Library Benefits And Remote Working Opportunities To Offset Population Decline, This West Virginia Morning

On this West Virginia Morning, summer is the perfect time for students of all ages to relax, but it’s also a time when learning loss can occur. One of the best resources to avoid the so-called “summer slide” is the library. Chris Schulz has the story.

On this West Virginia Morning, summer is the perfect time for students of all ages to relax, but it’s also a time when learning loss can occur. One of the best resources to avoid the so-called “summer slide” is the library. Chris Schulz has the story.

Also, in this show, with the addition of the New River Gorge region, the Ascend West Virginia program now has five destinations that are welcoming new remote working residents to the Mountain State. With the incentives of cash and free outdoor adventures, the program hopes to help offset the state’s population decline. Randy Yohe reports.

West Virginia Morning is a production of West Virginia Public Broadcasting which is solely responsible for its content.

Support for our news bureaus comes from Concord University and Shepherd University.

Caroline MacGregor is our assistant news director and produced this episode.

Teresa Wills is our host.

Listen to West Virginia Morning weekdays at 7:43 a.m. on WVPB Radio or subscribe to the podcast and never miss an episode. #WVMorning

Ohio County Board Of Education Cuts Library Funding

Some Ohio County residents are upset after the Wheeling-Ohio Board of Education voted to reduce funding for the county’s public library by one-third.

The decision to reallocate funding for the library was handed down during a board meeting last month. It voted to reduce funding from 3 cents to 2 cents per $100 of the institution’s assessed property value, according to the Wheeling Intelligencer. The board plans to use the money that would have gone to the library to fund property improvements within the county.

Supporters and staff members of the library system think this decision is ill-advised. Library President Dottie Thomas says it would mean a cut in the services and programs the library currently provides. She is concerned about upkeep on the building itself.

“It allows no room to maintain the building at all, or any capital improvements, or repairs, or all of that, which, of course, is very expensive,” said Thomas.

Those opposed to the decision also include notable names like West Virginia Poet Laureate Marc Harshman, who decried the Board’s decision as “shameful,” and former President of West Liberty University Clyde Campbell.

The Wheeling Intelligencer reports that the Ohio County Board of Education will re-evaluate its financial standing next year to decide funding levels for the library. Thomas says that without any state law requiring the funding of libraries locally, it would be difficult to encourage future funding.

“West Virginia made two mistakes,” said Thomas. “One: It never put in place any type of requirement for local government funding of libraries in the state code. And two, it has a very ineffective way of encouraging that funding. Some states do a much better job with local library funding.”

Though the defunding of the Ohio Valley Public Library is worrisome to Thomas, she thinks the institutions have a place in local communities all around the state.

“Do I believe public libraries are still relevant?” Thomas asked. “Absolutely. They provide the internet, of course, and all these services to all people, regardless of their economic status. It’s the taxpayers providing their community with a service that allows the local citizens to educate themselves and be well-informed.”

Buckhannon Library Debates Removing Children's Book Depicting Same-Sex Couple

The Upshur County Public Library Board of Directors is reviewing whether to remove a children’s book from their shelves, after a local pastor asked for its removal. The book, Prince and Knight,  depicts two men who fall in love. Pastor Josh Layfield brought the issue to the attention of library staff because citing moral concerns for people of faith who might happen upon it.

“This book could potentially be dangerous to people of faith that know what the bible says about such sexual immorality. And the reality is, books are windows, books are maps, books are mirrors, books train,” Layfield said.

The issue has sparked a debate among community members, and across the country. Several groups have urged the library to keep the book on its shelves, including The West Virginia Library Association and the American Library Association (ALA).

“The book in questions is written for children. It’s a picture book. It’s written in simple language. It’s age appropriate, it’s developmentally appropriate. The only thing that sets it apart is the fact that it depicts a same-sex couple,” Debra Caldwell said. Caldwell is with the ALA’s Office for Intellectual Freedom.

“It’s actually written as a fractured fairy tale, the prince and knight end up together, and there’s nothing sexually explicit and nothing wrong with that,” Caldwell said. “There are persons in the community engaged in same sex relationships, there are certainly families with same sex parents. So there really shouldn’t be a reason for this book to raise concerns.”

“The whole purpose of public libraries is to provide choice and meet the information needs of everyone in the community. And so there will be families who want and need this particular book. Other families will object to it, or not find it suitable for their own family. And they’re free to not read it. But the families who want to need it should be able to find it in public library, because after all, it’s a shared community resource. And it should reflect the diversity of the community, even those who might be in the minority or not the loudest voices,” Caldwell said. 

At this time, Prince and Knight is currently still in circulation in Buckhannon (but is checked out until mid December), according to their online catalogue. The book is also available in the children’s section in other libraries across the state, including in Charleston and Morgantown.

According to Dennis Xander, President of the Upshur County Public Library Board of Directors, the board will be reviewing comments from community members. Xander said they will likely make a decision on whether they plan to permanently remove the book from their library sometime in 2020.

West Virginia Education Department Rebuilding Electronic Items

Thousands of unused items like computers, monitors, keyboards and mice are being donated to the West Virginia Education Department for use in schools across the state.

 

The state Education Department says the electronic devices were going into state surplus. But instead, they’re being rebuilt, refurbished and given to schools and libraries across the state for free.

 

It’s part of an initiative called SecondLaunchWV. The state says private organizations such as Toyota Motor Manufacturing, Mountaineer Gas and the West Virginia Air National Guard have also recently donated equipment for the program.

 

The initiative is also providing equipment to the state’s 118 public libraries, according to a news release from the state Education Department.

 

The release says the program is 3-years-old and has placed more than 14,000 items in 47 counties – equaling more than $5 million worth of equipment.

W.Va. Library System to Limit Personal Belongings

A West Virginia public library system will soon limit the number of personal items patrons can bring into facilities.

The Charleston Gazette-Mail reports that starting Feb. 1, the Kanawha County Public Library system will limit patrons to three bags and will ban wheeled devices with some exceptions, including wheelchairs and strollers.

The policy comes after people flocked to warming centers and city recreation centers to escape cold temperatures, but library system officials said it doesn’t target homeless people.

Library system Director Alan Engelbert said homeless people do bring in numerous personal items, but so do other patrons.

“We frequently have people bringing large amounts of personal items into the library, and it was getting to be basically a health, safety and comfort issue for both the staff and patrons, so we’re just attempting to manage a situation that has proven to be problematic over the years,” Engelbert said.

Library system board President Monika Jaensson said she believes others from the system have spoken with local shelters and thinks the city and other shelters are working to find a place for homeless people to store their baggage.

The policy also follows last week’s meetings by homeless service providers and city and county emergency officials to create provisional warming shelter opening procedures.

Acclaimed Author Neil Gaiman To Speak at WV Book Festival

Author Neil Gaiman has earned many accolades for his books and graphic novels, including Hugo and Nebula awards for American Gods and The Graveyard Book. Two of his books, Coraline and Stardust, were made into blockbuster movies. 

 

Gaiman will be one of the featured speakers at the West Virginia Book Festival later this month. West Virginia Public Broadcasting is one of the festival’s sponsors.

Gaiman is primarily a fiction writer. He has crafted vivid characters who inhabit worlds that straddle the familiar and the fantastical. Strands of ancient and modern mythology run through much of Gaiman’s work.

Gaiman’s love of fantasy is evident in his decades-long collaboration with Abingdon, Virginia, artist Charles Vess, who illustrated the novel Stardust, among others. Gaiman says that’s not his only connection to Appalachia, though.

 

“But also in books of mine, like American Gods, in some ways began with my readings of the Appalachian folk tales,” he said. “The strange things that happened, or to my mind, the strange things that happened, to folk tales as they moved from England across the water. And the things that they would keep – a wit, they would keep wits, they would keep the triumph of intelligence and of craftiness. But they’d lose, they’d lose magic. And that fascinated me and that actually was in some ways the starting point for writing an entire novel – American Gods. And don’t think that people would ever point to that and go ‘Ah, this came out of the Appalachian Jack Stories,’ but in a lot of ways it did.”

 

Libraries in the Digital Age

Gaiman has spoken at length in the past about his love of libraries and shared some thoughts about the future of libraries in the digital age.

 

“I think the heartbreaking thing about libraries is, in this era of new technology, is that they are becoming more important, not less,” he said.

 

Gaiman said libraries are often the only places that people who don’t have access to the Internet can go to connect with the digital world. He also points to the changing role of librarians, who used to serve as navigators in an ocean of printed knowledge.

 

“And information was hard to find. And it was hard to find because it was like a flower growing in a desert – you had a long way to walk, but a librarian could take you to the flower. Now it’s more like  flowers growing in the Amazon jungle and you’re trying to find a specific flower,” Gaiman said. “Anyone who has spent 5 minutes Googling for information and just sees the amount of noise out there starts to realize that actually someone who knows what they’re doing is incredibly useful. And librarians know what they’re doing.”

 

Every Audience is Unique

Gaiman is one of the featured speakers at the West Virginia Book Festival next week in Charleston. He said he prefers a question-and-answer format for his talks because every audience is unique.

 

“It would be easy to get up and give a talk, or the same talk, over and over again. It’s so much more fun for me to find out what people want to know and answer those questions, because they’re always different,” Gaiman said. “I love it when people ask questions, I love getting questions on cards, that’s always fun, because at that point you can look at them and you go, ‘Oh, there’s two dozen people here who want to know about ‘Dr. Who’.”

 

Gaiman wrote two episodes for the popular British TV series — “Nightmare in Silver” and “The Doctor’s Wife.”

 

The author said that while he has traveled to and through West Virginia, he hasn’t had the chance to speak here and is very excited about the opportunity to do so.

 

More Audio from Neil Gaiman’s interview with West Virginia Public Broadcasting

Gaiman also shared some stories about a close friend and collaborator Terry Pratchett, who died earlier this year from early onset Alzheimer’s disease. Gaiman and Pratchett wrote the novel Good Omens together. Gaiman also spoke about his book The Sleeper and the Spindle, which Chris Riddell illustrated.

 

 

 

The Sleeper and the Spindle

In The Sleeper and the Spindle, I wrote a fairy story that's a strange kind of mash-up of Snow White and Sleeping Beauty.

This story was edited on Oct. 21, 2015, to reflect the fact that illustrator Charles Vess is from Abingdon, Virginia.

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