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Category: Public Libraries

Statement regarding Community Connections at the Millennium Library

Posted in Advocacy, Board, Public Libraries, and Safety

Statement regarding Community Connections at the Millennium Library
December 10, 2024

In response to the City of Winnipeg’s latest Winnipeg Public Libraries Attendance and Incident Quarterly Report stating that “funding for the Community Connections (CC) space is secured only until December 31, 2024” and that “there are currently no other funding sources for this library service,” the Manitoba Library Association (MLA) issues the following statement: 

Community Connections was envisioned and created by a working group composed of local citizens, community-based organizations, and professional library staff. Taking into account their own lived experience and community expertise, they sought to create a culturally safe, low-barrier  service space to access information and resources –  essential in light of growing social issues such as poverty, homelessness, and untreated addictions and mental health conditions. Vulnerable residents of downtown require support in accessing resources at the library and in the community. . The working group was formed to help inform and develop solutions steeped in values of librarianship, including equity and access to information and knowledge, and is trauma-informed and guided by principles of harm reduction and positive community development.

Community Connections is a library service with trained library staff including librarians, library service assistants, and community crisis workers. providing information for all community members. The service supports the safety of Winnipeg Public Library overall with the dedicated community safety hosts, the library staff, and community crisis workers providing tailored services for their most at-risk patrons. In fact, the WPL report states directly that: “The Public Service believes that the resources and staff available in the Community Connections space […] is crucial in maintaining safer library spaces.” and that “providing library customer services (access to information) is often the gateway for people to access housing, employment supports, food security, and other basic needs.”

Closing Community Connections goes directly against the security audit conducted by GardaWorld in the June, 2023 Improving Safety at the Millennium Library and Other Winnipeg Public Libraries report.  Closing CC would also go against prior commitments made by the City such as those outlined in the OurWinnipeg 2045 developmental plan and the Winnipeg Poverty Reduction Strategy.

Community Connections is a library service that reflects the needs of Winnipeg with specially trained library staff providing information for community members. CC staff have the tools, the education and the training to properly provide social service and library information to patrons, support patrons or de-escalate situations. These dedicated staff connect with those who might be at risk of exclusion, creating meaningful access to materials and services for all. 

Community Connections logs more information questions than any other Millennium Library service desk handling 45% of customer inquiries at Millennium Library. If funding is terminated at the end of this year, current patrons will still need the services and information they have come to rely on at Community Connections. Taking away Community Connection’s  4.2 FTE positions will mean vulnerable customers will seek assistance at the other service desks where there is limited capacity to provide specialized services that often require interactions that are extended in time and expertise. 

Without the dedicated and specifically-trained library staff to provide them with the answers they seek, not only will a greater workload be placed upon the already overburdened library system, but it will create unnecessary hurdles and friction points for customers as they struggle to navigate the information available while looking for resources. 

As libraries change and evolve, one fact remains constant: Libraries are there to serve and reflect the communities in which they exist. In addition to serving and reflecting the community around Millennium Library, Community Connections also reflects the Manitoba Library Association’s values of collaboration and partnerships, access to information, inclusivity and acceptance, communication, community, and open-mindedness. 

The Manitoba Library Association calls upon the City of Winnipeg to also provide ongoing, operational funding for the Community Connections library space at the Millennium Library past December 31, 2024.  We believe that other Manitoba libraries, as well as other libraries in Canada, can benefit from the lessons learned and the outcomes of this creative and effective solution – and most importantly, all citizens of Winnipeg.

[signed by Board of MLA]

Download the pdf of the statement

Manitoba Libraries Conference – Call for Program Proposals!

Posted in Academic Libraries, Conference, Library Technicians, Membership, Professional Development, Public Libraries, School Libraries, Special Libraries, and Trustees

What Have You Been Up To? Let’s Reconnect! 

The Manitoba  Libraries Conference will take place May 6-7, 2025 at the RBC Convention Center in Winnipeg, Manitoba. 

We are inviting a Call For Proposals until December 20, 2024

We are excited for our first in-person conference in 6 years and we want to invite you to join us as we reconnect, revisit, and reinspire

We are all responding to rapid technological changes (Hello AI), and social challenges. This is our opportunity to share our experiences, thoughts, knowledge, and (sometimes hard-earned) wisdom with colleagues.

Please consider putting forward a proposal using this Google Form. 

We have many colleagues in a variety of professional settings throughout our province and they’d love to see you and hear from you. We encourage you to submit session proposals in the public, academic and special library stream. We need everyone represented.

In challenging times, we are better together.

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Proposals can include: Lightning Talks (7-8 minutes); Presentations, Panels and Workshops; (20, 50 or 110 minutes)

Still can’t decide? A little unsure about what (and how) to present? 

Here are some tips from the BCLA: 

Conference Presentation: Better Practices

(Note the PDF slides in the first video are super helpful.

Submit your proposal today! 

Questions? Please reach out to Kirsten Wurmann, MLA Program Coordinator: kirsten.w@mla.mb.ca 

Artificial Intelligence in the Library: a roadmap to understanding and implementation

Posted in Academic Libraries, Professional Development, Public Libraries, School Libraries, Special Libraries, and Trustees

Please join us September 9 from 9:30-11:00am as we host public library administrator, technology consultant, and author Nick Tanzi, for a virtual talk about artificial intelligence and its implications for libraries.
We’re told the age of A.I. is upon us, but what does that mean for our libraries? This webinar will help demystify artificial intelligence and explain how it will change the library landscape. Attendees will be offered specific actions they can take to proactively adapt services, policy, and programming that address this new technological environment.

Nick has authored Making the Most of Digital Collections Through Training and Outreach (2016) and Best Technologies for Public Libraries: Policies, Programs, and Services (2020). He is also a past column editor for Public Library Magazine’s “The Wired Library”, and has been published in Computers in Libraries, Library Journal, American Libraries, and Marketing Library Services. His work also includes professional development workshops, keynote presentations, and talks in the U.S. and abroad, for a variety of library organizations. Nick is the assistant director of the South Huntington Public Library in New York, and has worked in public libraries for 25 years. The focus of Nick’s work is the intersection of libraries and technology, and his speaking approach is one that is light and conversational, and avoids unnecessary jargon.

This webinar is free for MLA members,  who will also have access to the recording and a PDF of slides following the presentation.

The event is $40.00 for non-members.
To become a MLA member, use this linkTo attend as a non-member, donate 40$ via MLA’s  PayPal account (left hand menu on our website – direct donation to: “A.I. Event”).

The instructions for attending the webinar will be sent out to confirmed registrants the week of September 2.

We’re excited to bring you this thought provoking and timely event!

Register here for the event: https://buff.ly/3zmLay5

Public Library Safety & Security Toolkit – Recording posted to MLA YouTube channel

Posted in Professional Development, Public Libraries, and Safety

On April 22, the Manitoba Library Association alongside the Canadian Urban Libraries Council/Conseil des bibliothèques urbaines du Canada presented to our membership the Public Library Safety and Security Toolkit.

This presentation was recorded and is now available to be shared with anyone who missed the day, or would like to share it with staff.

Please visit out Manitoba Library Association YouTube channel for the 45 minute video presentation: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JgMqzZSj81c&t=3s
Transcripts are also available.

For all virtual presentations, check out our website here: https://mla.mb.ca/professional-development/webinars/