PVLD Photos

  • Sylvia the Carpenter Ant
    Photos of PVLD people, places, and activities. Click on the photo to view all of the photos in the album!
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Palos Verdes

December 01, 2007

BUSY!

We are heading into an incredibly busy December here at PVLD. I am amazed at what the staff and volunteers are attempting:

Today (December 1st)

    9AM – Laura Henry and Kathy Buchsbaum told holiday stories for well over 150 people at the Avenue of the Peninsula (local shopping center) breakfast with Santa

    10AM – Fire Safe Landscaping program at Peninsula Center Library AND all-ages Knit-a-thon at the Annex. Well over 50 people attended each.

    1PM – "Swazzle" puppet show at Miraleste Library. Its 1:45 as I write this, so I have no idea how many attended but my guess is a lot!

    5PM – Staff and volunteer holiday party, including marching in the Rolling Hills Estates Holiday Parade

December 4th

    10 AM – O.W.L. program on buying holiday gifts for grandchildren at the Annex

    7 PM -- Holiday Music series kicks off with "dueling concerts"! Trio featuring Harpist Ashlin at Peninsula Center Library AND the Miraleste Intermediate School vocal ensemble at Miraleste Lib

December 5th

    7 PM – Holiday music concert with jazz pianist Dan Platus AND Peninsula Friends of the Library biennial meeting. Both at Peninsula Center Library

December 6th

    7PM – Les Choristes. Part of our foreign film series in partnership with Chadwick School

December 7th

    3:45 PM – Holiday Music concert with the Palos Verdes Intermediate School Pep Band at Malaga Cove Library

December 8th

    11 AM – "Reggie: My Story" Book talk and signing with author Angi Ma Wong at Peninsula Center Library

   

    1 PM – Windows to Vietnam: A Journey in Pictures and Verse at Peninsula Center Library

December 10th

    7PM – Holiday Music Concert with JJ's Sunset Syncopators at Peninsula Center Library

December 12th

    4:30 PM – Holiday Music Concert with the Amuse Brass Ensemble at Malaga Cove Library

December 14th

    4 PM – Holiday Music Concert – Piano Recital with Darlene Vlasek and students

December 15th

    10 AM – American Girls holiday tea at Peninsula Center Library

    2 PM – Reception and unveiling of our new public sculpture "Balancing Knowledge" at Peninsula Center Library

December 17th

    7 PM – Holiday Music concert with Mark Fitchett and the Peninsula School of Music at Peninsula Center Library

December 18th

    3 PM – Holiday Music Concert with Los Cancioneros Master Chorale at Peninsula Center Library

December 19th

    4:30 PM – Carols and more with Stanford University a capella group "Testimony" – Afterwords Café at the Peninsula Center Library

December 20th

    4 PM – Special holiday story time and visit from Santa at Malaga Cove Library

December 21st

    4 PM – Holiday Music Concert with renowned pianist Anli Tong and students at Peninsula Center Library

    

WHEW! And that doesn't include our regular schedule of 15 story times each week, book discussion groups, chess club, history discussion group and everything else that goes on every month!  It also doesn't include the many community activities that some of us participate in.

Wonder what we'll be doing between Christmas and New Years? Keeping the library open and trying to catch our breath!

May 10, 2007

Thank you Volunteers!

On Tuesday the Peninsula Friends of the Library hosted the annual PVLD Volunteer Appreciation lunch.  It was a wonderful opportunity to express our appreciation for work that our volunteers do to support the library.  We have over 200 active volunteers who give generously of their time.  This fiscal year we will likely surpass over 26,000 hours of volunteer support! 

Our volunteers

  • Operate our monthly book sales at the Malaga Cove and Peninsula Center Libraries and our new Internet book sales
  • Operate the wonderful Library Shop at Peninsula Center Library
  • Serve as "Information Greeters" - the first line of assistance for customers entering the Peninsula Center Library
  • Shelve books, magazines, and newspapers
  • Tidy the Peninsula Center library each morning before it opens
  • Provide story times at the Malaga Cove Library
  • Participate in our oral story telling program at Silver Spur School
  • Host monthly craft programs for kids (this is done by our teen volunteers!)
  • Serve on Boards and Committees including the Friends of the Library Board, the Library Advisory Committees at each library, and the Peninsula Teen Activities Council
  • Support our fundraising and community outreach efforts
  • Are Docents in the Local History Room
  • Collect oral histories of local residents
  • Translate foreign language materials so they can be accurately cataloged
  • Repair books and audiovisual materials
  • Carry out special projects such as our 40Families local history project

And much more!

Many of our volunteers have given several thousand hours of their time, and volunteer extraordinaire Gene Roder has set a record with over 8,300 hours to date.

We couldn't offer the level and range of services we do without our volunteers - THANK YOU!

Thank you also to Peninsula Friends of the Library for sponsoring our volunteer program, including the Volunteer Appreciation Lunch. 

Photos of the volunteer luncheon (taken by James Davis of our Facilities Department) can be found in the photo album to the left of this posting, or by clicking on http://www.typepad.com/t/app/gallery/manage?set_id=1076294

April 20, 2007

Friday musings

Every so often I go through a period where everything feels just a bit unsettled...like I have too many balls in the air, and just as soon as I manage to catch one of them someone throws another one at me. 

This has definitely been one of those times.  My week of vacation in mid-March was great - but it took another week to get on top of the backlog of emails, phone calls, and other projects, and I know I'm not alone in that feeling.

Then we have had a lot of staff changes.  The ball got started with the resignation of Customer Service Manager Jan Wierzbicki in January.  No sooner had we promoted Branch Library Assistant Eve Wittenmeyer to Customer Service Manager than our wonderful Branch Manager, Cindy Miller, resigned to take up a terrific new job as Associate Director at the Long Beach Public Library.  We are fortunate to have a pretty deep "bench" at PVLD and I was delighted to be able to appoint Jennifer Addington, most recently the Assistant Manager - Adult Services at our Peninsula Center Library - as the new Branch Operations Manager....but of course that has left the Assistant Manager job vacant.  We hope to fill that position internally, too...which will leave another hole to be filled!  We are also faced with the resignations of Kristen Waddell and Laurie Anderson - two of our terrific library school student employees who are moving on to new challenges and leaving some big shoes to be filled.

Add to the turmoil of successive staff changes the fact that we have some very big projects on our plate - including reorganization of our Young Readers department to provide District-wide services for infants through teens; installation of new carpeting at Peninsula Center Library (which involves a lot of extra work for our Circulation staff as we are lifting all of the book stacks to carpet underneath); selection and then implementation of a new "Integrated Library System" (the software that automates all of our library activities from purchasing books to the online catalog); gearing up for major fundraising to support expansion of the Miraleste Library, restoration of the Malaga Cove Library, and the creation of an endowment; and an overhaul of our employee classification and compensation structure - and its no wonder the PVLD staff are looking a bit shell-shocked!

The amazing thing is that we are continuing to make progress on all of these projects...thanks in no small part to the calibre of our staff.  The good news is that I think things will stabilize quite a bit over the next few months as we fill our staff vacancies, people settle into their new roles, and we complete some of the big projects on our plate.  The "bad" news is that as soon as we complete one project I am pretty sure we'll find something else we want to do in our quest to make PVLD the best library system of its size in the state (if not the country)! 

To our staff - I'm not sure you know how much I appreciate how you navigate the seemingly always turbulent environment at PVLD and still manage to make great progress in improving our services. 

Thank you!

April 12, 2007

Integrated Library Systems

Can't believe a week has flown by since I last posted.  We've been busy! 

We are in the process of selecting a new Integrated Library System - the software that runs all of our core library operations -including acquisition of books and other library materials, cataloging, circulation (checking books in and out), inventory control, and the public access library catalog.  So far we've had full-day demonstrations from 3 vendors with one more planned for next week.

Our current system is over 10 years old, won't be supported beyond next year, and is incapable of providing many of the services our customers are asking for without major modifications.  The new system will cost approximately a quarter of a million dollars and will need to last for the next 10 years so its a big decision! 

PVLD employees know what we want, and aren't shy about asking tough questions, so I'm sure the vendor representatives have been relieved when their day with us was over.

The good news is that while all of the systems we've seen have strengths and weaknesses, whatever we choose will be a BIG step forward, especially for our customers.  We won't be able to take advantage of all of the new features right away but these are some of the things that are on the horizon:

  • Email or telephone alerts to let customers know what items will be due soon
  • Online payment of fines and fees, and also online donations
  • Ability for customers to post "reader reviews" on the catalog
  • Ability for customers to choose to save their borrowing history so they can check if they've read something before
  • Much more intuitive searching of the library catalog

We can't wait!

April 04, 2007

Video Gaming in Libraries


Video Games, originally uploaded by pvldteens.

PVLD staff have been talking a lot about how to incorporate video gaming into our services, programs, and collections so I was pleased to see this posting on the "Designing Better Libraries" Blog

http://dbl.lishost.org/blog/2007/03/31/libraries-and-gaming/

Why video games in libraries?  Because they support many of the things we see as our core mission!  They provide intellectual stimulation, facilitate skill-building (e.g. problem solving and manual dexterity) and as this photo from the Annex shows - they even promote social interaction and community building.  They can even impart real knowledge - at last year's Public Library Association conference one of the speakers told of bringing his son, who has Downs Syndrome, to Boston for the first time.  As they travelled around the city the boy, who had never been there, pointed out various landmarks and even helped give directions.  Where did he learn how to navigate Boston?  From a "Tony Hawk" skateboarding video game that is set in that city!  Some games - think "Dance Dance Revolution" or Nintendo Wii - even promote physical activity.

And video games aren't just for teens! Check out this video from the Sedgebrook Senior Center in Illinois!  You'll need to scrolll down to the video called "Calling all Bowlers".

http://www.erickson.com/ericksonvideogallery/evlPlayerver5.asp?videoname=sportsActivitiesStreaming&var2=7

This New York Times article also discusses the seniors and video games 

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/03/30/arts/30seni.html?_r=1&ref=arts

Here at PVLD we have taken our first steps into the brave world of video gaming by having video game stations at the Annex (and hosting our first ever video game tournament at the Annex during Spring Break this week) and offering video games for circulation at the Miraleste Library, and soon at Peninsula Center Library.

Ideas we are exploring include:

  • Offering video game based programming for seniors at the Annex on weekday mornings when the space is otherwise unused.
  • Creating a "PVLD Gaming" website with links to games and information.
  • Purchasing a number of handheld video games (e.g. Gameboys or PSPs) that could be used for game tournaments using our wireless networks.
  • Purchasing handheld video games for circulation to give people a chance to try them out.
  • Sponsoring a "guild" or team in an online multi-user game such as "World of Warcraft"

We'd love to hear your thoughts and suggestions!

February 25, 2007

Why I live and work where I do!


022407_15242.jpg, originally uploaded by katherinergould.

I took the photo this photo with my cell phone on Saturday while hiking in the hills above Abalone Cove. That's Catalina Island in the distance. The area where I was hiking was recently acquired by the Palos Verdes Land Conservancy so it will be preserved as open space. Hard to believe this is a few short miles from the traffic and hustle of LA!

Sometimes people ask whether I will be staying in my current position. Sure, my job has the usual share of frustrations, the hours are long, and the to-do list even longer.... but after a couple of hours spent hiking and looking at this view, or walking with my husband and dogs on the beach below, I feel like I've been on vacation. Add in a short commute, the ability to run by the beach every morning before work, an amazing staff, and unbelievable community support and I ask myself - Why would I want to go anywhere else?

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