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Friday! It’s A Night For Niko!

We usually advertise just library-related material here – but Niko is the son of a CMLE library member Neil Vig, Patron Services Coordinator at Great River Regional Library. This seemed like something other library people might want to know, and potentially contribute to!

You can attend the fundraiser this Friday: May 10! If you want to just make a donation, you can contact Mark Kolbinger:  mkolbinger@isd726.org.

And we have had requests for a link to provide donations. Here is the GoFundMe account Niko’s family set up. Feel free to donate even a couple of dollars if you have them, to help offset some of the horrendous costs that big illnesses cause for families.

Library people are strong by working together. This is a great opportunity for you to be part of a community.

The Becker Education Association announces its 13th Annual Community Benefit… A night for Niko!

NIKO’S STORY

In September Nikolai (Niko) was diagnosed with Very High Risk Pre-B Cell Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia. He is currently undergoing intensive chemotherapy to help him battle this cancer, including injections into his spine.

Niko has already overcome two serious infections that landed him in the hospital for weeks as his cancer and chemotherapy makes it very hard to fight infections. Niko also undergoes physical and occupational therapy to help reduce the side effects of the chemotherapy.

Niko’s diagnosis has limited his parents’ time at work as they try to tag team his care and meet the needs of three other children at home. To help offset the costs of some of the care, Jennifer gives some of the chemotherapy at home and takes care of the IV fluids and rescue meds following high dose chemotherapy.

FRIDAY, MAY 10
JACK & JIM’S EVENT CENTER—DUELM, MN
$15 ADVANCE TICKETS, OR $20 AT THE DOOR
4:30-7:30 pm Dinner and Silent Auction
6:30 pm Live Auction featuring Colonel Ray & the IRAY auctions staff

Advance tickets available at Hubbard Electric (Becker) and North Crest Kids Activity Center (Sauk Rapids) (CHILDREN UNDER 3 ARE FREE)

Library People: Let’s Roller Derby!

One of our goals is to help build a community of library people, across CMLE and across the state. So we like to host a variety of member events to encourage all kinds of library people to come together, have fun, and meet each other in person!

We have a few different programs going on, so be sure you are subscribed to our newsletter (every Friday!) or our social media to keep up with it all.

Check it all out below, and RSVP now! Comment below, or email to us at admin @ cmle.org, and let us know you are coming with us!

We will buy tickets for all CMLE members. (There is no reserved seating, and it is definitely a family-friendly event – so also feel free to buy your own tickets to bring kids, friends, neighbors, or anyone else who might want to have some fun watching some cool skaters with some awesome library people!)

WHAT are we doing? Attending the SCAR Dolls roller derby home event, against FORX Roller Derby team.

WHEN are we doing this this? May 18th 2019 “Most home games have a start time of 6pm with doors opening at 5pm, but please visit our facebook page to find more detailed information as it can vary per game.”

WHERE is this excitement? The River’s Edge Convention Center in St. Cloud Minnesota. 

Wait, What? Who are these people?? “The S.C.A.R. Dolls are the one, the only, the original women’s flat track roller derby league in Central Minnesota. We formed in 2011 to create an opportunity for the women in the Saint Cloud area to participate in the challenging, exciting, and empowering revival of modern roller derby.

Roller derby is currently one of the fastest growing sports in the world, with over 1450 amateur leagues currently in existence and new leagues are forming all the time. This is not the exhibitionist, pro-wrestling style derby of the 1970’s, but a fast-paced, hard-hitting sport that the women of the S.C.A.R. Dolls are proud to be introducing to this wonderful community. We are working hard to make our league competitive in order to represent Saint Cloud both home and away.

Besides being talented and tenacious athletes, the S.C.A.R. Dolls are dedicated to giving back to the community through charity partnerships and fundraisers.”

Here’s a quick video of the team talking about their skati

Here’s a quick video of the team talking about their skating work:

We’ll talk about libraries at some point during the evening, I promise! We wouldn’t want you to feel left out of any library-related fun. We can enjoy hotdogs, chips, cheering for the home team, watching kids run around and lose their minds with the excitement – it’s just some noisy fun for all!

ALA Joins Groups Opposing Census Citizenship Question

Census Logo 2011

We talk about this all the time: Libraries are amazing places and jewels to the communities they serve!

This means, of course, that we are significantly more than “just” books, or “just” computers. Those are also great, and make up a lot of our work.

But organizations that are open to all in our communities, designed to serve the information needs of the people in those communities – it means that we deal with a lot of other issues in addition to “just” our biggest topics.

Libraries are affected by policies on all sorts of topics. When cities set rules or policies about homeless people – we feel the changes in public libraries. When communities vote for, or against, school funding – we feel that in school libraries. When schools require online homework – we feel that in public libraries. When the US enters into international copyright treaties, or doesn’t – we feel that in academic and in school libraries.

And when people start tinkering with the census, even if they have the best of intentions – that can affect EVERY library.

Libraries need funding. For a lot of us, that funding is set by the size of population we serve. (It’s all more complicated, of course; but this is a ballpark quickie explanation.) And the issues we see in a library are affected by the issues happening in those communities.

So, if a bunch of people in our community don’t fill out the census -our official community size shrinks. If your community size shrinks, your share of state and federal money likewise shrinks. “Hey! You don’t have as many people to serve! Great!! We’re going to shift that extra money over to communities with larger populations – thanks!!”

That may not be reality though, and so we still need enough money to pay for roads, schools, hospitals, libraries, and everything else that happens for real, actual people who do exist. They really are there, they really do need things, use things, buy things, and everything else a real person would do.

But….now the community doesn’t have money to help support that. Less money to fulfill the needs of more people? You can see the problem.

It’s a hassle to get enough people to fill out their census forms as it is! In the 2000 census, I worked in a community that got dramatically under-counted – and we had to go thru a whole “Whoops! Can we do that again??” to get enough state and federal funding to do things like “have a fire department” and other things that may seem trivial unless you want things like “no fires” in your community. (As an advocacy note: I’m in favor of “no fires” in my community.)

What to guess what happened to my library’s funding? If you guess it involved smaller numbers, you win the prize! (It’s a tear-filled prize, but…)

When people have specifically bad intentions toward the census, when they apparently WANT to under-count people in your community? Oh yeah, that’s going to be a serious problem for you, for your community, for funding in your library, for everything. Making it harder, scarier, and more potentially dangerous for people to answer the census means people won’t do it. And there goes your money, your resources, and a lot of nice things in your community.

Guess how much it matters that someone doesn’t like some of the real, actual people in your community?

In terms of still needing to get things done, it matters diddly.

It only means that EVERYONE in the community is going to get clobbered by the small-minded, the fearful, the uninformed, or the deliberately terrible people. This is all so unnecessary, so pointless, so bad.

This is happening now, today. We are all going to get clobbered if these people are allowed to mess up the census – along with all kinds of other community organizations, which can make work in libraries even harder. More people needing medical help from the computers in your library? Count on it. More people needing your library to create resumes and job applications? You bet. More homeless in your library? Well, that’s probably a given. Less funding in schools? Obviously. Big potholes tearing up your car? That will happen – and because there are apparently fewer people, the bus you might have been able to take could be gone too.

Census data goes way, way beyond just “count people and go home.” It influences literally millions of dollars that are going SOMEWHERE – but maybe not to you, to your library, or to your community.

DON’T LET PEOPLE UNDER-COUNT YOUR COMMUNITY!!!

(Small note: As ALWAYS, we are not taking partisan sides in any issue. Our only political stand is always “yay library funding and support!! more, please!!” And we always, always encourage everyone to think for themselves about candidates they choose to support. Any candidate or elected official can – and should! – support libraries and issues relevant to libraries. And any candidate, and elected official, should be encouraged to do so. Please encourage your candidates and officials to do good library things!)

So, we are very proud of the American Library Association, who are speaking for all of us in every type of library. Check out the excerpt below
by Larra Clark, and read the entire article (including a nice video!).

On April 1, the American Library Association (ALA) joined an amicus brief to the US Supreme Court opposing the last-minute addition of a citizenship question to the 2020 Census. ALA joined the American Statistical Association, American Sociological Association, and the Population Association of America in support of the plaintiffs in Department of Commerce v. New York. The case was appealed directly to the Supreme Court after a federal court ruled for the plaintiffs and ordered the Commerce Department to remove the question.

“Accurate and reliable census information features in an astonishing array of decisions, from where voters cast their ballots, to where small businesses choose to invest, to how the federal government allocates money, to how emergency responders prepare for natural disasters, among many others,” the brief states. The brief argues that the US Commerce Department’s addition of the citizenship question was inconsistent with its own standards and threatens the integrity of census data.

Arguments in the case will be heard April 23, and the Supreme Court is expected to rule before June 2019, when census forms are scheduled to go to press.

The amicus brief continues ALA’s ongoing opposition to the citizenship question and represents one aspect of ALA and library advocacy in advance of the 2020 Census. With leadership from the 2020 Census Library Outreach and Education Task Force, ALA members and staff are actively working in three major areas: developing resources and education to support the library field; coordinating directly with the Census Bureau and other stakeholders to increase awareness of library roles; and advancing policymaking that will support libraries and the communities we serve in achieving a fair, accurate, and inclusive census in 2020.”

THE TAKEAWAY:

Fill out your census form when you get it! Talk to your community members, hand out material to patrons, and support programs to encourage people to fill out their census forms!!

And tell your politicians to knock it off with trying to make some dumb point with the Census. This is too important for silly political games. We need this to work, and to work well, for everyone’s sake!!

Updates from State Library Services

Libraries support financial literacy
The Minnesota Library Financial Education Workshop will help libraries become the go-to source for financial education. Experts from the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau and local representatives from the Securities and Exchange Commission, Financial Industry Regulatory Authority, Social Security Administration and other financial experts will share issues and resources for financial literacy.

Two free, all-day workshops will be presented in Minnesota. Tuesday, April 23, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m., St. Cloud Public Library, 1300 W. St. Germain Street, St. Cloud, Minnesota Wednesday, April 24, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m., Hennepin County Southdale Library, 7001 York Ave. S., Edina, Minnesota Register online for the Minnesota Library Financial Education Workshop. For information, contact Joe Manion, 651-582-8640.

Big data! 
Thanks to all the library directors and report filers who submitted their 2018 Minnesota Public Library Reports. Individual reports for each of Minnesota’s 140 libraries are available from Public Library Reports on the Minnesota Department of Education website. Select the first letter of the library’s name to view an alphabetical list of libraries. The directory includes annual reports from 2010 to 2017. For historical or custom reports, please contact Joe Manion.
Updates from our Partners
Is your new library a landmark? Library Journal is looking for eight to ten public library buildings that are sustainable, functional, innovative, and beautiful to feature in their New Landmark 2019 edition. If your public library has completed new construction, expansion or significant renovation between January 2016 and March 1, 2019, you can apply.

You need to provide basic information about the project, respond to five essay questions and upload a minimum of six photographs. Apply online to become a library landmark. Deadline is June 7, 2019.

Applications submitted by design firms and library administration will be considered. A panel of judges representing designers and librarians will review applications. If you have questions, email Emily Puckett Rodgers, New Landmark Library organizer.


How to measure social and emotional learning at the library

The Library Research Service (LRS) set out to measure the impact of social and emotional learning (SEL) at the Denver Public Library. LRS is part of the Colorado State Library, a unit of the Colorado Department of Education that designs and conducts library research. LRS launched a pilot project to explore methods of evaluating youth outcomes from summer program experiences that positively impacted participant growth in relationship-building and problem-solving. Among the strategies tested—smiley face surveys, reflection on experiences, and team observation—observation using a behavior rubric and coding scheme proved the most promising. The results yielded preliminary, but valuable information to inform youth programming and staff training. LRS will share the SEL Tool with interested libraries. For more information, contact Katie Fox at LRS.

Libraries Serving Youth Meetup

Children's library, Leeds Central Library

Greater Together: Expanding Partnerships

Join us at this rare opportunity for school librarians and public librarians to meet, network and share ideas with representatives from out-of-school-time and other community organization. Learn about collaborations with libraries in Hennepin, Anoka, Scott and Dakota Counties, and get creative ideas from colleagues.

Tuesday, April 16, 2019, 9 a.m.-noon, Minnesota Landscape Arboretum, 3675 Arboretum Dr, Chaska, MN 55318

Registration runs through April 12. For more information, please contact Leah Larson at leah.larson@state.mn.us or 651-582-8604.

The program starts at 9 a.m., but please feel free to come at 8:30 a.m. to mingle. Sponsored by Northern Lights Library Network and Central Minnesota Libraries Exchange.

Register here!

Leah Larson

LSTA Grant Coordinator

651-582-8604  |  leah.larson@state.mn.us