Yorkshire Post

Libraries ‘more than just books’, says boss at council

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LIBRARIES IN a West Yorkshire district are to undergo a massive revamp as the council looks at how to deliver services in the wake of ongoing cuts that have reached £3.5m.

In outlining that “libraries are about much more than books”, Kirklees Council’s chief librarian, Carol Stump, proposes to redesign library provision across the borough by focusing on what it describes as the “wider community function”.

This could mean libraries acting as hubs for a range of services such as the voluntary and community sector, primary care, adult and children’s social care, and communitie­s teams as well as access to networked libraries elsewhere.

She says community-managed libraries are developing across the country and that Kirklees Council “should continue to proudly embrace and support” the idea as well as learning from the mistakes of other councils.

The existing home service looks set to continue but may be delivered in collaborat­ion with an as-yet unspecifie­d external partner. And book fines, for decades the bane of readers’ lives, could be axed.

Libraries in Kirklees have suffered under crippling financial cutbacks that have already seen budgets slashed by 43 per cent.

It is expected they will fall still further to 63 per cent – falling from £5.7m to £2.2m by 2020. The council says maintainin­g services to more vulnerable people “will be extremely challengin­g”.

The new vision for libraries follows a £25,000 government-funded feasibilit­y study and 12-week consultati­on that heard feedback from staff, friends’ groups and some of the borough’s 450 volunteers.

Whilst there was support for more volunteer input there was also strong support for retaining trained librarians and an acknowledg­ement that any further reduction in paid library staff “would have a negative impact on the quality of the service”.

By sharing space and integratin­g service the new library model would reduce running costs whilst improving social connectivi­ty. The council could back community management via training, provision of book stock and IT support. Financial support could be given through a parish precept.

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