New York Daily News

Read about it: Library use surged before budget cuts

- BY CHRIS SOMMERFELD­T

The city’s public libraries saw large spikes in visitors and social program participat­ion in the months before Mayor Adams’ budget cuts prompted them to eliminate Sunday hours at all branches and scale back other services as well, newly released data show.

The data were tucked into the Preliminar­y Mayor’s Management Report that Adams unveiled Tuesday afternoon. The report tracks performanc­e metrics of city services from July 1, 2023, through Oct. 31, the four-month span leading up to the release of Adams’ November budget plan, which enacted the library cuts, among other city spending reductions.

In that four-month window, the New York Public Library (NYPL) system, which serves Manhattan, the Bronx and Staten Island, welcomed more than 2.6 million visitors to its branches and registered 195,897 new library cards, according to data in the report. That’s a jump from the 2.4 million visitors and 142,933 new library card registrati­ons the system saw in the same four-month window in 2022, the data show.

“The data itself is reason enough for the mayor to restore the libraries to where they used to be,” said City Councilwom­an Carlina Rivera (D-Manhattan), who heads the Cultural Affairs Committee, which has jurisdicti­on over the city’s three public library systems. “There’s a mental health component to the libraries’ work, it’s a social engine, and in a budget this big and considerin­g how far these dollars go, these cuts have to be reconsider­ed. It will be a big priority for the Council.”

Adams, whose team started negotiatio­ns with the Council last month on next fiscal year’s $109 billion budget, has argued he must push through “difficult” cuts across all municipal agencies to address ballooning deficits exacerbate­d by expiring federal aid and the tens of millions of dollars the city is spending every month to care for newly arrived migrants.

The November cut that resulted in the end of Sunday hours at all branches — as well as a hiring freeze and reduction in some social programs — reduced city funding for the library systems by about $23.6 million this fiscal year. Initially, Adams planned to slash funding further for libraries last month, but he backed off that idea after city tax revenue projection­s greatly improved and the three systems warned that another cut would force them to eliminate Saturday hours, too.

Adams spokeswoma­n Elizabeth Garcia wouldn’t say whether the increased demand for city library services is giving the mayor second thoughts about his November cut. But Garcia tied the increase to “our investment­s in public safety, public spaces and working-class people as part of our holistic approach to accelerati­ng our economic recovery.”

Beyond visitor upticks, the NYPL, the country’s largest public library system, saw even sharper increases in use of its social programs, which primarily serve low-income New Yorkers and include efforts like free literacy courses, after-school initiative­s and career help workshops.

Overall, the Mayor’s Management Report report showed the NYPL had 369,555 people enroll in such programs in the latest reporting window — a 22% jump compared with the 287,701 who participat­ed during the same span in 2022. Use of NYPL branches’ free Wi-Fi also skyrockete­d, with the report logging 842,094 individual uses in the most recent four-month reporting stretch, a more than 100% surge over the 395,219 check-ins during the equivalent window in 2022.

The surge in demand for NYPL services was mirrored at the city’s two other public library systems, the report shows. Queens Public Library’s branches welcomed some 2.1 million visitors and registered 36,081 new library cards in the latest reporting stretch — compared with 1.8 million visitors and 28,966 new cards in the four-month span in 2022, the data show. Social program use also surged to 333,825 individual users in the 2023 four-month period compared with 263,061 in the previous one.

Brooklyn Public Library’s branches saw the biggest spike in new library cards, issuing 105,876 in the latest period compared with 59,967 in the last one, the report shows. Library visits in Brooklyn went up from 1.3 million in the 2022 fourmonth span to more than 1.8 million in the latest period, while social program participat­ion soared from 158,075 to 235,990, the data show.

The report doesn’t offer an explanatio­n for the increase in demand for library services across the city. But Rivera noted that the uptick comes as many of the tens of thousands of migrants, mostly Latin Americans, who have arrived in the city since 2022 are known to patronize libraries.

In a joint statement to the Daily News, the three public library systems said the upswing in service shows “New Yorkers understand the value of libraries and very much need and rely on what we offer.”

“We will continue to work with city leaders to fully restore our funding so that we can build on the progress we’ve made in recent years providing New Yorkers with libraries they deserve,” their statement said.

Last year, Adams said he would subject all agencies, including the libraries, to another round of budget cuts in April unless the city’s fiscal situation greatly improves.

He hasn’t ruled out moving forward with those cuts. He has, however, suggested the library systems consider dipping into their endowments, which are provided by private donors, to bridge some of the funding gaps caused by the cuts.

 ?? AP ?? Sunday closures at three city public library systems are enough to dampen spirits of avid readers.
AP Sunday closures at three city public library systems are enough to dampen spirits of avid readers.

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