Showing posts with label libraries. Show all posts
Showing posts with label libraries. Show all posts

Friday, 4 November 2011

Cup cake book club presents: the new community bookcase!!

Since our local library was closed by the Council, the Cup Cake Book Club was formed.

We started meeting at our local pub, the Spring Close Tavern, where we received a warm welcome. So much so, that not only are we provided with coffee and tea, and special cup cake napkins, but the landlord has decided to build a bookcase to house our books.

People can now go to the pub and read a book ( there is a growing children's section as well), or take a book home and leave a small donation to charity.

The bookcase proved so successful, that the collection box made £35 within a few weeks,and last Tuesday, we had the grand opening.

Local councillors were present, as well as councillor Ogilvie, who is responsible for the libraries in the Leeds City Council, and staff from the mobile library service to speak about their job and listen to people's suggestions and feedback.

It was a great night:

Councillor Ogilvie cut the ribbon to the bookcase,







The cakes were especially made for the occasion, reflecting both Halloween night and the loss of our local library.











We all enjoyed the conversation,





and the warmth of the fireplace.




We enjoyed a drink and learned a lot about other book clubs in the city.









Many thanks to the landlord, Mike, for his warm hospitality!!





Mike with councillor Ogilvie.

Friday, 20 May 2011

View from the Civic Hall



Our local library’s faith was sealed on Wednesday, when the Executive Board of the Leeds City Council met to vote on the recommendations. COVEN was present at the meeting, in order to follow up a campaign that we fought consistently, through involvement with the community, through our representation to the Leeds City Council and through this blog.

The good news from the meeting was that NOT all libraries earmarked for closure are going to be closed down. Communities all over Leeds fought to keep their libraries open and some succeeded. We didn’t.

Our neighbourhood is going to lose a very important resource, another one of a number of services closing down in the area, with purpose-built buildings increasingly left boarded up, such as the former Day Centre and soon, the hostel on Walter Crescent. Furthermore, as Cllr Golton noted at the meeting, the position of the mobile libraries brought in instead, will not match geographically the location of the library, leaving communities south of York Road without easy access to them.

Councillors from different wards commented on their localities’ needs but, unfortunately, none of our three councillors had anything to say on our behalf.

So, in our area, the library service will provide “targeted” children’s and family mobile services to the new Richmond Hill school, with a computer suite in the newly extended community centre. But although there will also be “fortnightly” mobiles for older people and weekly children’s mobiles, the mobile provision will be located in the part of Richmond Hill on the left of the railway, leaving the whole of East End Park, including the AllSaints’ primary school without any access to a library!!!

One other thing that felt really wrong was the councillors in the meeting, congratulating themselves on a “detailed” consultation. We have previously voiced our concerns over the nature of the consultation, but more problems with it emerged during the meeting. One of the main contributors in the consultation project was the Citizens’ Panel, which is mentioned often in the documents, sometimes having backed council proposals up to 90%. Only it turns out, as Cllr Carter noted, only 25% of the Citizens’ Panel questionnaires were returned!

So, when for example it is stated that “77% ( of the panel) agreed that the council should consolidate the number of libraries it has” in order to improve the quality, we are talking about the 77% of the 25%. You do the maths...

Monday, 14 March 2011

COVEN, Cllr Adam Ogilvie and the Richmond Hill Library

Copyright COVEN 2011
Following advice from one of our local Councillors COVEN asked to see Cllr Adam Ogilvie to talk to him about the importance of an accessible local library to our area.  He offered to meet us at the Civic Hall and 3 members of our group went along to talk to him on Friday 11 March 2011.

He first explained that due to government spending cuts the council as a whole had to make unpleasant decisions and his department alone had to find savings of £3,000,000.  When looking around for the best way to achieve this it was noted that some local libraries had become under used, very run down and would be difficult and expensive to refurbish but cuts had to be made in this area and that is why the consultation had begun to find out what residents thought.

We raised with him our concerns about, amongst other things, the quality of the consultation which we felt did not make it sufficiently plain that cuts were planned.  It appeared, certainly at first, as if we were being offered mobile library provision and you could be forgiven for thinking that this was as well as, and not instead, of a permanent library.  Cllr Ogilvie agreed that others has raised similar concerns about the quality and clarity of the consultation and took our points on board.

Next we raised the fact that though our library is only open 17 hours per week use is not consistent over that period.  We suggested perhaps targeting the opening hours to times of high usage might be more efficient and would allow for some reduction in hours without removing a permanent library from the area.

The actual building itself is a real problem.  We do not have a real library, only 1 room in a sports hall, it is extremely cramped and only available when the hall is not in use.  The library is very difficult to find and has no spare space were exhibitions or events could be held.  We feel that this is certainly one of the factors holding back its development.  It has been suggested, we understand, that space could be made available in either the refurbished Richmond Hill Community Centre for the computers - which would be available for all not just library patrons - or that a community space, including a library, might be incorporated into the Richmond Hill Primary School development.  We certainly think that both these ideas as worthy of serious consideration.

We stressed to him that there is a real need in this area not only for the facilities that a permanent building could provide in terms of computer access and books but also the valuable resource a library building here could be.  We would like to set up book clubs to encourage both parents and children to try new books, to explore reading or researching into items local groups across the city could bring to the library, as happens elsewhere in the city, this is especially important in an area like ours were educational attainment is below the city average but at the moment there is simply not the physical space for such ideas to by tried out.

Our area is poorly resourced in many ways, and though we know some other areas of the city are similarly disadvantaged our large number of constantly fluctuating residents makes a meeting space a real necessity.  With the schools here getting more and more crowded and home Internet access less common in this area than some other parts of the city it would meet many needs on many levels.

We can see that some residents, particularly the elderly or infirm, might really benefit from a mobile library service which comes to them given the difficulty of reaching the present library but if the opening hours of the library were more strictly targeted to the busiest times we feel that the unused library time could be provided by targeted mobile libraries in specific areas.

Cllr Ogilvie listened to our representations and confirmed that no final decision has yet been taken.  He promised to feed our concerns back to his committee and we will keep you informed of any developments as we hear about them.

Tuesday, 8 February 2011

Councillor speak on closure of Richmond Hill Library

Cllr Richard Brett and Cllr Ralph Pryke had supplied this reply in response to our request for their position on this very important matter locally.



Libraries are very important to many people in our community. All Saints C/E Primary school pupils use Richmond Hill Library after school and they have sent me a petition which I have passed on to councillor Adam Ogilvie who is the Labour Councillor responsible for the final decision on which Libraries stay open. It will be very sad if we can’t keep Richmond Hill Library open.

It would be used more if it was situated in a better place. There are no homes near it in its current position. Cllr Pryke and I have therefore asked senior Library staff to explore moving Library computers to Richmond Hill community Centre where a new extension would allow them to be kept secure. We think that RHEA and the youth service would use them as well as school children after school hours. Library staff have promised to look at this suggestion carefully.”

We have the first reply from one of our councillors on the closure of the library in Richmond Hill

"Dear Sue the issue you raise can be resolved if sombody listens to me and that is to have the new library built on the richmond hill primary school attatched to the schools library with safeguards built in when the community use it.


Cllr Ron Grahame
Burmantofts & Richmond Hill Ward
Labour Group"

We thank Cllr Grahame for his comments and look forward to hearing from our other two councillors soon. We will post their comments on the Blog as soon as they arrive.

Thursday, 13 January 2011

A new chapter?



Walking in my local library yesterday, I was impressed by the huge banner, all pink and full of promises, A New Chapter.

Looking at it, you'd think that things couldn't be better where library provision in the city is concerned: there is mention of 2,000 extra library hours, 100,000 extra computer hours, "tailored" mobile services and £1million to be spent on books.

And there is a consultation going, and an equally pink leaflet to complete to give your comments.

The questions are to do with further opening hours ( how many more hours would you like Compton Road library to be open for? Is Monday 9 to 7 good for you or would you like to offer another suggestion?), and with proposed locations for mobile libraries in the area.

Funny how, library CLOSURES are carefully hidden in the document. When I first looked, I couldn't find anything about Richmond Hill library. And I wasn't the only one. The librarian couldn't find anything on our library on the leaflet either!

So I asked for further information, and surprisingly (?) there wasn't any.
I did find the executive report on line, in the LCC website.

And I did find the mention of closures in the "consultation" document: it's on the very top of the second page, literally in small print and it says:


The costs and level of use brings the viability of Richmond Hill, Osmonthorpe and Swarcliffe Libraries into question. We 'd like your views on the proposals bellow.

Ultimately, the "views" asked, are about possible locations for mobile libraries which "could" visit the area, as it is very subtly mentioned ( and that, according to my poor English, means that there is a possibility that they mightn't.)

So please, find some time to visit the library and fill in the questionnaire.
Or you can do it on-line at:

http://www.surveymonkey.com/s/DTY7NMR

Residents in East End Park and Richmond Hill are used to living in a desert of public services provision: there is no sports' centre, no baths, and soon there will be no library. This is, according to the executive report because our library is underused. It is worth mentioning though, that Richmond Hill library only opens from 10 to 5 two days a week and half a day on Wednesday from 2 to 5, which means that it's no use to those who work or go to college. Still, it is used by the local primary school, by mothers and children, by old people, and by youths after school, if only for a brief period of time.

For me the library is very special: as a mother of small children in the area, it was my first port of call for information, books, printing, computers and more importantly as a place to go, to get out of the house and see other people, to teach the kids to appreciate the value of books and learning.

I know that the new mantra is that "we should all make sacrifices" (although apparently some of us will have to sacrifice more than others) but I also believe that some things, you can't put a price on.

Taking that very valuable service away from us, is bound to backfire:
We live in a poor area, where services are absent, internet use limited and with very little for young people to do.

I would like to paraphrase and old Greek saying for this instance that goes: where a school closes, a prison opens.

I would like to say: if a library closes, s**t happens..