Truro News

Cumberland County libraries get a financial reprieve

Province providing one-time grant to alleviate funding worries

- BY DARRELL COLE

It appears as though Cumberland County’s library system has dodged another bullet.

Days after announcing it would be cutting hours at five of its seven libraries for budgetary reasons, Cumberland Public Libraries chief librarian Denise Corey said the region is receiving another one-time grant of $52,667 from the province to allow for time to work on a long-term funding strategy.

“This is very good news for the library, it means that we don’t have to reduce branch hours and it also means that the same staff that I was telling two weeks ago that their hours were being cut have been given a reprieve,” Corey said.

The libraries received a similar grant last year.

Corey said the funding still doesn’t address the long-term funding issues for public libraries, it does allow the library to continue offering services to Cumberland County residents.

“We’ve bought two more years and we hope that before those two years expire that we’ll have a new funding model. Otherwise, in two years we’ll be going back down this road,” said Corey. “At some point, unless they change the formula, which they are looking at, we will have to cut hours because we can’t sustain what we’re doing.”

Currently, public libraries in Nova Scotia are taking part in a core services review and there is indication from the government that the review and resulting funding formula changes should happen in the next fiscal year.

Earlier this week, the deputy minister of Communitie­s, Culture and Heritage Tracey Tawell told the legislatur­e’s public accounts committee said Nova Scotia’s public libraries are receiving a three per cent budget increase – of $474,000.

While she has been critical of the government’s reluctance to increase funding over the past several years, Corey is appreciati­ve of the one-time grant.

Two weeks ago, Corey announced the library’s board of directors had decided to reduce hours at five branches, including Oxford, Springhill, Amherst, Parrsboro and Pugwash effective June 1. Libraries in Advocate Harbour and River Hebert were going to maintain their hours because cutting them would impact employee’s benefits packages.

She said the cuts would have saved approximat­ely $ 13,000 year.

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