Category: Uncategorized

Email to JPL’s Bridges Users

I forwarded the email below to JPL patrons who have used Bridges within the past year. 

—————————————————–

As a borrower of Johnston Public Library e-books and e-audiobooks, I think it’s important that you know how decisions by book publishers impact wait times for library users and how publishers’ pricing of library e-books and e-audiobooks limits the number of copies that we can make available. The email from the State Library of Iowa included below includes information on these issues as well as how you can give feedback to publishers about how they do business with public libraries.

 

Here are the main points for those in a hurry:

 

  • Libraries often get a discount on physical books and audiobooks but publishers charge libraries three to five times more than retail for e-books and e-audiobooks. This limits the number of copies we can buy and increases wait times.
  • Macmillan—publisher of John Grisham, James Patterson, Nora Roberts, and other popular authors–has decided to prevent libraries from purchasing more than one copy of all new e-books and e-audiobooks for the first eight weeks after their publication. This will result in even longer wait-times for new titles.
  • The easiest way to let your voice be heard is to sign the petition at https://ebooksforall.org/. You can also contact Macmillan directly be emailing press.inquiries@macmillan.com

 

Eric Melton

Director

Johnston Public Library

6700 Merle Hay Road

Johnston, IA  50131

515-278-5233 ex. 604

melton@johnstonlibrary.com

 

 

Having trouble viewing this email? View it as a Web page.

 

October 16, 2019

Please Share This with Your Staff & Patrons

 


Publishers Are Changing E-Book Access for Libraries

It was a dark and stormy morning…

You run to your car through the rain to start your drive to work and open your favorite e-audiobook app for some rush-hour listening. To your dismay, the audiobook you purchased has vanished from your library. After dinner, the rain still falls as you settle into your favorite chair with a cup of tea to finish the thrilling ebook you bought last week, and you discover it too has vanished from your e-reader’s library. You search for the missing titles and find your ownership has expired and you must purchase them again, and the price has risen to $60!

As a consumer this has likely never happened to you; when you buy an ebook you assume you’ll own it forever and the prices are roughly comparable to the price of print books. But publishers have different prices and rules for libraries which determine how long we can own a copy. And now Macmillan Publishers is restricting libraries to one copy of all new titles for the first eight weeks after publication. These policies imposed on libraries by publishers create challenges as we strive to purchase sufficient digital copies to minimize wait times and meet the increasing demand for these formats; at Bridges in 2018 ebook use increased 18.6% and e-audiobook use increased 22.7%.

Libraries No Longer Own eBooks and e-Audiobooks

When a library purchases a digital copy of an ebook or e-audiobook, the publisher determines how long the library is allowed to own that item before it must be purchased again. This is called metered licensing. A perpetual license allows the library to purchase a digital copy once and own it forever, a situation which is becoming increasingly rare. Most major publishers have recently adopted a metered license policy where each purchased copy expires after two years, and some publishers also add a limit on the number of times a digital copy can be checked out before it expires so that very popular titles may expire before the two years have ended.

The publisher’s intent with metered licensing is to approximate the wear-and-tear which a physical copy would get through repeated use, wear-and-tear that does require libraries to decide whether to remove or replace worn out physical copies. In that context the two-year metered license doesn’t seem entirely unreasonable, until you factor in the significantly higher prices libraries pay for ebooks. Metered licensing also means that older titles simply vanish from our collection because we can’t always afford to replace those titles due to the high prices and the need to spend our limited funds on copies of newer, more popular titles. This robs our patrons of a rich back catalog of titles which are just as fulfilling now as they were when they first came out.

Macmillan Publishers has made an already difficult situation considerably worse with a new policy which prevents libraries from purchasing more than one copy of all new ebooks and e-audiobooks for the first eight weeks after publication. This will result in pent up demand among Bridges patrons who will wait even longer for new titles from Macmillan, titles by authors like John Grisham, James Patterson, and Nora Roberts. With a checkout period of two weeks for ebooks, only four patrons will be able to check out the single copy of new Macmillan titles while the library waits for the eight-week purchase embargo period to end. This shortsighted policy is detrimental to both libraries and to the community of book consumers that libraries foster and publishers need.

Libraries Pay Much Higher Prices For eBooks and e-Audiobooks

Many patrons assume libraries pay the same price for ebooks and e-audiobooks that consumers pay. This is true for print books, where libraries receive discounts comparable to the discounted prices one sees on Amazon. But it is not true for e-copies where libraries pay three to five times the consumer price. To illustrate this, let’s put together a shopping cart of the September 2019 top 5 New York Times fiction bestsellers and compare prices.

Per copy prices for consumer vs. library copies September 2019. Consumer prices are from Amazon. Note that a two-year metered license also applies to all of the ebook copies and most of the e-audiobook copies.

Title

Consumer ebook

Library ebook

Consumer e-audiobook

Library e-audiobook

The Institute by Stephen King

14.99

59.99

14.95

99.99

The Testaments by Margaret Atwood

14.99

55.00

14.95

95.00

Where the Crawdads Sing by Delia Owens

14.99

55.00

14.95

66.50

The Goldfinch by Donna Tartt

11.99

65.00

14.95

65.00

The Titanic Secret by Clive Cussler

14.99

55.00

14.95

95.00

Total cost

71.95

289.99

74.75

421.49

 

Once you multiply these prices by the number of copies we need to purchase to satisfy demand, the prices become prohibitive. For example, Bridges has purchased 50 ebook copies and 34 e-audiobook copies of Where the Crawdads Sing at a cost of $4,977. And to satisfy demand we honestly need to purchase even more; over 1000 patrons are waiting to check out an ebook copy and 728 patrons are waiting to check out an e-audiobook copy. The popularity of this title is an extreme situation, but it’s easy to see ebook pricing is a challenge for our collection budget; spending $5,000 or more on a single title restricts the number of other titles we can purchase.

You can help!

The prohibitive pricing and unfavorable contract terms put libraries in a difficult position with little leverage for negotiation. The only way for libraries to exert economic pressure would be to boycott publishers who impose the policies which are detrimental to our ability to provide materials to our patrons. Unfortunately, this isn’t a realistic option unless we want to deny our patrons access to the authors and titles they want most. Macmillan is not the only publisher making their licensing terms more difficult for library collections.  And while some patrons would be able to purchase their own copies, many wouldn’t have the means to do so; we would be failing in our mission to provide equitable access to all if we stop buying these titles.

What libraries are doing is registering our protest to these unfair policies with a united voice. And we encourage you to add your voice as well. Publishers need to understand that libraries foster an active community of readers and those readers are the people who purchase books. Libraries don’t harm publishers; we help them.

Let your voice be heard by joining with the American Library Association, Public Library Association, Urban Libraries Council, Canadian Urban Libraries Council, and even ebook platform companies like Overdrive, in strongly opposing the increased restrictions on digital library lending, especially the new Macmillan eight-week purchase embargo and the recent elimination of perpetual licensing by all of the major publishers.

The easiest way to let your voice be heard is to sign the petition at ebooksforall.org. But you can also contact Macmillan publishing directly be emailing press.inquiries@macmillan.com.

Read more news about publisher restrictions and policies affecting your library access to ebooks and e-audiobooks at the Urban Libraries Council’s Fair E-Book and E-Audiobook Lending for Libraries information page.

Original blog post by Nathan James,Deputy Executive Director of Central Arkansas Library System. Updated to reflect Iowa (Bridges) information. 

(https://cals.org/blog/publishers-are-changing-e-book-access-for-libraries/)

I Love Libraries

 

Thank you for being a Bridges member library! 

 

1112 East Grand Avenue
Des Moines, Iowa 50319


Bridges is made possible in part by the Institute of Museum and Library Services under the provisions of the Library Services and Technology Act as administered by the State Library of Iowa.

 

 

 

 

 

 


 

 

Posted in Uncategorized

First pops concert of the season

https://dmsymphony.org/events/havana-nights/.

 

This is a link with info about our first pops concert of the season.  If you like Latin and Spanish music, this may be right for you!

Posted in Uncategorized

Pleasant Hill Halloween party, another reminder!

The Pleasant Hill Halloween party will be held this Friday the 18th, from 6:30-8 at the Doanes Park Youth Center in Pleasant Hill.  It’s free and you may wear a Halloween costume, and there will be lots of games and excitement! 

Posted in Uncategorized

Parameters for cancelling an Adventure Pass

New language clarifying our rule on cancelling an Adventure Pass has been added to the website:

“To cancel a reservation please call the library (515-278-5233) prior to closing the day before your visit. “

Posted in Uncategorized

8th grade library card application humor for your Monday

Posted in Uncategorized

Lynne’s Dad

With the extra funds received for the flowers, I made a donation in Robert’s name to Blessman International. 

—————

Lynne’s dad passed away on Friday morning. A sympathy card is in the break room for anyone that would like to sign.

I am purchasing flowers on behalf of the library and will collect money from those interested in contributing. An envelope will be placed in the breakroom. 

Services will be held on Tuesday, October 15 at McLarens Resthaven Chapel & Mortuary in West Des Moines. Visitation is at 10am and the service is at 11am. 

https://www.legacy.com/obituaries/desmoinesregister/obituary.aspx?n=robert-r-thompson&pid=194144259&fhid=11274

Posted in Uncategorized

Ice Skating Rink Coming to JPL

I received this messge from the parks director yesterday. I’ll provide more information as I get it.

 

Eric,

We have been working with the Iowa Wild to encourage more skating/ice hockey in the metro area.  They are donating a rink to the City of Johnston to install and use this year.  This will just lay on a grass surface.  My thoughts are the commons there by the library represents the best site.  It has plenty of flat ground and parking adjacent to it.  I wanted to touch base with you to make sure that you didn’t have any issues with this location.  Let me know your thoughts.

Thanks,

John

 

John Schmitz

Parks and Recreation Director

Posted in Uncategorized

Patron request to relocate a book

I thought staff may be interested in my response to a patron requesting that we relocate a particular book. There may be cases where relocation is appropriate (and I believe we’ve done it once or twice while I’ve been at JPL) but, in my opinion, this is not one of them. 

 

—————————————————

 

Hello!

My nine year old recently checked out “Breakaways” by Cathy Johnson in the children’s section. I was surprised to see it had a picture of two boys kissing in bed. I want to state I would also think it is not age appropriate for my nine year old to read a book with a boy and girl kissing in bed. I do not know what you think of this, but as a parent who visits this library often, I would like to suggest this book would be better suited in the young adult section.

 

Thank you

 

—————————————————

 

Thank you for your message about The Breakaways. I looked through the book and can appreciate that some of the content is not what you’d like your child reading. Some parents, however, may not find it objectionable for their child. We feel that these kinds of decisions are best left with parents and not librarians.

 

We are cautious about moving books into sections of the library meant for books intended for an older audience (the recommended age-range for The Breakaways is 8 to 11 years). Doing such would make them less accessible to their intended audience and would also put us in the position of “deciding” that, in this case, a book written for 8 to 11 year olds should be less accessible than other books written for that audience.

 

I have decided that The Breakaways should stay in the library’s Juvenile Graphic Novels collection. I’ve attached the library’s Collection Development Policy which includes details about how we select library materials as well as a form you can complete to have the library board reconsider my decision.

 

Let me know if you have any questions or additional comments.

Posted in Uncategorized

Time Sheets Due on Thursday

Posted in Uncategorized

WDM Library closure

The West Des Moines Public Library will be closed from October 14-26 to prepare for renovations, so please don’t be surprised if a lot of WDM residents request cards from our library. 

Posted in Uncategorized

Building Air Pressue

The HVAC guy came today and thinks he solved the building pressure issue that was making it hard to open the staff door.

Posted in Uncategorized

Requesting Renewals for ILLs

Requesting renewals for ILLs over the phone or in person just got easier

All ILLs that we lend have a wrapper that instructs them to email Dreama for renewal requests, but if a patron calls the library or stops by a public service desk to request a renewal for an ILL, we can submit the request through the Purchase/ILL Request in the Helping Patrons view of the Intranet.

                                                                                           

  1. Look up the patron using the barcode or last name.         
  2. Click on the ILL link in blue to the left of the name. 
  3. Click submit next to the title(s)

If they have an email address on file, the patron will receive the following email: 

We received your interlibrary loan renewal request. We will let you know when we hear back from the lending library about extending your due date. In the meantime, hold onto the item (we’ll waive any overdue fees that accrue while we’re waiting for a response). We will let you know as soon as we hear back from the lending library.

Posted in Uncategorized

Funny Reference Questions

We are compiling a list of funny reference questions for a presentation we are doing at the beginning of next week. 

If you have any that you’ve received while working in the library, please send them my way! If you have the answer to the question, that’s even better! 

Posted in Uncategorized

September All-Staff Meeting Notes

 Agenda – All Staff Meeting 9/26/19

  

  • TS/IT

  • Public Services

    • Fall adult and family event schedule (link)

    • Our Stories: The Mizo Community (more info)

    • ESL Childcare

      • We are suspending childcare for our ESL class. Attendance has been too low to continue. 

  • Youth Services

    • Socktober/Sock Hop

      • We will be collecting socks and other articles of clothing during the month of October. This will culminate in a Sock Hop on October 21st. A sensory-friendly sock hop will start at 5:30pm followed by a sock hop for all at 6:30pm. See details.

    • New programs:

      • Paws to Read

        • A new YS program lets kids read to trained therapy dogs. One of the dogs is HUGE! Details here

      • Teen Programs

        • Jessica has started a new teen tabletop gaming program. She purchased several cool new games. Details here

    • Kosovo (if time allows)

  • Circulation

    • Home Delivery Update

      • Home delivery has taken off this past year thanks to Rod and Molly’s efforts. They’ve been turning more deliveries over to volunteers. Checkout the link above for the latest stats.

    • Volunteer Update

      • Volunteers put in a ton of hours at JPL. Molly shared some stats which are linked above

    • Welcome Jennifer

  • Eric

    • Online payments

      • Providing a way for patrons to pay fines/fees online is WAY too expensive. We will not be offering it any time soon. 

    • Security Cameras

      • Once the city council votes to approve the expenditure on 10/7, the new security camera system will be ordered. We hope to everything done by late fall or early winter.

    • Restrooms

      • The restrooms will have new tile, stalls, and counter installed sometime this fall or early spring.  

    • ILA

      • Several staff will attend–and Megan, Beth, and Peg will present at–the Iowa Library Association annual conference next week. Checkout the details here. Staff will share what they learned at the next all-staff meeting in November. 

 

Posted in Uncategorized

WDM Library book sale

The West Des Moines Library is having a huge book sale today through Sunday during their hours in order to prepare for upcoming renovations.  Hours are today (the 27th) from 9-6, Saturday from 9-5, and Sunday from 2-5. 

 

Renovation should start later this fall and be completed in early 2021, and a lot of items that aren’t circulated as much as others will be placed in storage.  Those items in storage will likely be unavailable for checkout, so a lot of ILLs may take place during this time.  Also, please expect a lot of WDM residents requesting cards at our library. 

Posted in Uncategorized

Great story from NPR/Story Corps

“Judge Olly Neal grew up in Arkansas during the ’50s and didn’t care much for high school. One day he cut class and wandered into the library. It’s there he came across a book by African-American author Frank Yerby. The provocative cover piqued his interest, but Olly had a rough-and-tumble reputation to uphold. So rather than check out the book and have his classmates see he was voluntarily reading, he stole it.

He came to StoryCorps to tell his daughter Karama Neal about what happened next.”

Listen to the rest of the story here: https://storycorps.org/stories/judge-olly-neal-and-his-daughter-karama/

 

Posted in Uncategorized

Symphony re-mix and concerts

I would like to invite you to a Symphony Re-mix taking place on Friday, October 11th starting at 5:30 PM at the Civic Center downtown Des Moines.  There will be free Fong’s Pizza and beverages available for purchase, and an open rehearsal at 7.  We are playing Night on Bald Mountain by Modest Mussorsky, Symphony in Sculpture Suite and Symphony in Scuplture III (world premiere) by Steve Heitzig, and Scheherezade by Nicoli Rimsky-Korsokov.  This event is only for people 21 and over, and it’s free with no reservations required. 

 

Concerts for this set are on October 12th at 7:30, and October 13th at 2:30 at the Civic Center. 

 

If you are interested in attending a rehearsal but can’t make an open rehearsal or concert, please contact Aaron Williams at aaron@dmsymphony.org, or Richard Early at richard@dmsymphony.org. 

Posted in Uncategorized

Banned Books Week Quiz

Which banned book should you read next?

I got The Grapes of Wrath. ***It asks for your email on the page that lists the results, but you don’t have to enter it. Just scroll down***

Posted in Uncategorized

Pleasant Hill Halloween party

I would like to invite you to the Pleasant Hill Halloween party on Friday, October 18th at the Doanes Park Youth Center in Pleasant Hill.  I and other PH librarians will be helping out, and you all are welcome to come with kids you know.  It is from 6:30-8 PM, and there will be treats and games, and you may wear costumes.  It’s free!

Posted in Uncategorized

Parking tomorrow morning

They will be painting the staff side of the parking lot tomorrow beginning at 7:15 a.m. Since we have a staff meeting at 8 a.m. it would be best to park in the east lot. By the time the library opens and meeting ends, we should be okay to move our cars over to the west side of the lot.

Posted in Uncategorized