Comment: Trump budget would hurt state, community libraries

By Kim Wyman

Libraries play a vital role in our communities. Thanks to the many services and programs they provide, local libraries help transform lives and strengthen communities.

Unfortunately, many libraries face a darker future depending on what happens in the other Washington later this year.

The president’s proposed fiscal year 2018 budget would eliminate the Institute of Museum and Library Services (IMLS), the primary source of federal support for the 123,000 libraries and roughly 35,000 museums in the U.S.

This federal funding cut would have a terrible impact on the Washington State Library, as well as local libraries like the Everett Public Library and the Sno-Isle Libraries serving Snohomish and Island counties. For instance, grants originating from IMLS funding allowed the Everett Public Library to start a new laptop computer lab and world languages collection, digitize the library’s Northwest collections, and offer several adult classes and programs. Another grant helped pay for the main library’s renovation project.

Each year, our State Library receives an average of $3.2 million in federal funding, which provides a variety of services to Washington libraries, their staffs and residents statewide.

Many of the State Library’s programs and staff positions are made possible through federal Library Services and Technology Act funding provided by IMLS.

It funds grants, resources and services provided to local community libraries, such as summer reading programs, nonfiction books for school libraries, training for teacher-librarians, library trustee training, STEM training kits for local libraries to borrow, and a host of other services and support for libraries.

The money also fully or partially funds:

The Ask-WA 24/7 reference service that is a cooperative of more than 60 libraries throughout Washington, both public and academic, providing online reference services through chat, email and instant messaging.

The software used to provide the State Library’s Ask a Librarian service, in which State Library staff are available to answer questions via email and chat 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., Mondays through Fridays.

The nationally acclaimed Washington Talking Book &Braille Library, which provides audio and braille books for patrons of all ages who are unable to read standard print.

Several statewide databases, two e-book and audiobook consortiums, and staff training and development.

Perhaps most importantly, LSTA funding supports Washington’s prison libraries, a hugely successful program operated by the State Library. In fact, Washington is the only state whose State Library provides in-prison resources and staff. Many inmates cite access to the prison library as an influential factor in their preparation for life after release. These libraries help improve inmate literacy and prepare them with skills and information they need once they are released and re-enter society.

The good news is the president recently signed into law a spending bill to fund the federal government through September — including full funding for IMLS. The bad news is that Congress and the president must pass a new budget for the 2017-18 fiscal year and IMLS funding is once again on the chopping block.

When I traveled to D.C. early this year, I met with members of our state’s congressional delegation and asked them to support keeping IMLS funding in the federal budget. State Librarian Cindy Aden and a group of local librarians from our state recently returned from a similar trip and told federal lawmakers how these cuts would devastate not only our local libraries but Washington communities.

In this digital age, libraries have evolved by offering books, music and other materials that can be accessed on smartphones and other electronic devices. Yet they still provide a special place where people can browse shelves, sit down and read a book or magazine, check out books, use a computer or attend programs and workshops that educate, inform and entertain.

Local libraries are unsung heroes in our cities and towns, providing a variety of services and programs that are open and free to the public and benefit young and old alike — and everyone in between.

Libraries are part of what make America great, but if federal funding for local libraries and the State Library is cut, many of the programs and services they provide will be cut, too.

Kim Wyman, a Republican, is Washington’s Secretary of State.

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