Waterloo Region Record

Libraries, museums prepare for disasters

Archivists say artifacts at risk in Canada

- HOLLY MCKENZIE-SUTTER

As Brazil mourns the loss of irreplacea­ble artifacts after a fire ravaged the collection at its national museum, Canadian archivists say some of this country’s heritage treasures could also be at risk.

Cara Krmpotich, director of the University of Toronto’s museum studies program, said dangers like earthquake­s, flooding, and forest fires have made emergency preparedne­ss a priority for Canada’s archival spaces, but funding for infrastruc­ture can be hard to come by.

“Could what happened in Brazil happen here? In some ways, absolutely,” said Krmpotich. “If we think about shifting weather and climate change, absolutely this is something we should be thinking about in Canada.”

The Thomas Fisher Rare Book Library at the University of Toronto houses national treasures like the oldest English printed book in Canada from 1481, the letters of General James Wolfe, and written archival records of artists like Margaret Atwood and Leonard Cohen.

Associate chief librarian Loryl MacDonald said a 48-page disaster preparedne­ss plan is in place to minimize damage to the library’s valuable collection in case of a fire or water damage from sprinklers, including a trained salvage team to inspect and review the books.

Earlier this summer, a server crash wiped out the digital archive at Memorial University of Newfoundla­nd. While all hard copies of the documents remain, and all public services have been restored as of Sept. 1, the process to restore the public Digital Archive Initiative is ongoing.

In 2014 a fire broke out at the Musée de la civilisati­on in Quebec City, posing a threat to the collection.

A few years ago, a fire broke out at a First Nations cultural community centre on Vancouver Island, prompting a call to other institutio­ns for help preserving its threatened collection.

Other institutio­ns in the province gave instructio­ns over the phone about how to prevent mould growth and dry out artifacts, but the isolated nature of the museum sparked change from neighbouri­ng institutio­ns that wanted to do more to help.

Heidi Swierenga at the Museum of Anthropolo­gy said the close call prompted an ongoing initiative to form a provincewi­de network of responders for when disasters threaten archives and collection­s, including localized training and disaster kits.

The network hasn’t been put to the test yet, but Swierenga said it’s given curators and archivists more confidence in the safety of their collection­s.

“Let’s just say MOA had a big flood, I would be able to pick up the phone and call conservato­rs and they’d be able to say, ‘Yeah, we’ll be there right away,’” Swierenga said.

 ?? UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO HANDOUT THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? University of Toronto's Thomas Fisher Rare Book Library houses a treasured collection, the kind archivists want to protect from fire and other risks.
UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO HANDOUT THE CANADIAN PRESS University of Toronto's Thomas Fisher Rare Book Library houses a treasured collection, the kind archivists want to protect from fire and other risks.

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