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The financial crisis has caused a lot of withdrawals at the public library.
A few years ago, public libraries were being written off as goners. The Internet had made them irrelevant, the argument went. But libraries across the country are reporting jumps in attendance of as much as 65% over the past year, as newly unemployed people flock to branches to fill out résumés and scan ads for job listings.
Other recession-weary patrons are turning to libraries for cheap entertainment -- killing time with the free computers, video rentals and, of course, books.
Last Friday, there was a particularly long waiting list of 157 to check out the popular vampire novel "Twilight," by Stephenie Meyer, from a branch of the Stockton-San Joaquin County Library here in Tracy. This central California town has been ravaged by mortgage foreclosures, and area libraries report a surge of traffic. Shamika Miller huddled over a laptop at the Tracy branch. Laid off from her job as a bookkeeper at Home Depot more than a year ago, Ms. Miller, 29 years old, says she has visited the library "if not every day, every other day" since October to check job listings with her computer.
Read it all.
Filed under: * Culture-Watch Books * Economics, Politics Economy

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3. libraryjim wrote:
In our area: The University and the Community College BOTH have had to institute a hiring freeze on all employees, including the unfilled Library staff. Lastly, new reference books are in short demand. Most of the monies for book purchases go to popular fiction (such as “Twilight”), while medical reference materials are outdated on the shelf. One I saw had a copyright of 1990. Of course there is always the internet, but a lot of older patrons are not comfortable using the internet. Jim Elliot <>< |
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4. Sick & Tired of Nuance wrote:
The real problem is that there are no cookies allowed in the library! |
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5. libraryjim wrote:
True most libraries have “no food or drink” signs in the library. However, I’ve been to libraries that
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6. Sick & Tired of Nuance wrote:
Hi Jim, My post was meant as a tongue-in-cheek stress reliever. It was supposed to be funny. Thanks for your detailed response and I hope I did not raise your ire. I completely understand the need to protect the reference section, but books that are checked out…well, they are subject to…oh, I shudder to think! ;^) Good luck in the job hunt. I have spent many wonderful hours in libraries. We just had a budget vote for more funding for our local library, and although I voted “no” on school budget increases and road work costs, I voted yes to fund renovation at our library. They are that important to me. (We home school and we already have very high property taxes and gasoline taxes.) By the way, all three measures passed. January 17, 9:40 am | [comment link] |
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7. John Wilkins wrote:
I was teasing, of course. In fairness, I believe libraries are possibly the most important government institutions there are, and a good example of how the government can support liberty. January 17, 2:31 pm | [comment link] |
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8. libraryjim wrote:
Tired, As to what happens to checked out books, I don’t have to IMAGINE. I’ve seen it, and you would not like to! I went out to get the books from the book drop one day and found that someone had dumped their KFC scraps there. Fortunately, the cup of soda landed right side up, and nothing spilled onto the books, but the chicken bones! Thank goodness they were in a ‘box’. By the way, that’s mild. You should see what people use for bookmarks! Of course we get the patrons who bring in a book—dripping wet—and say “It was that way when I checked it out.” Ah, the stories I could tell. “When I read about the way in which library funds are being cut and cut, I can only think that American society has found one more way to destroy itself.”—Isaac Asimov January 17, 9:49 pm | [comment link] |
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9. libraryjim wrote:
I just sent my resume to the Bush Library in Texas. It will be interesting to see what, if any, response I get. |
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the library is government funded. Perhaps this is an excess of spending?
January 16, 2:24 am | [comment link]