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Librarians Under New Management

By JULIA SILVERMAN (Associated Press Writer)

From Associated Press

October 04, 2007 1:56 PM EDT

MEDFORD, Ore. - A big, red " Closed " sign has been plastered across the front

door of the library here since mid-April, when Jackson County ran out of money

to keep its 15 branches open.

 

In a few weeks, though, the sign will come down and the doors will be flung open

again, now that the county has come up with an unusual cost-saving solution:

outsourcing its libraries.

 

The county will continue to own the buildings and all the books in them. But the

libraries will be managed by an outside company for a profit. And the librarians

will no longer be public employees and union members; they will be on the

company's payroll.

 

Library patrons might not notice much difference, but the librarians will, since

the company plans to get by with a smaller staff and will have a free hand to

set salaries and benefits.

 

" The average citizen, when they walk into the library, they will see

well-trained, well-educated, customer-service-oriented people working in the

library, " said Bob Windrow, director of sales and marketing at Germantown,

Md-based Library Systems and Services, or LSSI, the company taking over. " They

won't know who is paying their salary, and they won't care. They care whether

the library is open adequate hours, and are they getting good service. "

 

For years, state and local governments have been privatizing certain functions,

such as trash collection, payroll processing and road maintenance.

 

But contracting with an outside company to run a library is a relatively new

phenomenon, one that has been gaining in popularity as communities from Jackson

County, Tenn., to Redding, Calif., look for ways to save money.

 

The practice has generated a backlash from those who argue that municipalities

are employing a backdoor method of union-busting, and those who say that such

profit-making ventures go against the notion that libraries are one of the

noblest functions of government in a democracy.

 

" This is a shift from the public trust into private hands, " said John Sexton, an

out-of-work Jackson County librarian who has interviewed with LSSI for his old

job. " Libraries have always been a source of information for everyone and owned

by no one. "

 

Most of the 15 or so U.S. municipalities that have outsourced their libraries

has signed on with LSSI, which is the biggest player in the field but is

privately held and does not disclose earnings.

 

Jackson County lost 36 percent of its budget in one fell swoop last year when

Congress failed to renew the rich subsidies designed to help parts of the

country where logging has been hurt by endangered-species regulations. Rather

than cut back on, say, law enforcement, county officials closed the libraries.

(Congress later approved a one-year extension of the logging subsidies.)

 

Book lovers complained bitterly about the closings, but two ballot measures to

raise taxes and reopen the libraries fell short. Then LSSI offered to run the

libraries, underbidding the public employees union.

 

The contract with LSSI will be worth around $3 million a year; the county will

also budget $1.3 million to maintain the buildings. Combined, that is about half

of the $8 million a year the county previously spent on its libraries.

 

However, the libraries will be open a total of only 24 hours a week, compared

with 40-plus hours for most branches before the shutdown. And LSSI plans to hire

50 to 60 full-time employees, down from 88 under county management.

 

The county will retain control over certain policies, such as late fees, the

cost of a library card, or how long library patrons can keep a best-seller.

 

But LSSI will be in charge of buying books and says it will use its muscle to

obtain deep discounts from suppliers. It will also be responsible for hiring,

and says that while its salaries will be comparable to what the employees were

making previously, the benefits will be less generous. The workers will lose the

right to participate in Oregon's pension system for public employees and instead

will qualify for a 401(k) program.

 

Many former staff members are interviewing for their old jobs, meaning library

patrons are likely to see some familiar faces when they check out a book. But

there won't be enough jobs for everyone. And some have yet to decide whether to

go back.

 

" I am taking a wait-and-see approach, " said Amy Kinard, who worked for the

library system for 17 years. " I am not hopeful for a job, but I am trying to

stay open to the benefits of working for them. "

 

Some bibliophiles fear that the library, under distant, corporate management,

will be less attuned to local interests when buying books and will stock the

shelves with lots of best-sellers.

 

" Does this company understand local needs? " asked Loriene Roy, president of the

American Library Association, which opposes library outsourcing. " We have long

regarded libraries as different. We deal with intangibles. We are not

profit-driven. "

 

Riverside County, Calif., one of California's fastest-growing regions, is widely

seen as the pioneer in library outsourcing. The county signed with LSSI in 1997

and has stuck with the company; a 2002 study found that Riverside County library

patrons were generally pleased with the services.

 

In just the last year, Texas cities San Juan and Leander, California cities

Redding and Moorpark and the Jackson-Madison County library system in Tennessee

have joined LSSI's ranks.

 

In Bedford, Texas, outside of Fort Worth, Mayor Jim Story cast the tie-breaking

vote in August against allowing LSSI to take over the libraries.

 

" The salaries were going to be pretty low, and I was afraid that that would lead

to high turnover of their own employees, " Story said. " Plus I did not think that

they would have the manpower to handle the quality of service that we now have

in our library. I wasn't willing to that risk. "

 

Fargo, N.D., cut its ties with LSSI in 2003, after concerns that the company had

not paid its bills on time, while Jersey City, N.J., dropped its contract in

2001 after the mayor who had vouched for LSSI left office.

 

Back in Oregon, Jim Olney, director of the Jackson County Library Foundation,

considers himself a union supporter, but said: " Look, if it is either close the

libraries or outsource them, we'd rather have outsourcing. Sometimes you have to

go for the difficult choice because there is no easy choice. "

 

 

 

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