HomeMy WebLinkAbout11-20-2023-BLT-PUBLIC COMMENTSNovember 20,2023,BLT Agenda Item Comments
These comments on Newport Beach Board of Library Trustees agenda items are submitted by:
Jim Mosher (jimmosher@yahoo.com ),2210 Private Road,Newport Beach 92660 (949-548-6229).
Item No.1.Minutes of the Oct 16,2023 Board of Library Trustees
Meeting
The passages in italics are from the draft minutes,with corrections suggested in strikeout
underline format.
Page 1 (page 5 of agenda packet),Item V,paragraph 3:“Trustee Antonella Castro requested a
couple minutes to review the responses before she approved that she had reviewed them.”
[What is this trying to say?Not having attended the meeting,I am unable to guess what
responses the trustees had to approve they had reviewed.]
Page 2 (page 6 of agenda packet),Item 5:“Chair Watkins reported that they are 25%through
the fiscal year (FY)and at 23.4%over all overall expenditures,making them currently under
budget for the year.”[alternatively,the words “over all”could simply be deleted]
Page 7 (page 11 of agenda packet),paragraph 3 from end:“Mr.Jerry Kappel,NBPLF CEO,
asked if Library Services Manager Lightfoot could provide him a column for the Foundation’s
publication based on the touches in the community.”
Page 7 (page 11 of agenda packet),last paragraph:“Mr.Kappel commented that the website
chat feature is the most complained-about website interactive option.If they consider adding it
as a feature,he suggested they really look deep into what the interaction feature is that they
choose,and what the satisfaction rating it has.”
Page 8 (page 12 of agenda packet),paragraph 1,sentence 2:“She suggested the two
programs cross pollenate pollinate.”
Item No.2.Patron Comments
In Comment #4,a patron asked if the Library would place for public pickup a flyer produced by
the Newport Beach Film Festival.
The response –that NBPL would be happy to do so –seems appropriate,especially since the
flyer was said to promote “films that are based on books.”However,it is unclear if it is consistent
with Policy NBPL 8 (Display and Distribution of Materials).
At one time,NBPL,like many public libraries,had a fairly liberal policy for placing materials in
the public handout areas.However,a former director seemed uncomfortable with some of the
material,and she convinced a former board to limit the shelves to government materials,only.
This is reflected in the current NBPL 8,paragraph B of which says:“No materials provided by
any non-governmental agency will be permitted on the designated shelves.Acceptable
materials for dissemination on the shelves include Library information and announcements from
City-designated Library support groups;City-sponsored programs and events;and materials
November 20,2023,BLT agenda item comments -Jim Mosher Page 2 of 7
from other governmental agencies –e.g.City,County,State,and Federal information;and
information and instructional materials from schools in the Newport Beach area (“school”is
defined by the California Department of Education at http://www.cde.ca.gov/ds/si/ds/dos.asp).”
Since the City supports the Film Festival through a monetary contribution,the inclusion in the
second sentence of “City-sponsored programs and events”might seem to allow placement of
their flyer.But this is contradicted by the first sentence,which prohibits any material from “any
non-governmental agency.”
The Board may wish to consider if NBPL 8 is overly restrictive,or at least to resolve if its
prohibition on non-government materials is as absolute as it appears,noting that according to
the Monitoring List,it would not normally come up for review until February 18,2025.
A particularly curious example of its overreach came some years ago when a doctor from Hoag
Hospital gave an invited presentation to the City Council about stroke prevention,and asked if
he could put flyers in the library alerting community members to the warning signs of strokes.
NBPL 8 did not allow that.
Item No.3.Patron's Request for Evaluation of Library Resources
I would guess the number of requests under this heading is unusually large for a single month,
although I don’t know what the typical number is.1
In the absence of any explanation accompanying the item,I have these observations:
●I see 16 requests for evaluation (one for two books),presented in alphabetical order
based on the patron’s last name.
○Presenting them chronologically might be more helpful,as it would highlight the
sequence in which they came.
●12 of the requests are stamped as having been received on “9/18/2023”and the other 4
on “9/29/2023”despite them bearing a variety of dates (13 between 9/15 and 9/20,and
one of the other 3,all from the same patron,as old as “7/1/2023”).
○Were the 16 forms received in two batches?
○Or is there some other reason for them being stamped on only two days?
●11 of the 16 requests mention the same book (George/Melissa)
●11 of the Director’responses are dated “Nov.14,”three “Nov.15”and one “Nov.16,”
seemingly unrelated to the date received.
○Is the nearly month-long response delay for some of these normal?Or was there
some special reason for it?
●One of the requests (agenda packet page 29)criticizes three books,but,for unexplained
reasons,one of those is highlighted,and only that one is responded to.
1 News stories about the recent controversy in Huntington Beach indicated that prior to that,there had
been only five requests for evaluation in five years,or about one per year.
November 20,2023,BLT agenda item comments -Jim Mosher Page 3 of 7
●All the request forms were completed by hand despite the library offering a fillable
electronic form (revised October 16)on its NBPL 2 (Collection Development Policy)
page.
○Was a fillable form available in September?
○Should it be more widely publicized?
●Regarding the outcome of patron requests for evaluation,the current version of NBPL 2
contains the statement “Any unresolved concerns shall be referred to the Board of
Library Trustees for final resolution.”It is not entirely clear from this,or from the
evaluation form,or from the Director’s response letters,if patrons,themselves,have a
right to appeal to the Board or if only the Director can decide if a matter should be
referred to them.
○Should NBPL 2 be more clear about this?
●Should NBPL provide a form that patrons can use to put in a good word for a book they
really like and hope NBPL will keep in its collection?
○Currently NBPL 2 mentions only there is a ““Suggest a Title”form located on the
Library’s website”for items not already in the collection (unlike the Request for
Evaluation form NBPL 2 does not provide a link to where it is).2
○NBPL 2 suggests no way to comment positively on an existing item.
Item No.4.Library Activities
Regarding the Adult Services Coordinator’s report,on agenda packet page 73,with 118 titles
lent and just 12 titles borrowed during September and October,there appears to be a very large
imbalance in NBPL’s InterLibrary Loan program.
Since every item lent by anyone must be borrowed by someone else,it would seem that
mathematically the two numbers would have to be equal when averaged over all participating
libraries.Is this large imbalance NBPL sees typical of public libraries?Or does it reflect an
unusually high charge for the service,or insufficient publicity about it,at NBPL?
What hard-to-find materials does NBPL have?And what institutions are the requests for them
coming from?
Also,on the following page,does “Librarians Rosemary Hammock and Laurie Sanders have
begun evaluating primary sources housed at Central Library for the Local History collection”
mean library items not currently in the collection are being considered for addition to it?If so,is
there room?Or does it mean items already in it would be discarded to make room?It would
seem items regarded as of archival importance could be designated as part of the collection
without physically being placed in the cabinets.
On agenda packet pages 79 through 82,it is apparent that of the metrics tracked,only program
attendance has bounced back to,and exceeded,pre-pandemic levels.I may have missed
meetings where this has been discussed,but does staff anticipate future recovery in circulation,
reference and patrons served?Or are the current low numbers tracking a longer term downward
2 NBPL 2 likewise mentions InterLibrary Loan,but provides no link to it.
November 20,2023,BLT agenda item comments -Jim Mosher Page 4 of 7
trend in those statistics resulting from changes in patron behavior unrelated to the pandemic?If
the latter,does that mean changes should be made to the service model?
Item No.8.Consideration for Children's Collection Development
Policy
This item is a bit curious since the minutes of the last meeting indicate the Trustees just had an
ad hoc committee which I thought was created to address the same issue as is proposed to be
addressed by a new committee,namely if tweaks were needed to the treatment of children and
parents in the current development policy.And after adopting its recommendations on October
16,it was dissolved.I can only guess the intent is to have a different set of two Trustees discuss
the issue with staff “offline”?
Given the recent controversies,I would also guess much has been written about the adequacy
of children’s collection policies,although I’m not able to find it.
As best I can tell,standalone children's collection development policies are rare,although as
I’ve pointed out in the past when NBPL 2 has come up for review,many public libraries have
more elaborate and specific collection development policies than NBPL,and some of those
contain sections dealing specifically with their children’s collections.
One of the very few I found with a separate “Collection Development Policy –Children’s
Department,”applying to materials for children through Grade 8,is from the Lynn,
Massachusetts,Public Library.However,the only criteria that seem child-specific are
“Educational significance”and possibly “High artistic quality and/or literary style.”Most seem to
match their more general policy,which also contains the same warnings about parents’
responsibilities.
Another is the Medford,Massachusetts,Public Library’s Children’s Collection Development
Policy,geared,it says,to the needs of children through Grade 6.It is considerably more
detailed than their general development policy.
By contrast,the Cambridge Public Library has a section on Youth Materials in their general
policy,which says “The criteria used in the selection process for materials in the youth services
department are fundamentally identical to those used for adult materials,”and warns “Parents
and guardians who do not want their children to have access to specific library materials should
so advise their own children.”
Closer to home,I notice many collection development policies,such as those from Santa Ana,
Pomona and Palo Alto,provide a brief overview of the various groupings they organize their
collections into (including Children’s and Youth materials),and the objectives of each,
something NBPL 2 does not currently do.Santa Barbara has a longer than normal list of its
collection categories and what it seeks to achieve in each.
Rather than a separate policy for children’s collection development,it might be noted that the
current NBPL 2,after listing our general selection criteria says (see near bottom of page 92 of
the agenda packet):“materials for adults,teens and children will each be judged differently.”
It would seem sufficient to follow that with a listing of criteria specific to those collections.
November 20,2023,BLT agenda item comments -Jim Mosher Page 5 of 7
Item 10.Newport Beach Public Library Foundation Wish List
The staff report does not explain how creation of a “seed library”became a wish list item.
Is it a follow-up to Patron Comment #7 from page 14 of the May 15,2023,agenda packet,
asking if NBPL had one?
In her reply,Library Services Manager Lightfoot mentioned that in Orange County they existed
at the Yorba Linda and City of Orange libraries (of which I believe Yorba Linda is the oldest).As
I probably mentioned at the time,Huntington Beach also has one (even with a video).And
though the patron thought UCI had none,they do as well.
Since all of these use old paper card-style library catalog cabinets to store the seed packets,it
is unfortunate NBPL disposed of all of its.
I support this item,although I am not sure what the full plan is.Most seed libraries not only
provide commercially-packaged seeds,but also encourage residents to return with their own
homegrown ones.Processing and packaging those usually depends on a network of dedicated
volunteers with some knowledge of what they are doing.How will Mariners staff manage this?
Incidentally,those visiting the City of Orange Seed Library page may see in the menu on the left
a number of other interesting “library of things”items they offer,including beginner’s hiking and
birdwatching backpacks that are apparently a companion to the State Parks Pass program that
NBPL offers.I don’t know if NBPL is aware of that additional state offering.
Item 11.Lecture Hall Update
As the trustees are undoubtedly aware,at its November 14,2023,study session,the City
Council gave direction to go ahead with considering the bids received for construction of the
Lecture Hall,however,with some of the members imagining it could be transformed from a
lecture hall into a multipurpose civic auditorium,or at least a lecture plus small theater venue,
with a few change orders to the builder.That does not seem at all realistic to me.The seats at a
civic auditorium normally number in the thousands,for which there is no room at the site.And
even for small events,the design that was developed over several years,and bid,was very
specifically for use as a lecture hall,with the added flexibility to accommodate other kinds of
small-scale events rejected at an early stage due to the anticipated cost increase.
Item 12.Balboa Branch Replacement Update
The Trustees may wish to know that at its November 7,2023,meeting,as a result of recent
acoustic tomography showing an advanced state of internal decay,the City’s Parks,Beaches
and Recreation Commission approved a City staff request to remove yet another of the
landmark eucalyptus trees at the Balboa Branch site.The tree in question is the one by the wall
separating the library and fire station parking lots.That tree is now in its 30-day appeal period,
after which the removal can proceed.I believe that will leave just one eucalyptus or possibly
two.Parks staff said that younger ficus trees planted on the site were intended to provide future
heron nesting sites if all the eucalyptus have to be removed,but replacement of this one will be
on hold until plans for the future fibrary are more developed.
November 20,2023,BLT agenda item comments -Jim Mosher Page 6 of 7
Item 14.Library Foundation Liaison Reports
I notice from Item 12 at the City Council’s February 25,2003,meeting,that at that time the
Foundation provided the money to support what are now called the “Witte Lectures”(at that time
the “Distinguished Speakers Lecture Series”)to the City,which then paid the bills.It is unclear to
me when the current practice began of the Foundation using the donations it receives to
produce programming independent from the Library.
Item VII.PUBLIC COMMENTS ON NON-AGENDA ITEMS
NBPL Facility Histories
The November 14 City Council meeting was adjourned in memory of James Pirdy,a local
architect who died,apparently unexpectedly,on October 21.I was surprised to hear,in the
eulogy,the reference to “the many buildings he created as a brilliant architect,such as the
Newport Beach Central Library.”I found that surprising because I thought the Central Library
had been designed by a San Francisco firm that had been approached,more recently,in
connection with the Lecture Hall,but had declined to bid on its design.
Checking the “About…Hours and Locations…”page for the Central Library on the NBPL
website,I see that Mr.Pirdy’s firm did indeed partner with Simon Martin-Vegue Winkelstein
Moris,San Francisco,although a Council document from July 25,1994,announcing completion
of the project,suggests the role may have been more one of completing detailed drawings and
specifications,and supervision,than of creative design.
I bring this up because I notice the background information provided on the NBPL website about
the various branches is not consistent.
The page for the Central LIbrary (linked to above)mentions the architect and price,but not who
built it (the Koll Construction Company).That for the new Corona del Mar Branch mentions the
cost of the 1952 building,but not the current one.And it mentions neither the architect or
builder.It also confusingly says the CdM branch “was completed in September 2019,”yet
includes photos from a July 20,2019,grand opening.For the Donna and John Crean Mariners
Branch,one learns only its in a “15,000 square-foot building”(not sure if that includes the
Jorgensen Room)that “opened in 2006.”
For each facility,it would seem helpful to provide the date,size,cost (including the amount of
private donations,if any),architect and possibly the builder.
Facility Names
Regarding the Donna and John Crean Mariners Branch,since it is the only facility named after
private residents,and since naming complete facilities after people is against current City policy,
I have sometimes wondered how it acquired its unusual name and whether the Council ever
approved it.According to a January 28,2003,page 1 article in the Daily Pilot (available via the
NBPL’s Local Newspapers Archive),the name seems to have been bestowed by a private
fundraising support group in recognition of a $500,000 pledge from the Creans.Page 3 of the
November 20,2023,BLT agenda item comments -Jim Mosher Page 7 of 7
City Council minutes from the same day includes a report from Council member Don Webb of
having attended a January 27,2003,ceremony (apparently at the Mariners School)where the
name was “formally announced,”but it does not indicate he asked the Council to approve it.
Item 19 on that night’s agenda created the “Mariners Joint Use Steering Committee”and
continued to refer to the facility as the “Mariners Joint Use Library,”as did some later reports.It
may be having people’s names in a library name was more acquiesced to by the council than
formally approved by it.
Municipal Code
I would like to thank NBPL staff,especially Reference Librarian Chris Hennigan,for coordinating
with the City Clerk’s Office to bring up to date the paper copy of the City’s Municipal Code that is
kept in the bookshelf behind the reference desk at the Central Library.Its upkeep had been
neglected for at least seven years.Sadly,at the November 14 meeting,the City Council
introduced a 470-page Ordinance No.2023-22,which,if adopted,will,among many other
things,eliminate the Clerk’s duty to maintain such copies for the public’s use –leaving the
library with the question of whether it will need to be discarded when some of its pages become
out of date,which will be soon.
Extending Reach Through LINK+?
In reviewing our Collection Development Policy (NBPL 2),I noticed that under “Reciprocal
Lending”it mentions that additional resources are available via InterLibrary Loans and universal
borrowing (by which California residents have in-person borrowing privileges at all participating
libraries).
In looking at the corresponding policy for the Palo Alto Public Library,I notice that under
“Resource Sharing With Other Libraries”they mention their participation in LINK+,a “union
catalog”nearly 80 participating California,Nevada and Arizona college and public libraries,from
which physical materials can be borrowed without having to through ILL.
I do not recall hearing about this,and do not know if NBPL has considered joining.
Trustee Training
With a recent resignation,Newport Beach’s Board of Library Trustees will be in the unusual
position of having four of the five trustees new to the board this year.
The new trustees may wish to be aware that in addition to the Public Library Trustees Toolkit
and Resource Guide provided by the California State Library,and those of the American Library
Association,there was formerly an independent California Association of Library Trustees and
Commissioners that offered free training.They seem no longer to exist,but there would still
seem merit in trying to get some outside perspectives on what role trustees should play in library
governance.