San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

EXPANDING LITTLE FREE LIBRARIES

County supervisor­s create initiative to fund installing more book-sharing boxes

- BY ANDREA LOPEZ-VILLAFAÑA

Just outside Katia Padilla’s Chula Vista home are two upright boxes filled with shelves of dozens of books for sharing with children, teens and adults.

They’re called Little Free Libraries.

Padilla, who grew up in Mexico, loved to read when she was a little girl, but books were expensive and she didn’t always have access to them, she said.

“I would dream I had a library all for myself,” Padilla said.

Now a mother and retired ultrasound technician, Padilla wants to be sure her children and other kids in the neighborho­od don’t face similar obstacles to reading, she said. That was her driving force for installing the little libraries, she said. And it’s one reason San Diego County officials are turning to little libraries to increase access to books in low-income neighborho­ods and communitie­s of color across the region.

The idea behind these book-sharing boxes is simple: take a book; leave a book. The popularity of little libraries has grown over their first 11 years — there are more 100,000 Little Free Libraries worldwide including 270 in San Diego alone.

The county Board of Supervisor­s voted unanimousl­y on March 16 to create a “Little Libraries” initiative to help residents in low-income communitie­s install the booksharin­g boxes. According to the San Diego Council on Literacy, about 560,000 adults in the region read at an elementary school level or not at all. About 60 percent of low-income students in San Diego don’t have books at home.

“The reality is there are vast disparitie­s,” said Supervisor Nora Vargas, who represents cities and neighborho­ods in southern parts of the county. “Many communitie­s’ children don’t have access to age-appropriat­e books at home, which causes them to fall behind.”

Vargas brought the initiative to the board. She said it will address some disparitie­s in disadvanta­ged communitie­s by promoting and encouragin­g reading from home. The county plans to set aside $20,000 for the initiative.

The county’s library system would work with the San Diego Council on Literacy and other nonprofits and volunteer groups to install more little libraries.

The book-sharing boxes are a program of the Little Free Library, a national nonprofit that provides mini-library building materials and informatio­n to people all over the world. People can register the libraries with the organizati­on for a one-time fee of $40 to $80.

All little libraries don’t have to register. There are dozens in San Diego that are not affiliated with it.

The registrati­on fee can be an obstacle for some, as well as getting the materials to build the libraries and purchasing books to fill them, advocates say.

“I think a lot of folks, they forget how expensive books are,” said Jose Cruz, CEO of the San Diego Council on Literacy. “You go into a regular store, you’re going to pay $12 to $15 for a book . ... For a lowincome family, that’s a lot.”

In an effort to help families interested in operating little libraries, Cruz said the council will collect donated books for the libraries.

He said Little Libraries can increase children’s access to books in a “neighborly” way.

“Here are these residents in all these communitie­s across America and beyond that are building their own libraries and exchanging books, reading them, trading them, and it’s just something that makes you feel good,” Cruz said.

It’s unclear how many little libraries are located in San Diego’s southern neighborho­ods because many are not officially registered. Padilla said there are at least 10 little libraries within a 3-mile radius of her home.

Neighbors in Logan Heights and Valencia Park have been installing little libraries across those neighborho­ods. A community council in Valencia Park has already helped install four little libraries.

Padilla opened the little library in front of her home two years ago and has seen how successful they are.

“Putting them in areas of low-income, that’s going to make so many kids happy,” she said. “I wish we have little free libraries on every block.”

She keeps the libraries stocked with books in Spanish, Tagalog and other languages. She also recently opened a little library outside her home in Baja California.

“You see kids who are very low income and they ask you, ‘Are you sure they are free?’ and then you see their big smiles and sometimes they say, ‘I’ve never had a book,’ ” Padilla said.

 ?? KRISTIAN CARREON ?? Katia Padilla pulls a book from her Little Free Library that she has operated for two years at her Chula Vista home on Tuesday.
KRISTIAN CARREON Katia Padilla pulls a book from her Little Free Library that she has operated for two years at her Chula Vista home on Tuesday.
 ?? KRISTIAN CARREON ?? Fernanda Padilla, 10, and her mother, Katia, read a book by their Little Free Library at their Chula Vista home on Tuesday.
KRISTIAN CARREON Fernanda Padilla, 10, and her mother, Katia, read a book by their Little Free Library at their Chula Vista home on Tuesday.

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