through the Blue Acres program to possibly sell their homes and relocate. All that would make for a heavy lift anywhere. In a poor city like Paterson, it's a tractor pull.
"We still have families that need help," Davis said. "My priority is to get these residents situated."
One could hardly blame Davis if he forgot, for a second, about the damage done to the branch library, but he is already scouting possible locations for replacement, including the former Head Start school building located at Clinton and Garfield streets.
Battling the odds
Ultimately, of course, it will be the city's Board of Library Trustees, with major input from Czesak, who will recommend where or even if a new location is feasible, though insurance assessments and possible engineering studies at the present site must first be concluded.
At any rate, the director said she is interested in a newer building — the current one was built in 1944 — that has more space, including a room for technology, for children's programs and a place for quiet study.
Czesak admits the library's use was low compared to other branches, such as the main branch on Broadway, but she said that if re-opened, "my personal opinion is I am committed to keeping the branch in the 1st Ward." For the uninitiated, that's already one of the city's most underserved communities, one that, since the storm, has battled the odds every day on a hundred different fronts.
So I guess that's where I step in and say, yes, I know the city faces a myriad of challenges right now. I know it is trying to get more police and firefighters on the streets in an era of massive budget cuts in Trenton and Washington. I know its public works department has its hands full.
And yet, as I said, I have a soft spot for libraries. We need them, however small they are, perhaps more than ever.
If the doors are open, someone will walk through them. I implore all who will listen to fight to save this library, in one form or another, for the families of the 1st Ward.
They haven't had a whole lot to cheer about lately. Give them this one victory.
E-mail: lowryb@northjersey.com
Cumberland County freeholder candidates have their say on the county library
http://www.nj.com
October 26, 2011,
By Jason Laday/The News of Cumberland County The News of Cumberland County
BRIDGETON — This is the fourth in a series of seven articles focusing on the candidates for Cumberland County freeholder, and their positions on the issues. This entry covers the future of Cumberland County Library. Friday’s story will focus on social services in the county.
The candidates are: Democrats Freeholder Director Bill Whelan, Freeholder Deputy Director Jim Dunkins, Deerfield Township Committeewoman Carol Musso and Tony Surace; against Republicans William Gonzalez, Sandy Taylor, Mary Gruccio and Jody Farabella.
Listen back to any one of the various public hearings and meetings regarding the budget last year, and one would assume the Cumberland County Library was the only issue that mattered.
For a time, for many, it was.
When it was announced the freeholders were targeting the $900,000 operation for closure, scores of supporters came out, writing letters and all but begging officials to find a way to keep the library open.
In the end, they did — albeit with some cuts, including a $61,000 cut in operating expenses and a challenge to come up with $215,405 on its own.
However, several officials made it clear the library would only be safe for at least a year; that come the next budget cycle Cumberland County Library could easily find itself on the chopping block again.
That time is fast approaching.
While they admit it may not be the most popular option, the Republicans have advocated eliminating the county library and using the savings to bolster the local libraries in Bridgeton, Millville, Vineland, Port Norris and at Cumberland County College.
“I think we all have to consolidate,” said GOP candidate Sandy Taylor. “I mean, we have all these libraries, it’s not fair for the taxpayers to have to pay for everything; I think we need to scale down a little bit in these economic times.”
Fellow Republican William Gonzalez agreed, picking up on the issue of “fairness.
“Every city is being taxed twice,” he said. “We have a Cumberland County College library where taxpayer money also goes to, as well.”
Later, Gonzalez added: “What we’re saying is to eliminate the county library as it currently stands, and re-organize that library, and in doing so, free up money to assist the other five libraries in the county to get better service to the entire county, and not just the residents of that town.”
For Democratic Freeholder Director Bill Whelan, who oversaw the last budget cycle in which the library was threatened and saved, it’s still too early to say what will happen to the facility.
“We’re just starting to process of pulling together budgetary numbers for next year,” said Whelan.
“Is it on the chopping block? We’re going through all of the departments to see what can be done and what will be cut.
“There’s been no direction given to the county administrator to cut anything. At this point, we’re gathering the information from department heads and seeing what kind of numbers we have, and then we’ll progress from there.”
Whelan said they’ll have the information they need by January or February.
“Then we’ll have a much better handle on things, he added. “They’ll be all kinds of proposals.
“What we did last year was ask for a prioritization from the department heads. We were just trying to be transparent last year, and we got the results.”
What resulted from the initial announcement of the county’s plans to close the county library last was an outpouring of support for the facility. Residents packed freeholder and budget meetings, giving their own personal stories about how the library helped them get a job, or how helped improve their grades in school.
Republican candidate Jody Farabella stated he understood closing the library would be an issue for many people, but he added that people were struggling with taxes and needed relief.
“We’re talking about shared services — it’s one of the things we need to explore,” said Farabella. “It’s a no-brainer. It’s a lot of money there.
“It’s going to bring up some issues, but you’re asking questions about how to help the taxpayer, and that’s one of the options.”
Whelan pointed out that he was appreciative of the large turnouts in favor of the county library, stating it showed people still cared about their county government.
“I really mean that,” said Whelan. “If you saw the meetings at all, I very patiently allowed people to say what was on their mind, even when they were repeating themselves, and saying things that weren’t particularly relevant, but were things they felt they had to say.
“Any time we’re going to cut something, we’re going to hear from the public,” added Whelan. “Then you’ll have another group of people who say you’re doing the right thing. And ,so, I expect anything that we talk about will be defended by those who love it.”
Republican Mary Gruccio said officials need to learn more about how residents use the library, and act accordingly.
“I think you really have to take a look at the use of the library,” said Gruccio. “Is it being used? How much is it used for books and materials and resources? Are they using the technology?
“Because maybe you keep a piece of it; maybe you keep the technology lab for the people, or maybe you scale down. I don’t think we know all that we need to know off the top of our head as of today.”
Last year, Jean Edwards, acting director of the county library, stated approximately 70,000 residents walked through the doors of the Cumberland County Library over the previous year.
Another 30,000 took advantage of the library’s bookmobile, which circulated more than 13,000 items at 376 stops, including schools, senior centers and prisons.
According to library figures, 26,000 people logged on to the public access computers there, using them for school assignments, research, finding employment and social networking.
In all, the library in 2010 loaned 74,520 books and other materials, as well as 13,682 movies.
Residents used the library’s website, clueslibs.org, to download 1,010 books from home.
Also in 2010: Almost 900 people enrolled in classes at the library in subjects including keyboarding, cover letter writing, résumé writing, computer basics, job searching, various Microsoft software and basic Internet skills.
Future of 1st Ward Library in Doubt
http://www.thealternativepress.com
Joe Malinconico
Saturday, October 8, 2011
PATERSON, NJ – For more than a month, the doors have been closed at Paterson’s library branch on N. Main Street.
The building took a beating from the Hurricane Irene flooding. More than 8,000 books – or about three-quarters of its collection – were destroyed, officials said. Floodwaters ruined the furniture and badly damaged the heating system. Inspectors have yet to determine if the structure remains sound.
In fact, library officials are not sure whether they will ever reopen the N. Main Street branch.
“Right now, we’re kind of in a holding pattern,’’ said library director Cynthia Czesak. “We’re waiting to find out if the building will be inhabitable.’’
Even if the building is deemed safe, officials are not sure they want to move back in. The library gets damaged almost every time the Passaic River overflows its banks, and the tab for the repairs keeps growing, officials said. “It doesn’t seem to be the best use of our money,’’ said Czesak.
The city is considering relocating the library to somewhere else in the area.
“I would definitely be against,’’ not having a library in the 1st Ward, said Council President Anthony Davis, who represents that part of the city.
“We’re committed to trying to continue library services in the 1st Ward because the community there has been vocal about it,’’ said Czesak.
Besides finding an alternate site in the 1st Ward, officials also have to decide what type of services the neighborhood branch ought to provide, Czesak said. For example, if the community wants a library that specializes in children’s services, that might require a different type of building than one would accommodate a library emphasizing technology, like computer access, she said. Library officials say they may hold some neighborhood meetings to get a better sense of the community’s needs.
Paterson’s library system underwent significant reductions in the 1990s, when four branches were closed for budget reasons, officials. That left the city with the main library on Broadway and three branches – Main Street in South Paterson in the 6th Ward, the Totowa branch on Union Avenue in the 2nd Ward and the on N. Main branch in the 1st Ward.
The library board recently acquired a used Bookmobile from the city of Passaic at a nominal fee. The vehicle needed some repairs, but the problems at the No. Main Street branch have nudged officials along in getting the Bookmobile in working order. The Bookmobile may serve as an interim branch in the 1st Ward until the city comes up with a plan for what to do about the flood-damaged building, officials said.
Meanwhile, city education officials are not sure when – and whether - they will be able to reopen School No. 4, also known as the Rev. Dr. Frank Napier School, which was also severely damaged in the flooding. Students have been scattered at three different facilities as an interim measure – kindergarten through sixth grades at St. Mary’s on Sherman Avenue, seventh and eighth grades to 137 Ellison Street and special education students to School No. 28.
The earliest School 4 would reopen seems to be January, officials said.
Looking to the future, Montclair library gauges community opinion
http://www.northjersey.com
Tuesday, October 18, 2011
BY TANYA DROBNESS
The Montclair Times
About two dozen residents and library officials tonight share opinions about the future of the Montclair Public Library as part of the institution's six-month strategic plan. But the book-loving businesswoman who runs her own customized corporate training firm in Montclair would like to see the Montclair Public Library offer more electronic reading.
It's just one of the things she thinks could help the financially-plagued institution maintain its system as it faces an uncertain future.
"I have memories of my childhood of going to the library. I get audio books now from here," said the lifelong Montclair resident, who also suggested that the library consider a reverse-mentoring program for teenagers and senior citizens during a community meeting held tonight in the Main Library's auditorium.
Williams-Bogar was one of about two dozen residents, Montclair Public Library Foundation members, and Library Board Trustees, who gathered to offer input and share thoughts about the library. The dialogue is being used as part of the library's six-month strategic plan, which includes exploring alternative ways to raise funds.
Library consultant Alan Burger, of Princeton-based Library Development Solutions, facilitated the meeting and took questions and comments from concerned citizens. Along with Burger were Library Director David Hinkley and Library Board of Trustees Treasurer Wil Adkins.
"It's going to be another tough budget year," said Adkins. "What do we want from our library as we look down the road?"
Focus groups, particularly those comprising students and senior citizens, have helped gauge the community's expectations of the library, Burger said.
Tonight, it was the residents' turn.
"It seems to me the biggest challenge is technology. Publishing is changing at lightning speed," said David R. Jones, a former editor of The New York Times who has lived in Montclair for 38 years. "Libraries are going to have to change because technology is changing. We need to do a better job at encouraging that transition."
Eve Schaenen, a member of the Montclair Library Foundation, believes that the only way the library system can survive is to "think inter-institutionally." Schaenen said she is concerned about school libraries shutting down, and thinks the public library may fill an "essential" gap.
"It seems to be a natural role for the library to take over," Schaenen said during the meeting.
Trudy Fraser, a member of the Friends of the Bellevue Avenue Library group, said she believes the temporary closure of the branch earlier this year made an adverse impact. "I think the community has stopped counting on the library [as a safe place to go] because the Bellevue Avenue Library had closed," she said.
Some residents questioned utilization of space at the Main Library, while some indicated a collaboration with other libraries and perhaps Montclair State University for advanced services.
Grace Grund, owner of Terra at the Isabel Rose Café in the Main Library, said she would love nothing more than to see the library become a community center and be reinvigorated as a "go-to" entity in the township.
"We need to figure out how this can be a place where people feel that they belong here," Grund said.
Senior citizens and children use the library the most, Hinkley confirmed during the meeting, noting that changes are occurring rapidly. "We really want to move forward," he said.
Hinkley said that the institution reached record attendance in 2009 and record circulation in 2010, and attendance this year may be the highest ever, despite working with a $2.7 million budget that falls hundreds of thousands of dollars short of what is needed to operate the system.
One of the largest in the state, the three-story Main Library on South Fullerton Avenue is about 55,000 square feet, and its Bellevue Avenue Branch Library is about 5,000 square feet, Hinkley said.
The library has been forced to make significant cuts in staff in the past decade, declining from 37 full-time employees in 2001, compared to 19 full-time employees this year, according to Hinkley. "We're absolutely at the bare minimum," he said.
"If I had those staffing problems, how would I meet all these needs? And that's going to be difficult for anybody to solve," said Karen Karin Rosenberg, a Montclair resident and writer of fiction and non-fiction, who also expressed concerns about how to bridge the needs of individuals and community groups.
Rosenberg added, "Teenagers are overly dependent on Wikipedia ... There's much, much more available in the databases.
"This library serves a lot of people well, but not enough people know that ... If we don't get them to understand it, we're going to lose funding."
Contact Tanya Drobness at drobness@montclairtimes.com.
The Die is Cast: Stone Harbor Library Contract Awarded
http://www.capemaycountyherald.com
Oct. 16, 2011
By Al Campbell
STONE HARBOR — Long ago and far away from 95th Street and the beach, where this borough’s branch of the Cape May County Library will stand, Julius Caesar coined an unforgettable phrase, “Iacta alea est” (The die is cast).
Caesar spoke that sage uttering after his army crossed the Rubicon in 49 B.C., but he could well have spoken of the deed done by the Board of Chosen Freeholders Tue., Oct. 11.
That evening, as residents of this fair borough watched the evening news or their favorite game show, the board unanimously agreed to award a $5.3-million contract to R. Wilkinson and Sons Construction, Inc. of Absecon to erect that 14,000-square-foot facility on part of an oceanfront municipal parking lot.
The Atlantic County firm was selected from a field of nine bidders. The contract was “conditionally awarded” until the company obtains from the state Department of Treasury, Division of Property Management and Construction a classification of “C008-General Construction” in an amount that exceeds the total contract price of the new facility.
The site, not the library, has been a contentious one in the borough. Petitions were presented during council meetings that protested the location; the last one bore 266 signatures. Still, the notion of shifting from the planned site was not one the governing body was prepared to entertain.
A scant seven parking spaces will disappear as a result of the building, according to county Administrator Stephen O’Connor.
A website emerged opposing location of the site “Worlds Most Expensive Library.” It declares the price per square foot would be “$1,050 per square foot compared to $150 to $400 for standard libraries.”
The site also used a cost of $14.7 million for the complete project, it used $6.2 million for construction “on beachfront property valued at $8.5 million.” Further, it stated the site had been selected without approval of the majority of local or county taxpayers.
While library officials, freeholders, Mayor Suzanne Walters and members of Borough Council are anxious to grab shovels for a groundbreaking ceremony, that auspicious occasion is “on hold” awaiting the state Department of Environmental Protection’s permit and stamp of approval that will allow work to proceed 10 feet from the bulkhead.
To move the sluggish process through DEP’s vaunted halls, the county retained Princeton attorney Neil Yoskin, who specializes in environmental matters. The amendment advocated by him was published in the New Jersey Register April 4, 2011.
That amendment was to permit “Federal, State, county or municipal development projects which are located adjacent to a bay or ocean or bay front or oceanfront, beach, dune or boardwalk, and are greater than 15 feet in height measured from the existing grade of the site or boardwalk need not comply with the setback requirements in (d) 2 above provided that the development contains design elements that enhance physical or visual public access to the waterfront beyond that which would be afforded by strict compliance with (d) 2 above and the development, as proposed, would remain in compliance with N.J.A.C. 7-7E-3-50.”
At the time, Yoskin told the Herald, “The rule as currently written required that new structures adjacent to water bodies, beaches or dunes be set back from the landward limit of the beach-dune by a distance equal to twice the building’s height.”
He said the amendment was “intended to keep buildings from overshadowing the water body or beach-dune complex. The rule has frequently resulted in the denial of permits for single-family homes on bayside lots, usually triggering litigation that always and eventually results in settlements. It has long been understood by practitioners and by DEP that the rule needed to be amended.”
Yoskin stated that one of the purposes of the Stone Harbor library location was to allow seniors and handicapped patrons enjoyment of the views of the ocean from the second floor of the facility, regardless of season or weather.
The county’s communication with Yoskin has continued “on a regular basis,” O’Connor told the Herald.
“We are hoping to have the final permit in the next couple of weeks, by mid-November. That way, we could start construction by the end of the year,” O’Connor added.
“From what I understand there is a lot of misinformation. People think we are eliminating the entire parking lot. That is the biggest issue, or that people won’t have access to the beach,” said O’Connor.
He restated that seven parking spaces would be used, and said no public access to the beach would be restricted.
In order to comply with the anticipated state DEP amendment, the structure was moved 10 feet from the bulkhead, and reduced in height from 55 to 37 feet.
Atlantic City school official to advocate for libraries in Washington
http://www.pressofatlanticcity.com
Posted: Friday, October 14, 2011
By DIANE D'AMICO Education Writer |
Donna Haye, assistant superintendent for curriculum in the Atlantic City School District, will represent the district and the American Association of School Librarians at a congressional briefing Monday in Washington, D.C., to advocate for a bill that would support school libraries.
The AASL named Haye its Distinguished School Administrator this year for her work in invigorating the district's school libraries. Haye said Friday that two $250,000 grants from the federal Improving Schools and Libraries fund helped pay for those improvements. That bill was not reauthorized, but advocates are now lobbying for a new bill called Strengthening Kids' Interest in Learning and Libraries Act, or SKILLs.
"I want to show them how we used the grant money and the impact it had," Haye said Friday.
Haye, one of four presenters representing school districts, said she has prepared a slide show demonstrating how Atlantic City used federal and other funds to improve libraries and students' educations. The theme for her presentation is "sharing," and she will show how the teachers and school librarians have worked together. She said she also will talk about the importance of school libraries in urban districts, where many students do not have access to computers or have books at home.
The briefing, "Education Reform and the SKILLs Act: An Analysis of Twenty-First Century School Libraries and Their Impact on Career and College Preparedness," will cover how the SKILLs Act supports and sustains school libraries. The act ensures that every school has a state-certified school librarian and that libraries get the resources students need to become lifelong learners.
"The school library is a 21st-century learning center today," Haye said, citing the use of Podcasts and e-readers to get students engaged. Representatives of schools in California, Indiana and Virginia also will testify along with American University librarian William A. Mayer, a leader on the changing face of services in libraries.
Contact Diane D'Amico:
609-272-7241
DDamico@pressofac.com
Berkeley Heights Library continues to recover from Irene's floodwaters
nj.com
Published: Tuesday, October 11, 2011
By Independent Press Independent Press
By Dana Ragonese
BERKELEY HEIGHTS — The Berkeley Heights Library is recovering slowly but surely. In the wake of the late August hurricane that caused major destruction to New Jersey, the Berkeley Heights Public Library suffered major damage to its lower level and was forced to cancel most of the September events.
According to Laura Fuhro, the children’s section director, some events are not happening at all while other adult events have been moved to different local locations.
“The biggest change is the fact that all the middle school children that come in have to be behave in a more mature manner,” Fuhro says. “They are upstairs now rather than having their own level.”
She insists that the library hasn’t been hindered, “We have moved books around the upper level so there is still access.”
Fuhro continues to say “It is a tedious process but one step at a time.”
Stephanie Bakos, library director, agrees. “First we had to take care of the walls then, the carpet, and then have volunteers help put all the books back on the shelves.”
A number of volunteers reached out to the library for support and aid. “We have boy and girl Scouts, individuals emailing a wish to help,” Fuhro says.
Bakos describes the disarray in the back rooms of the lower level, “boxes and boxes of books, and we had just repainted this room, many people were eager to use it.” Packed into this room are chairs stacked on top of one another, countless boxes of books, CD’s, magazine racks.
“We can’t give any actual dates for when the lower level will be open,” Fuhro states. “You can schedule things to get done but every step depends on the step before…”
The Berkeley Heights library was hoping to have an open house in October for the children and families who received library cards during September but, that will have to be postponed as well.
Penns Grove-Carneys Point Library damage from Hurricane Irene floodwaters exceeds $100,000, officials say
http://www.nj.com
Published: Wednesday, October 05, 2011
By Michael Williams/Today's Sunbeam Today's Sunbeam
PENNS GROVE — Damage done to the Penns Grove-Carneys Point Library during Hurricane Irene will be more costly to repair than originally thought, and public donations are being sought to help fund the project, library officials said on Tuesday.
According to Linda Huff, president of the library board of directors, repairs to the library on South Broad Street here will cost around $100,000 based on current damage estimates.
“It doesn’t look like a lot of damage, but everything is expensive,” said Huff. “Water came in through the front door, back door, and from under the building ...We’re still trying to get everything cleaned up.”
Insurance on the library will not be enough to cover the cost of the damage, and the library is asking for the public donations to help fund the repairs.
Huff said the board is still waiting to hear back from their insurance company on exact figures, but in the meantime, anything the public can do to help would be welcomed.
“We appreciate anything that anyone is able to give us,” said Huff. “Our main goal right now is to get the library open as soon as we can, in a safe environment.”
The library was damaged in late August when Hurricane Irene tore through the area. Following the storm, carpets inside the building were soaked, a total of 12 wooden bookcases were damaged by water, doors swelled, and some drywall was ruined.
The parking lot was also hit hard, said Huff.
Fans and de-humidifiers were brought in to dry out the building, and the carpets have been treated for germs and odor. The 12 bookcases are being examined to see which ones can be salvaged, and which need to be replaced.
Replacing a single book shelf costs about $700, said Huff.
“We’re addressing what needs to be done to open safely and effectively,” said Huff. “We originally thought we’d be closed for only a few days, but we just kept finding more and more damage.”
The board is continuing to work to seek estimates and ideas for the best and most cost-effective ways to make the necessary repairs. If all goes accordingly, the library could re-open in about one month, she added.
“Everyone just wants to get it open as soon as we can,” said Huff.
Anyone who wants to make a donation to the library can send it directly to the Penns Grove-Carneys Point Library, 222 S. Broad St. For more information, contact the library at (856) 299-4255, or Huff at (856) 299-5696
Cliffside Park library marks reopening following fire
http://www.northjersey.com
September 25, 2011
BY KAREN SUDOL
STAFF WRITER
The Record
CLIFFSIDE PARK – The public library officials reopened Sunday, almost two years after a fire ripped through the building destroying a large part of its collection.
Even though the library on Palisade Avenue has been open for several weeks, officials planned a grand opening to celebrate the state-of-the-art facility that features a 1,100-square foot expansion.
A Nov. 30, 2009 fire damaged several rooms, floors, computers and thousands of books that must be restored. A room that holds the borough’s historical data was unscathed but some historical treasures, DVDs and music including a large classical collection were damaged.
The 1965 building was gutted and an addition constructed that will become the adult reading area.
A media room with seven laptops, a projector, drop-down screen and surround-sound has been created courtesy of donations from Grantwood Congressional Church, she said. A designated area has also been established for teenagers.
“It looks nothing like it did before,” said Valentino Steinfeld, adding that the $1 million project was funded through insurance money.
While the building closed, the library temporarily relocated to a storefront on Palisade Avenue.
“It was worth the wait,” said Valentino Steinfeld, who became director in July, 2010. “It was a lot of hard work and I know for some patrons it was a bit of an inconvenience” as well as for the staff who worked in cramped quarters.
More than 100 people attended the grand opening Sunday afternoon where local officials spoke and patrons checked out the building. A harpist, face painter and magician were also on hand.
In an earlier interview, Mayor Gerald Calabrese said the library has come a long way from its origins in the basement of School #3.
“It’s a big improvement from what we had from the fire,” he said. “It’s a great asset to the community.”
E-mail: sudol@northjersey.com
Emerson library renovations on track
http://www.northjersey.com
Saturday, September 24, 2011
BY CHRIS HARRIS
STAFF WRITER
The Record
EMERSON — The construction phase of a nearly half-million-dollar renovation of the Emerson Public Library will likely be finished by Halloween, Library Board President Bill Panza told the borough council this week.
If work at the library continues according to plan, Panza said the building's grand re-opening could occur the first week of the new year.
"I am positive we will meet our budgetary goals," Panza told Mayor Carlos Colina and the council during a presentation Tuesday, adding that he has been meeting regularly with the project's contractors.
Panza said the project was "70 percent" done at this point. Once the construction phase concludes, work on the interior can begin, including designing a circulation desk and computer lab.
The collaborative interchange Tuesday between Panza, Library Board Treasurer Marcia DeSalvo, and the council marks a shift in relations between the two boards, which were cantankerous just two months ago.
Colina and the board spent months requesting the project's financial statements from the library board and its former director, Jodi Fulgione. Under pressure from the council, the library board changed leadership and fired Fulgione.
"I am extremely pleased with the new leadership of the library," Councilman John Lazar said.
DeSalvo told the council the renovation project — calling for an upgrade of the building's ceiling, lighting and HVAC units, along with a redesigned interior — was on course to come within the $456,000 budget, which includes a change order allowance of $50,000.
A portion of that $50,000 has already been allocated to cover unanticipated costs, including asbestos removal and new wiring for the library's computer network.
DeSalvo said $22,000 of the budget was earmarked for the moving company hired to store the library's contents, while $142,000 still needs to be paid to the contractor for the balance of the renovation work.
The budget also includes a $90,000 reserve, DeSalvo said, that won't be touched. The account was set up to provide the library with enough capital to cover three months' worth of operating costs.
Panza said the library board is considering less expensive carpeting to help stay within the budget, and that some of the library's old furniture will be refurbished.
The second phase of the project will concentrate on the library's new circulation desk and computer lab. Panza said he may try to seek private sponsorships to fund these areas of the library, as well as a proposed children's room.
The library board also told the council it has started searching for a permanent replacement for Fulgione. An interim director is expected to start Monday. The interim director will be paid by the hour, and will work no more than 20 hours a week.
Councilman Scott Rivers said he is "excited by these positive developments," and added that he feels "a partnership" has been restored between the council and the library board.
E-mail: harrisc@northjersey.com
Library plan could include expanded municipal complex for West Milford
http://www.northjersey.com
September 23, 2011
BY ANN GENADER
CORRESPONDENT
Although Township of West Milford Officials have not yet officially revealed that the proposed new township library will include changes to the present municipal building indications are this will be in the final plan.
The Township of West Milford Council on Aug. 17 authorized the award of a professional services contract to Fox Architectural Design of Ledgewood for architectural services for the township museum in an amount not to exceed $7,200. The funds are to be provided by the Heritage Trust Fund in accordance with its proposal dated March 19, 2010.
"While the building design is only in conceptual stages, our goal is to provide a true community center and social gathering place at no additional cost to our residents," said Mayor Bettina Bieri in her August monthly newsletter to residents. "Although premature at this time, the Library Board is eager to unveil the proposed design to our residents. We truly look forward to that day and promise to share the renderings as soon as we have a visible plan."
"The Library Board of Trustees firmly believes in long-range planning and fiscal responsibility," said Bieri, who is a trustee. "Therefore, our plans include not only a donation of the existing library facility to the township, but also a joint venture with the township."
"The members of the Library Board of Trustees unanimously support a new library facility provided there is no additional cost to the taxpayers," said Bieri. "Unlike proposals of the past, the new township library will rely solely on existing, state-mandated funding."
"We have already approached the Facilities Assessment Committee (FAC) which was formed in May 2008 for the purpose of proactively addressing the deficiencies within our municipal buildings and their uses," she continued. "We believe the FAC recognizes the value of this expansion project and the many opportunities and benefits it offers our township. We anticipate that this joint venture could further our mutual goals of a centralized, expanded, and ADA-compliant municipal complex, and ADA-compliant municipal complex."
"Obtaining approvals has been a lengthy and slow process," Bieri continued. "As reported to the Township Council and published in local newspapers in March 2010, the Highlands Council unanimously approved the municipal redevelopment project in order to achieve the goal of a new library. In the interim, the Library Board continues to seek New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection (NJDEP) approvals while simultaneously meeting with our architect."
Mayor Bieri said a free public library can be an invaluable resource for every member of the community and every age group. She said that despite the state of the economy and a technically-driven society, libraries are busier than ever.
"A well-designed library increases property values and serves as a focal point and community center," said Bieri. "In West Milford, our library is extremely undersized and outdated. While our staff does a tremendous job given the inferior resources, West Milford residents want and deserve so much more. For over a decade, residents have been awaiting a new public library to better meet the needs of the community, but finding an appropriate location remained a long-term obstacle.
The Township of West Milford, on behalf of the West Milford Library Board of Trustees, is under contract to acquire property adjacent to the municipal building from current owner Edna Finn known as lot 13. Bieri noted she found the suitable site adjacent to town hall for the new library.
A resolution approved by the township council on Aug. 17 authorized Mayor Bettina Bieri to sign a Treatment Works Application with respect to a septic alteration.
Ferriero Engineering made application for the construction of a new septic system for use in a public library on the property with a combined wastewater flow of 1,875 gallons per day. Also proposed is a relocation of flows on the same block (7903) for lots 14, 15 and 16. This involves a combined wastewater flow that exceeds 2,000 per day. The NJDEP requires a Treatment Works Permit for all design flows that exceed 2,000 gallons.
"The Library Board of Trustees holds its public meetings at 7:30 p.m. in the West Milford Municipal Building on the second Tuesday of the month," said Mayor Bieri. "We welcome your presence and your input, so please join us or visit wmtl.org for continued updates on the library project."
The FAC has been working since 2008 to find adequate office and meeting space to meet the township’s growing needs. Meeting Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) requirements is also a goal.
Councilman Dan Jurkovic, who serves on the FAC, said the committee has been investigating the possibility of reconstruction of the municipal building as part of a redevelopment project in the municipal complex area.
Possibility of connecting the library and present town hall by a breezeway has been one of the discussion topics. Adding a large meeting room in the library to replace the present limited sized meeting room in the municipal building is a current topic. This would allow conversion of present meeting room space for possible uses of offices or storage.
The library board has savings amounting to $2 or $3 million to use for the new facility.
County and city grants to aid Bridgeton Library expansion
http://www.nj.com
September 15, 2011, 8:55 PM
By Greg Adomaitis/The News of Cumberland County The News of Cumberland County
BRIDGETON — The city is looking for ways to “expand and improve” their library and two recent grants, plus another at the county level, may pave the way.
A resolution heard at a county freeholder meeting this week would authorize submitting a $400,000 grant application to the state Department of Community Affairs (DCA).
That total would go toward an Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA)-compliant elevator in the “Bridgeton city hall for a public library,” according to the resolution.
“We are exploring and looking for funding to expand and improve,” said Mayor Albert Kelly of projects at the city hall annex building.
Kelly was unaware the $400,000 resolution had been passed but said it did not mean the historic library would be relocating across Commerce Street.
Though he has not yet spoken with the Bridgeton Public Library’s board of trustees, Kelly got in touch with Freeholder Director Bill Whelan soon after their meeting to discuss the resolution.
County Deputy Administrator Kim Wood said the application to the DCA would be made through the South Jersey Economic Development committee, as Cumberland County is a member.
Two resolutions heard at last week’s Bridgeton city council meeting would accept a total of $165,000 from the New Jersey Historic Preservation Trust.
The $15,000 grant is for preservation efforts at the city hall annex building. Kelly said the money would go towards research at the city hall building, while noting a library with combined education center at that location. He felt such a facility may be a way for local colleges to host classes at the building.
Kevin Rabago, from the city’s Office of Planning and Development, said the total could go
toward a “historical architect to come in and set out the appropriate scope for remediation.”
As for the $150,000 grant for preservation efforts at the building, “It’s brick and mortar money for actual work,” Rabago said.
The former Cumberland National Bank now houses the city library and a group of concerned patrons have been working toward restoration efforts for some time now.
Save the Library! (STL) and Friends of the Bridgeton Library have been in pursuit of a two-thirds match for a $150,000 New Jersey Historic Trust grant. Penny Watson, of STL!, said her group heard last March that the library was on a list to receive the grant.
However, as the city owns the bank building that houses the library, they had to approve the grants.
