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Outside the Hudson Area Library, two white lions seem to hang their heavy rusting heads and sigh. The building they guard, built in 1816 as a poorhouse, now serves as the public library for some 12,000 citizens in central Columbia County, and is in need of more than a few repairs. The whole structure slouches in a state of dignified neglect, somewhat self-conscious of its rotting moldings and crumbling mortar. Perhaps more important, the books inside, save a few recent New York Times bestsellers, give off the smell and aura of the Eisenhower Administration. Three of the library's four computers are crammed into the director's office, and like the director, Frank Rees, they seem overworked and in need of an upgrade. Rees knows all about these problems, and when asked about the future of his library, he seems despondent and hopeful at the same time. "The only proper way to support a library is through taxpayer dollars and we're not getting nearly enough," he says.
The Hudson Area Library's voters, however, are among the very few in the Hudson Valley who voted down budget increases last November, killing a proposal to roughly double general funding there. Despite an October 2003 Marist Poll in which 63 percent of households nationwide claimed that they would vote for an increase in taxes to support the library in their local community, voters from Hudson's suburb, Greenport, claimed that they were already overburdened by taxes. Greenport is more affluent and homogenous than Hudson, and some of its residents did not attempt to hide their disapproval for what they saw as a proposal that delivered nothing more than extra books for Hudson's minorities. "It's unfortunate," says Rees. "But we're making the most of the money we do have."
A CENTER FOR SOCIAL MOBILITY In order to implement the reforms they outlined, The New York Board of Regents introduced New Century Libraries to the state legislature in 2003, a bill that asks for $108 million to fund a host of ambitious programs, including digitization grants, new construction, talking book and Braille libraries, and urban literacy initiatives. Many question the chances of the bill's passage at a time when the state is struggling to pay for basics, such as state medical insurance, pensions, and education. "Many of us realize that state money is very scarce these days," says Carol Desch, Coordinator of Statewide Services at the New York State Library, "but we're confident that the full reforms will eventually materialize if we can convince lawmakers that we have an urgent need."
Cohen cites growing numbers of second-home families that are often unhappy to discover that their town's libraries don't have the resources to stay open on weekends. The second-home demographic is a compound problem for the Hudson Valley's libraries. The influx of newcomers places a burden on the limited resources of small towns and hamlets without contributing to an increase in state funding. The New York State Education Law divvies out cash to libraries based on a formula that largely favors populated areas. Since most second-home families in the Hudson Valley continue to list their downstate addresses as primary residences, the Census 2000 does not accurately reflect the increases in upstate library users. Fewer upstate primary residences equal fewer state dollars for our area, which ultimately translates to fewer books, software, and to locked doors on Sunday.
A NOVEL APPROACH
It would be impossible for an individual to obtain even a fraction of the services provided though NOVEL on his or her home computer, no matter how fast their Internet connection. LexisNexis, for example, a popular database that searches millions of newspapers, journals, and other sources, would cost an individual between $300-500 for a standard one-year subscription. NOVEL provides not only this database, but thousands of others just like it that access general articles, legal, medical, and financial information. "This program is already working in over four thousand libraries in our state," says Carol Desch at the New York State Library, "and I don't think most people yet know how incredible it is." Despite these advances in remote and online technology it doesn't seem that all of the library's traditional roles will disappear anytime soon. As our public spaces vanish, communities increasingly rely on the local library for public lectures, meetings, support groups, and even political functions. "And even if everyone eventually does obtain the ability to access the world's information from their offices and bedrooms, you'll still need some place to help make sense of it all," says Kinderhook's Tupple. "I don't think there will ever be an end to the kid running in my door shouting ,'Hey you, I've got to write this paper on Ulysses S. Grant and I need some help.'" A GROWING DEMAND New Paltz represents the classic Hudson Valley library struggling to stretch dollars to match a growing demand. The library's genealogical collection, one of the best between Albany and New York, is in need of professional archival care and humidity control. Repeatedly, locals have asked the library to provide increased space for meetings and special functions, and the staff struggles to accommodate the steady stream of traffic on their three computers. "Even if New Century Library passes," says Giralco, "we won't have nearly enough cash on hand to fund what we hope to do." Beginning this spring, New Paltz plans to raise money the old-fashioned way, riding around town with an open hat, asking for direct help through donations. Meanwhile, The Hudson Area Library actively maintains its own fund drive in order to pay its bills - and things aren't all bad at the former poorhouse. Despite the failed referendum in Greenport, voters within Hudson's city limits did approve a separate and modest budget increase last fall, thus helping the library to avoid a deficit for the first time in several years. As I sat in Hudson's library, searching through the latest newspapers neatly stacked on a card table, two library clerks settled down around the circulation desk. Clearly old friends, the two chatted about neighbors, relatives, and friends in the hospital. One mentioned a loved one who'd been in the hospital for kidney failure, but she could have easily been speaking about her own library: "I'm really not going to let it get me down," she said. "Things will improve somehow - they always do. We'll find a way to get through it all." | |||||||||||||