What
the heck was I doing attending yet another cluster-fuck Berkeley Library
Trustees Meeting last week? Taking notes, that’s what. Happily, back out in the
street (free at last, free at last!) someone in the loop let me in on what’s
really going on. Without my informant’s input, my article (see below) wouldn’t
have had a spine. What the article doesn’t let you know, however, is that the
City of Berkeley has launched an expensive investigation of any and all library
whistle blowers, without whom, Berkeley would never have discovered the
destruction by the former library director, Greg Scott, of 39,000 books, books
paid for by the citizens of Berkeley, and therefore a theft of our commons.
What
the article omits adding is that this theft of our history is happening in
libraries nationwide.
Public and Library Employees Ignored by Berkeley Board of
Library Trustees
In the home stretch of researching my latest book, I found
myself consulting a 1969 issue of an anthropology publication archived in the
Main Branch of the Berkeley Public Library, discovering what the people I had
been writing about, the Juwasi (or San) of the Kalahari Desert really looked
like. Before leaving the library, I browsed the reference room. I came upon an
atlas of women travelers of the 19th Century. Whoopee, I thought.
Research done, proofs corrected, I’ll come back to have a serious look. A mere
five months later, I found the reference room was stripped. The shelves were nearly as bereft as a mediaeval monk’s tonsure.
What was going on?
I discovered 39,000 books had walked out the back door of the
Berkeley Main Branch of the Public Library to be pulped. Rumor had it the pulp
found its way into the manufacture of mattresses. I was given access to the
database of the 19,000 last copies that had met their fate in the teeth of the
shredders. I found a disproportion of titles about women and the women’s
movement; about Blackness and the history of Black folk, and volumes on economy
and politics. Did the library trustees have an agenda?
Since then I have regularly attended monthly meetings where
the public is “invited” to interface with the Board of Library Trustees. My
participation in these events was prompted by a lifetime of activism and a
sense that with so much public indignation at the theft of our Berkeley
commons, the Board of Library Trustees might be persuaded to shift their
policies. Through the exertion of public pressure, Jeff Scott, the Library
Director, whose trashing tenure lasted a bare 11 months (so much mayhem in so
little time), was summarily dismissed. Surely things were bound to improve. And
yet, nine months later, the same policies remain in force, notably both weeding
and collections acquisitions remain in the hands of only two librarians answerable
to the Manager of Collections; whereas formerly, librarian specialists had this
responsibility each in their particular areas of expertise.
Last Wednesday’s meeting marks a water shed in the breakdown
of relations between the trustees , the public and the library employees.
Public commentary was restricted to one minute. Following the comment period,
two representatives from Local 1021 shared a union notification of no
confidence in the current Collections Manager; followed by two representatives
from Local 1 who spoke in opposition.
It turns out at issue is a serious labor dispute which finds
employee morale at an all time low. Yet throughout the proceedings I marveled
at the trustees’ expressions of satisfaction and complacency. Could it be this
state of affairs is exactly what they intend? The absence of many librarians
for fear of retaliation was duly noted by many speakers. Could it be the
trustees agenda is to make working conditions so unpleasant as to encourage
older, better paid employees to quit? Recent union negotiations revolving
around pay cuts across the board would seem to suggest that is exactly what is
going on.
The same trustees who appear indifferent to employee
intimidation, display similar indifference to the public. The most recent
meeting suffered from lack of any sound amplification. Often speakers comments
and directions by the Board secretary could not be heard. Most tellingly, the
Board continues to stage these meetings at the Pittman branch, recently visited
by the fire department which determined only 34 seats could be accommodated. All
were occupied Wednesday, with another 34 people left standing for the nearly
two hour long meeting duration—some of them senior citizens.
Repeatedly, when the
public has posed a question to this Board in good faith, it has been met with
the assertion that the Board cannot answer questions. If in fact the Board is
gagged, it follows that public is gagged as well, yet many questions continue
to be asked of this board in what appears to be an ongoing and futile exercise
by a public making comments that run off
the trustees like water off a duck’s back. If the trustees of the
Berkeley Public Library are responsible neither to the employees nor the
public, to whom are they responsible?
What you can do to help stop Berkeley LibraryGate:
Here are resources you can use to get more involved in saving our books!
Rally highlights discrepancy in number of books weeded from Berkeley Public Library
Berkeley Public Library Trustees Website
Phone for Beth Pollard, Interim Director of Library Services, BOLT Secretary 510-981-6195
Contacting the Berkeley Public Library Trustees link
Save the Berkeley Public Library Books Website
Contacting the Berkeley Public Library Trustees link
Save the Berkeley Public Library Books Website
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