|
In
his December 14, 2004 report
to the Salinas City Council, Salinas City
Manager Dave Mora listed “a weak economy”
and “state and county raids on local revenues”
as the top reasons for Salinas’ $9.2 million
deficit-the casualty of which is Salinas’
libraries.
The
city of Salinas tried to raise some of the $9.2
million that would keep the libraries open and other city services intact by
putting a Salinas city sales tax (Measure A)
and a large utility users tax (Measure B) on the
November 2004 ballot. The measures failed.
Salinas had to “reduce expenditures”–close the libraries.
Salinas’
struggle has caught the
nation’s eye. Two of the
libraries closing, the Caesar Chavez Library and
the John Steinbeck Library, are named for the
region’s most articulate champions of the
oppressed, an irony that, sadly, makes a good
story.
Action
Plan Formulated at ALA Mid-Winter Meeting
The
Salinas closures go against the grain of American
Library Association (ALA)
policy
that “free access to the books,
ideas, resources, and information in America’s
libraries is imperative for education, employment,
enjoyment and self-government'.” State Librarian
Susan Hildreth reports that at the ALA midwinter
meeting in Boston, participants discussed the
Salinas closures at length before approving an ALA
governing council resolution directing the ALA president to convey ALA’s
concern to elected officials in Salinas. Following
that meeting, the ALA Executive Board requested
that ALA President-Elect Michael Gorman, Library
Director at CSU Fresno, lead a delegation to visit
Salinas and offer assistance. Also, ALA leaders
have begun to develop an action plan to facilitate
ALA’s actions and support when similar
situations arise.
Delegation
Day
On
Wednesday February 23, 2005, ALA’s concerns
were personally voiced in Salinas. A delegation
of ALA and California Library Association (CLA)
leaders and Susan Hildreth
spent the day in Salinas meeting with civic
officials and concerned citizens. The delegation’s
goal was, according to Michael Gorman, “to
consult with all interested parties and to start
a process of helping through advice,
information, and support.”
Susan Hildreth and CLA President Danis
Kreimeier report the February visit was a
resounding success. Susan Hildreth says, “We
were graciously welcomed by everyone in Salinas;
and the reality of national and state interest
in their community boosted the widespread
efforts to keep libraries alive in Salinas.”
Salinas’s
dignitaries, Mayor Anna Caballero, City Manager
Dave Mora, Assistant City Manager Jorge Rifa
Salinas City Council members and staff, and
community and business leaders, greeted the
delegation with well-researched materials and a
fast-paced agenda for the day.
At
an early afternoon private City Hall meeting, Jorge Rifa gave the delegation a
Power Point overview of Salinas’ budget
history and demographics. Hildreth says
that Rifa’s “devastating” numbers
clarified how the budget has trapped the City’s
leaders with few choices for keeping Salinas
afloat. Hildreth and the others also learned that
City Manager Mora is understandably dedicated to
public safety–to protecting Salinas’s
police force.
At
a subsequent meeting that included business
leaders, Mayor Caballero, City Council members,
and Rally
Salinas! supporters, the
delegation received an overview of the political
scene in Salinas and Monterey County and
participated in enthusiastic discussions of
strategic planning for future initiatives.
That
evening the delegation was welcomed at the
meeting of the grass roots initiative Save
Salinas Libraries. Kreimeier and Hildreth were heartened to see
that more than 100 local activists were already
organizing into task forces that will create
informed public relations and fundraising plans
for public support for funding the libraries.

February
23 Delegation - from left: ALA President-Elect
Michael Gorman; President of the California
Library Association, Danis Kreimeier;
Coordinator, Monterey Bay
Area Cooperative Library System Linda Crowe; Salinas Mayor
Anna Caballero; CLA Chapter
Councilor to ALA, Vickey Johnson; State Librarian Susan Hildreth;
former Fresno County Librarian and former
president of the CLA, John Kallenberg; Salinas
City Manager, Dave Mora.
- Photo
Courtesy of Vickey Johnson
Delegation
Day Outcomes
The
library leaders saw first hand February 23rd
that Salinas’s library activists need help
continuing to emphasize the value of libraries
to the people of Salinas. Friends
of the Salinas Library (FOSPL)
President Lynn Steele explains that many
people in Salinas “don’t grasp that a
library is more than a place to check-out books
and use the Internet.” Salinas’s activists,
Steele says, “must induce voters to approve
another ballot measure,” but, she adds, they
lack the persuasive data.
Salinas
requires factual fuel, the statistics, studies,
and rhetoric to convince Salinas taxpayers that
libraries increase property values, and that
illiteracy connects to crime. The CSL,
the ALA and the CLA will supply that fuel.
Hildreth,
Gorman, and Kreimeier will be what Kreimeier
calls “informational resources” to Salinas.
They will not only share persuasive language and
research on the sociological, economic, and
educational benefits of libraries but also the
names of people who can help bring about a
successful tax initiative. Hildreth, for
example, has provided both FOSPL’s Lynn Stark
and Jorge Rifa a list of library polling
specialists who can help define criteria for a
new measure. “We need that polling data,”
says Steele.
Meanwhile,
library programs consultants at the CSL are
providing consulting services and technical
assistance to the Salinas libraries. The CSL is
working with the city of Salinas and the library
to maintain literacy programs and funding. It is
also working with partners in the city to
provide homework assistance.
Next
Steps for Salinas
Kreimeier
points out that Salinas’s literacy program was
one of the original state-funded literacy
programs over 20 years ago. She
says probably everyone in Salinas knows someone,
a tutor or a learner, who has been touched by
literacy services. If Salinas can tap into that
power, Kreimeier suggests, it would “personalize”
the budget crisis for the community.
Susan Hildreth is speaking to the Salinas Valley
Chamber of Commerce on March 29. She will argue
for not only the moneymaking value of libraries,
but also for the library’s critical
contributions to literacy and youth development
that make communities strong.
Editor’s
Note:
On
March 3, 2005 the Salinas City Council voted 6-0
to leave Salinas’s libraries open on a
skeleton schedule. Under the new plan,
contingent on Salinas’s activists raising
$500,000 by June 20, Salinas’s libraries will
be open two days a week for five hours a day
through December.
In an article posted March 11, 2005 in the ALA’s American Libraries Online, Susan Hildreth said of the City Council’s decision that she thinks“ it’s just marvelous that they [Salinas leaders] are committed to keeping this library system open in some way or another.” “There is so much community activity on many different levels to try to define a permanent or more stable funding source for the library,” Hildreth concluded.
|