The San Diego County Library received the 2012 Library of the Year award for their outstanding “ingenuity, creativity and perseverance” and record-breaking success in the face of budgetary cuts. Read more about this prestigious award and how our county's library was chosen to receive it.
On June 5, the San Diego County Library system earned the Gale Library Journal “2012 Library of the Year Award.” The group (LIbrary Journal
and Gale, which produces reference sources for libraries) affirmed the
library’s outstanding “ingenuity, creativity and perseverance” with
record-breaking success in the face of budgetary cuts.
Encinitas branch manager Amy
Geddes is confident that her library (and the other 32 branches in the
county library system) is reclaiming power of written and spoken
discourse.
Geddes also points out that
director José A. Aponte launched “floating” collections using new
systems and "regional consortia" to stimulate a stagnant circulation.
County libraries reported a threefold increase in circulation since
2008, from 4.1 million to 12.1 million, despite severe budget cuts (30%
in the past three years). Last year, county libraries offered 20,000
programs, including a 20 percent increase in adult programs and realized
a 40 percent increase in attendance.
Aponte and his team also
redrafted library spaces to offer the public more face-to-face contact
with librarians. The Encinitas Library alone reported raising its
membership by over 10,000 cardholders since 2008, which is now more than
75 percent of the total population of Encinitas; in 2011, the branch
served 435,000 customers, lending 630,000 materials.
For more information go to the San Diego Reader.


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