WA Secretary of State Blogs

Floods, Eruptions & more from Whitman County Heritage

November 1st, 2011 Ross Fuqua Posted in Articles, Digital Collections, Uncategorized Comments Off on Floods, Eruptions & more from Whitman County Heritage


 

Staff at the Whitman County Library, a Washington Rural Heritage participant, have been hard at work this summer and fall adding almost 200 more items to the Whitman County Heritage digital collection.

 

Many images of natural disasters in the region — including the Palouse River Flood of 1910 and the aftermath of the 1980 Mount Saint Helens eruption —  are now accessible online, as well as early images from the very small communities of Ewan and Revere, Washington, west of St. John.

 

The  Athenaeum Club and the private collection of Bob Bowen have also become sources of historic images and material for Whitman County Heritage this year, contributing to an already wonderful and rich digital collection. We salute Patti Cammack and staff of Whitman County Library for their continued effort in providing access to these important resources through the Washington Rural Heritage project.

 

 

 

 

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Volunteer Engagement Strategies for Libraries

October 20th, 2011 jfenton Posted in Articles, For Libraries, For the Public, Training and Continuing Education, Uncategorized Comments Off on Volunteer Engagement Strategies for Libraries

Carla presenting in Kennewick

“This was one of the best workshops I have attended. It was relevant and had great information. The presenter was EXCELLENT!”

“It was an inspiring day full of useful information. Carla’s energy is contagious and she offered information at a lively pace.”

“Wonderful. The presenter was extremely organized and had a wealth of experience. Very impressive.”

“I’ve been employed with this library since 2001 and have attended numerous library conferences, training seminars and workshops during that time. This was the BEST library related training I’ve ever attended!! Thanks!!!”

These comments are direct quotes from the evaluations for the recent round of Successful Volunteer Engagement for Libraries workshops held in eight libraries around Washington State, ranging from Liberty Lake to Bellingham. The workshops were presented by Carla Lehn from The Lehn Group based out of California. Carla is also the Library Programs Consultant at the California State Library.

This workshop grew out of the Transforming Life After 50 project that involves fellows from Washington, California, Idaho, and other states. One of the courses taught as part of the fellowship, which focuses on serving adults 50 years and older, was Volunteer Engagement and Carla was the instructor. Her templates for volunteer job descriptions and targeted recruitment plans proved to be valuable tools.

As libraries across the nation and in Washington struggle with budget cuts, volunteers are more in demand than ever. However, creating successful volunteer programs is not always easy. Carla’s experience in this area provided a great blueprint for libraries in Washington to follow.

The workshop focused on baby boomers and the generations that will follow them and how they are seeking new ways to use their skills and experience to make a difference in their communities. The workshop focused on how to start or “re-tool” a volunteer engagement program that will not only capture the talents of these potential volunteers, but will reap the benefits of ongoing support for the library that comes from having these people meaningfully engaged.

As a result of these workshops, a WebJunction Washington page has been created under “Washington State Library Resources” on Volunteer Engagement Strategies for Libraries. You can access the page at http://wa.webjunction.org/685.

Among the resources shared on the page are links to Carla’s Transforming Life After 50 archived course and a recorded webinar presented by David Junius (Washington Talking Book & Braille Library/WTBBL) called The Bottom Line on Volunteers.

For the workshop scheduled in Seattle at WTBBL, WSL partnered with David Junius and WTBBL volunteer Steve McCarthy to add their unique volunteer perspective as well. Here’s David’s view of Carla’s workshop:

“Both Carla and I have a nonprofit fund development background, so I appreciated her approach to the identification, recruitment and stewardship of volunteers, and her point of view on the generational pools of talent we have available to meet our needs. Fund development is akin to relationship development, which is what managing volunteer programs is all about.

“Carla’s workshop was valuable for new and veteran volunteer managers. Saying WTBBL has 400 volunteers donating 32,000 hours annually is the standard statistic I share, to the point where it almost doesn’t register with me anymore.

“However, when I mentioned this statistic at the start of Carla’s workshop, people were impressed.
That reminded me that even after doing volunteer management for three years, on top of another dozen in various nonprofits working with volunteers, I still have something to be excited about…especially in this economy where volunteers are (even more) valued.

“While we often look at outputs in volunteer management – how many hours, how many volunteers, how many items circulated by those volunteers, etc. – we also need to look at the outcomes. Just as our volunteers help the lives of our libraries’ users, they are also elevating their own lives by being involved with us. Carla’s workshop re-amplified this for me.”

WTBBL volunteer Steve McCarthy also attended the workshop, and he has started to use a few of Carla’s tools in further developing the volunteer corps at the local nonprofit where he is the board chair. Carla’s information is transferable between types of organizations, with the common denominator being a respect for the people involved in each part of the organizational relationship: staff, volunteers, and library users.”

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WSL Updates for October 20, 2011

October 20th, 2011 Diane Hutchins Posted in For Libraries, For the Public, Grants and Funding, News, Technology and Resources, Training and Continuing Education, Uncategorized, Updates, Washington Talking Book and Braille Library Comments Off on WSL Updates for October 20, 2011

Volume 7, October 20, 2011 for the WSL Updates mailing list

 Topics include:

1) WANTED – ONLINE RESOURCES CONSULTANT

2) MORE THAN JUST BOOK SALES

3) DON’T MISS THIS YEAR’S EARLY LEARNING SYMPOSIUM

4) SEEKING NOMINATIONS FOR CUTTING-EDGE LIBRARIES

5) SCHOLARSHIPS AVAILABLE FOR 2012 ALA MIDWINTER MEETING

6) FREE CE OPPORTUNITIES NEXT WEEK

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WSL Updates for October 13, 2011

October 13th, 2011 Diane Hutchins Posted in For Libraries, For the Public, News, Technology and Resources, Training and Continuing Education, Uncategorized, Updates Comments Off on WSL Updates for October 13, 2011

Volume 7, October 13, 2011 for the WSL Updates mailing list

 Topics include:

1) MORE FREE BOOK DISCUSSION KITS

2) PUBLIC LIBRARIAN’S GUIDE TO E-BOOKS

3) DO YOU KNOW A “STAR” IN LIBRARY ADULT SERVICES?

4) ONLINE TOOLS FOR SPANISH SPEAKERS

5) FREE WEBINAR – REACHING RELUCTANT READERS

6) FREE CE OPPORTUNITIES NEXT WEEK

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WSL Updates for September 29, 2011

September 29th, 2011 Diane Hutchins Posted in For Libraries, For the Public, Grants and Funding, News, Technology and Resources, Training and Continuing Education, Uncategorized, Updates Comments Off on WSL Updates for September 29, 2011

Volume 7, September 29, 2011 for the WSL Updates mailing list

Topics include:

1) INPUT NEEDED ON EARLY LEARNING GUIDELINES

2) FIRST TUESDAYS – SUMMER READING FOR 2012

3) TAKE THE NATIONAL SURVEY OF INTERNET USE AND FUNDING

4) GRANTS – LAURA BUSH 21ST CENTURY LIBRARIAN PROGRAM

5) INFOCAMP SEATTLE 2011

6) FREE CE OPPORTUNITIES NEXT WEEK

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WSL Updates for September 22, 2011

September 22nd, 2011 Diane Hutchins Posted in For Libraries, For the Public, Grants and Funding, News, Training and Continuing Education, Uncategorized, Updates Comments Off on WSL Updates for September 22, 2011

Volume 7, September 22, 2011 for the WSL Updates mailing list

 Topics include:

 1) FREE WORKSHOP – BASICS OF ARCHIVES

 2) SUSTAINING CULTURAL HERITAGE COLLECTIONS

 3) NATIONAL LIBRARY WEEK GRANT

 4) FOCUS ON COLLECTIONS CARE WORKSHOP SERIES

 5) CONNECTING DONORS TO PUBLIC SCHOOL LIBRARIES

 6) FREE CE OPPORTUNITIES NEXT WEEK

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WSL identifies, meets the ‘Oh woe!’ girl

September 12th, 2011 Kirsten Furl Posted in Articles, For Libraries, For the Public, Hard Times, News, Uncategorized Comments Off on WSL identifies, meets the ‘Oh woe!’ girl

Members of the Jensen family check out young Jodi in the lobby of WSL.

Four-year-old Jodi Jensen had had enough. She’d spent all morning at the Yakima Valley Regional Library carefully selecting her weekly library books (including Achilles the Donkey), playing in the water fountains, sliding down the banisters with her sister Tamera, and pushing all the elevator buttons. She was ready to go home and have a nap. Problem was, her mom Marianne hadn’t finished checking out her own books.

Then...

Exasperated, she leaned her forehead against the card catalog. A photographer from the Yakima Herald-Republic was at the ready, and snapped her sweet sourness. The photo won the sweepstakes in the annual 1969 Oregon-Washington Associated Press newsphoto contest, was snipped for family albums, and was all but forgotten.

Decades later, when the Washington State Library relocated from capital campus to its present location in Tumwater, it resurfaced as one of several photos used for lobby art. More recently, it was used in our ‘Hard Times Got You Down?’ resources bookmark and was distributed to libraries all over the state.

...and now.

This past year we tried to get in touch with not Jodi, but Tamera, as the newspaper mistakenly identified the little girl as her sister. A few weeks ago, we heard from the Jensens. The whole family was going to be in the area for Byron and Marianne’s 50th wedding anniversary.

The family stopped on the way to their celebration destination excited to see the lobby photo and amazed at the celebrities they had become. Jodi, her sister Tamara, and parents jovially posed for photos and chatted with staff, remembering that fateful day. Jodi even recreated the Yakima scene on the second floor of the State Library. Thank you, Jensens, for making it such a fun day for the staff at WSL.

Where is the little girl in the lobby photo? She’s a hair stylist in Renton. And now you know the rest of the story!

Check out more photos of the Jensen family’s visit to the Washington State Library at: http://www.flickr.com/photos/wsl-libdev/sets/72157627632872492/.

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Clippings for the week of September 2, 2011

September 8th, 2011 Leanna Hammond Posted in Uncategorized Comments Off on Clippings for the week of September 2, 2011

Image courtesy North Pend Oreille Heritage collection

Image courtesy North Pend Oreille Heritage collection

Library News
At the Wilbur Town Council meeting Wednesday, Aug. 3 Mayor Robert Wyborney informed the council that Assistant Librarian Connie Finch has resigned from the Hesseltine Library effective August 31, 2011. Council approved the appointment of Shirley Goodlake to the position of Assistant Librarian. (Wilbur Register, 8.11.11)

At the Prosser Library high-speed Wi-Fi and Internet access are free services via 10 public computers. The library is offering four classes this fall: Computer Basics (Sept. 17), Internet Basics (Oct. 15), Using E-mail (Nov. 19) and Genealogy Basics (Dec. 3). Each class is on a Saturday morning and lasts for 90 minutes. Classes are free. Space is limited, so registration is required – call or sign up at the library. (Record-Bulletin, [Prosser] 8.17.11)

At a budget workshop held Aug. 8 at White Salmon Valley Community Library, the Fort Vancouver Regional Library District Board of Trustees directed library administrators to draft a 2012-2013 budget that uses a combination of reserve funds and spending cuts to bring expenditures in line with an anticipated significant reduction in property tax revenue over the next few years. The Library District’s revenue projects for 2012-2013 will see a $1.86 million decrease due to declining property values. (The Enterprise, [White Salmon] 8.18.11)

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WSL Updates for June 2, 2011

June 2nd, 2011 Diane Hutchins Posted in For Libraries, News, Training and Continuing Education, Uncategorized, Updates Comments Off on WSL Updates for June 2, 2011

Volume 7, June 2, 2011 for the WSL Updates mailing list

Topics include:

1) STATEWIDE DATABASE LICENSING – INFORMATION REQUESTED

2) FREE LEGAL RESEARCH WEBINAR

3) CONNECT THE DOTS – AN EARLY LEARNING EXCHANGE

4) WANTED – INTERNAL LEADS EDITOR

5) SHARPEN YOUR WEBSITE – METRICS AND ANALYTICS

6) FREE CE OPPORTUNITIES NEXT WEEK

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Transforming Life After 50

May 3rd, 2011 jfenton Posted in Articles, For Libraries, Uncategorized Comments Off on Transforming Life After 50

Photo: From TLA50 Institute in Portland, OR: Stephen Ristau and Suzanne Flint, TLA50 coordinators

from Ning Community website: http://tla50resource.ning.com/


  • Nearly 2/3 of all the human beings who have ever lived past the age of 65 are alive today.
  • Often considered the wealthiest generation in American history, Boomers face unique financial challenges – including the lowest savings rate (10%) of any other generation, the uncertainty of Social Security and skyrocketing healthcare costs.
  • Midlife is a period in which individuals begin to think about, plan for, and actually disengage from their primary occupations and the raising of children. They launch a second or third career, develop new identities and new ways to be productively engaged.
  • Four out of five Boomers see work as playing a role in their retirement.
  • In a 10-year longevity study, researchers concluded that close family relationships, although important, were less likely than a network of good friends to increase longevity in older people.

These are just a few facts that staff from Washington libraries have been learning this past year. Transforming Life after 50 (TLA50), an initiative that began in California, is taking over Washington libraries. From the largest library systems (King County Library System, Seattle Public Library) to the tiniest libraries (Odessa, Neill Public), enhancing services and programs for mid-life adults has become a focus thanks to 18 Washington fellows participating in a year-long fellowship.

Ninety-one Fellows from eleven states are participating in the year-long IMLS Western Regional Fellowship — an initiative to help transform library strategies, policies and practices to better support the needs and interests of midlife adults, ages 50+.  Fellows were introduced to a new framework for serving and engaging these midlife adults at an in-person training institute in Portland, Oregon in September 2010.

In Portland, Fellows heard from guest presenters including Laura Carstensen, Paul Nussbaum, Michael Zielenziger and Robert Atchely. Furthermore, Fellows had the opportunity to meet each other and the instructors for the online portion of the fellowship. May is the final month of the live courses with a wrap up webinar scheduled for June. The online courses will be available to Fellows for a few months for those who need to catch up or wish to revisit previous courses.

In addition to the Fellowship, Washington Fellows have been spreading the word about TLA50 by presenting at the Washington Library Association conference in Yakima. More opportunities to share the TLA50 experience are coming soon with PNLA (Pacific Northwest Library Association) conference in August and WALE (Washington Library Employees) conference in October.

The Fellowship has focused on several areas of programming and services. At the Institute, presentations included the following topics:

  • Community
  • Financial Security
  • Health (and aging)
  • Life After 50 Options
  • Lifelong Learning
  • Spirituality
  • Work & Volunteerism

The online courses have built on this foundation with courses on:

  • Strategic Facilitation
  • Community Assessment
  • Partnerships and Collaborations
  • Volunteer Engagement
  • Evaluating Results
  • Engaging Adults through Social Media

As we’ve learned how to engage mid-life adults in the library and community, we have also learned how important the changes brought about by the “Boomer” generation are to all of us today.

For a video peek at TLA50, visit http://tla50resource.ning.com/video/transforming-life-after-50-an

Also, consider joining the Transforming Life after 50 Ning community online: http://tla50resource.ning.com/ which is open to anyone interested in enhancing services and programming for the over 50 population in the library.

One final fact (that speaks for itself):

  • 11% of the world’s population is over 60. By 2050, 22% will be.

*Quotes from the TLA50 website, http://transforminglifeafter50.org/.

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