The Opinionator
I am a family man with several grown children and many grandchildren, all living on the Cape. They are the future of everything and I want to leave them a world that I have done my best to improveFounded in 1954. Our mission is to encourage and advance understanding of our natural environment through discovery and learning. Exhibits, lectures and trails. (Brewster)
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Let's Privatize Public Libraries
Like we've privatized our wars?
Some people are totally convinced that the government screws up everything it attempts. The words government bureaucracy usually connote red tape, incompetence, overpaid hacks in no-show positions, and ever changing priorities depending on whatever politician seems to be the man or woman of the hour. For these haters of government, these believers in government inefficiency, turning things over to the private sector is the way to go. Privatization for many is a panacea.
It pops up at all levels.
Want to win the war? Turn the fighting over to Halliburton or Blackwater. Why risk the lives of our soldiers when there are mercenaries unimpeded by annoyances such as the civil code or the U.S. Constitution?
Unhappy with public schools? Shut them down whenever you can and turn the education over to charter schools, vouchers, choice schools and private ones. Let people choose the kind of education they want for their children. So what if now and then we have a Nazi, KKK, or Al Qaeda school? Citizens deserve whatever schools they want for their kids. Get the selfish labor unions out of the picture and use your taxes for the kind of education you want. See here.
Why tolerate confiscatory taxes? If we turned government over to private companies, they could eliminate costly pension plans and cut way back on fringe benefits. They wouldn't have to deal with all the crap of public sector unions working out the agendas of selfish politicians who don't care about the little guy.
A library like grandmother's living room
The news this week was all about Yarmouth and their three miniature libraries. Visiting them is kind of like visiting grandmother's living room. In order to handle budget cuts, the library people are thinking about closing one and/or fragmenting hours beyond belief so you never know when they are open. This crazy hours business has worked with some of the landfills down here on the Cape, there's no reason why it shouldn't work for libraries.
People showed up at a library hearing and complained loudly that they do not want this to happen. Agreed, that there is deep support for these little libraries, but it is not very broad. A mile deep but an inch wide.
How about turning over the whole she-bang to the private sector? People could rent books and computer time to do research. Handle it like a video rental store. As more and more homes get computers, one must ask how relevant the research aspect of libraries has become.
When I was a kid, every family tried to invest in a set of encyclopedias to proudly adorn their living room wall. Kids could use them for school projects. It was a status symbol to have a set of a fine encyclopedia in your home, and if you couldn't find what you were looking for you could go to the local library where there were four or five sets. Today, we simply Google for the information and the universe of articles becomes available at the speed of light. Plus you can command the machine to print out whatever you are seeing on the screen. We just don't need libraries anymore for their reference function. Even the best seller function is lessened. You can buy hard cover versions of these books at B.J.'s or Stop and Shop, often for under $10.00.
Jackson County, Oregon is hiring a firm to run its library. The big private company will use its buying muscle to get volume discounts on books and will handle hiring and firing. Salaries will be comparable, but benefits will be reduced, replacing expensive pension plan with 401 (k) programs. They won't keep them open all the time and will save money this way, needing only 50 employees, down from the present 88 people. Collection development will probably suffer because professional librarians will go elsewhere, preferring not to be subject to free market demands instead of scholarly ones.
There is a moral argument that taxpayers should not be burdened with the costs of maintaining public libraries. It is common for many people to decline the use of library services, yet they are taxed to support them. At least school taxes are payback for when we were educated with public dollars. Furthermore, it is questionable if taxpayers should be forced to fund library materials they find objectionable. Just as many conservatives objected to tax supported art such as Robert Mapplethorpe's photography, others may object to paying for pornographic westerns, Rush Limbaugh books or Left Behind recordings with their tax dollars. In a private library, people can choose whose ideas to support with their money.
Last spring the Boston Globe reported two Massachusetts towns weighing the possibility of privatizing libraries. Towns already charge for school sports, kindergarten and bussing to and from school, Why not extends this to the libraries? The towns of Tewksbury and Dartmouth, facing library budgets forcing overrides, were looking into the option of turning the whole program over to a private company.
Privatized libraries are not unheard of in other states. A Maryland-based company, Library Systems and Services LLC, called LSSI, runs 65 library branches in four states. Generally, LSSI will not hire unionized employees, helping it to save on benefits packages.
The Globe story quotes Robert Ferrari of Tewksbury who said he believes that private companies are held to stricter standards:
"I'm pro-privatizing as much of government as possible. The government cannot run anything that a business couldn't do better."
16 comments
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I appreciate the work our public safety provides, but is it wrong to make it work better and at less of a cost to the taxpayers?
As a very young child, I read all the classics and most of known history from books borrowed from my FREE PUBLIC library.
If it had been run privately and charged a fee, my family could have never afforded it. Then I would have would up like these asinine, illiterate dumb bastards who complain they pay taxes for the library and don't use it.
Whose fault is that?
Ned, some states ARE privatizing roads--roads that were built by public funds for the common weal. If they fall into disrepair or become more expensive than they're worth, whom do you vote out of office?
Or do you hire Blackwater mercenaries to wipe out the mercenaries who are running the roads? I could get into that.
While Janet and Demetrius are in power?
Not a chance.
Also they are one of the last defenders of the first and fourth amendments. Librarians have gone to court to defend the privacy rights of their patrons against the requests of an intrusive government and thwart the book burning tendencies of extremists. Also grandmother's living room would never shelve some of the very hip selections found in our public libraries. They are far from stuffy or out-of-date. The rush for privatization needs to bear in mind the rich history of administrative law in the US, laws which bind public administrators but not CEO's. Perhaps certain government agencies do have difficulty administering programs, but to suggest that private industry could do so much better seems short-sighted, given current events in corporate America. They are screwing up just as badly, if not worse. After all, it's the government who is now bailing out private industry.
I think we need to be very careful what we wish for.
what a fascinating porridge-
too hot-
too cold-
some just right-
intellectuals-
elitists-
common sense-
non sense-
marxists-
animal rights-
leftists-
many progressives-
what a blog site!-
In this case, these private libraries are non-profit entities. The town does not run them, and it seems to work out to everyone's benefit.
is about the least relevant
social issue I can imagine.
sell some books-
move to the fire temples-
seniors & children read & learn fire safety-
sell the former libraries-
case closed-
next-
Many towns' public libraries are run by private nonprofits. Brewster Ladies' Library gets only about 7% of its income from town and another 2% from the state, if the undated info on Education Bug is accurate. I think Opi's concern is with for-profit companies owning libraries.
But I think consolidation of at least some branches or little libraries would make sense. If the Senior Center bus can make the rounds, it should be able to have a stop at the main library.
What if we have Nazi, KKK, and al Qaeda schools and libraries? More taxes would be needed for police and other law enforcement agencies to curb the violence they would instill in impressionable youths. So, in the end, you'll probably pay more taxes and live in a more dangerous world.
I cannott believe you're serious about this proposal, and I think you're just being controversial for the page views. Fair enough; everyone's gotta make a buck.
I do not think anyone who posts in support of privatization really realizes how much work, blood, sweat and tears is put in by librarians who love the community they serve.
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