HARINGEY has truly done a great job with the upgrades to branch library buildings in Stroud Green, Highgate and Muswell Hill.
However, this good work was made against a wider and longer backdrop of running down of Haringey Libraries. When it comes to this service for the public, the council seems to suffer from cognitive dissonance.
Due to the (2027) Borough of Culture's decision to slash opening hours in Libraries over the Borough—by a third—residents who indirectly paid for those significant structural improvements are not getting full value.
Council staff continue to see Libraries, less as housing a service and more as municipal real estate. The council property service appears to have slipped out of control. Massive losses of public funds have been generated in this function.
Some 10 years ago, the Haringey shoe-horned council office accommodation into two of our bigger libraries: Marcus Garvey in Tottenham and in Wood Green. As well as reducing the size, shape and layout of the library function, in both buildings, this distorted their original character.
The lack of regard for Marcus Garvey Library was on display when the noticeboard outside promoted the adjacent swimming pool, with library wording underneath and less prominent. Are council staff actually ashamed of the library service?
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Now, similar disregard continues under the London Borough of Culture 2027:
Friends group warns of ‘serious safeguarding issues’ over new homel...
In the HCP article linked above, Jasmine Taylor is interviewed about the council's latest attempted attrition on libraries.
Jasmine is one of our Borough's leading libraries advocates as well as Chair of the Friends of MG Library.
CDC
Former Opposition Spokes on Libraries
Tags for Forum Posts: Borough of Culture 2027, Haringey Council, Jasmine Taylor, Libraries, Library, Marcus Garvey, library service
I think part of the issue is not addressing what people want to use libraries for. I lead a review of Camden libraries over a decade ago and found that the way a library is used varies massively site by site. It ranged from Swiss Cottage, one of the largest public libraries in London, where book borrowing and adult study space was the most important use, to Regents Park where after school homework was what constituted the biggest footfall. Taking a blanket approach to library service design just wasn’t working resulting in some that had footfall over under 100 people a day. So the service offer at each was designed to fit need, rather than the other way around. For instance in Queens Crescent library, which is in the middle of a very large social housing estate, linked up with local schools to provide after school study and homework clubs,
Each library, because of its geography, has a different role to play.
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