Take Environmental Responsiblity for Your Reading (And a Great Story About "The Unknownable Bottom Line")

Eco-libris is a site where you can pay to have one tree planted for every book that you've read (or bought or whatever “balance” you want to create.)  The cost is just under $1 per book – a small price to pay (er, not that I will be anytime soon but the concept has lots of appeal anyhow.  Er, maybe after Christmas!) 

Here's an interesting exercise – try to imagine the pitch that you would have to make to your board to justify spending an additional $10 000 or $20 000 or whatever to buy into this program for every book your library purchases.  This is one of those weird unmeasurables we often come across where's it's impossible to determine what a fixed expenditure brings back to your organization over time via expanded and continued good will

That's probably the tack I'd try to take – that spending this money might result in increased good will which leads to increased usage which leads to all manner of good things.  But if I'm a board member, my counter argument is that the library is already very environmentally friendly by virtue of the fact that it allows a single purchased book to be used by dozens of people over its lifetime.  As I said, an interesting question…

Friday Fun Link – North Korean National Library (Nov 14, 2008)

A FIMS alumni provides an intriguing glimpse into North Korea's national library

(via one of the FIMS-related groups on Facebook)

"Hey everybody – I'm a liberrian like my dad!"

100 Movie Spoilers in 5 Minutes

To me a spoiler is revealing a secret or an unexpected twist.  Some of these are not spoilers (“The Ducks win”? “Meg Ryan ends up with Tom Hanks”?  No shit – haven't you ever seen a Hollywood movie before?).  But the idea's still fun. 
 

Paging "HeadTale", "Mr. HeadTale" to the Web 2.0

I came up with the moniker “Head Tale” when I had a freelance consulting company doing web site design back in the late 1990's.  I liked that the name connoted a few different things including the luck of a coin flip, telling stories, and my hometown of Indian Head.  (Okay, and I also liked that some people might read it as a double entendre!

I know I didn't start using it as my online handle until after 2001 because that's the year I joined MetaFilter and I still dislike that I used my boring college nickname “Jaybo” there.  But anyhow, that's all a long preamble to introducing this site which allows you to check whether your name is taken at various popular online web sites. 

Remembering Last Remembrance Day

It's hard to believe that I've been writing this blog on a nearly daily basis for what, two and a half years now?  It's even become another resource tool in my arsenal – I often search my own blog for items and ideas that I know I've written about in the past so that I can re-visit them, now, with the benefit of hindsight or to remember a fact or whatever. 

I've also grown to have some posts that are particular favourites for one reason or another.  I summarized some of them in a post called “Best Tales” (which badly need updated!) and today, I would like to highlight a post that will go on that “Best of…” list when I do get around to updating it – the post I did last Remembrance Day, a few months after my grandfather passed away

Music Monday – "While There's a Lucifer To Light Your Fag/Smile Boys, That's The Style"

My grade two teacher had a local pianist come to my school regularly to teach our class a variety of traditional songs (“Snowbird” by Anne Murray was about as modern as it got!) 

Most of those songs are ones I can still sing to this day and when you think of the impact that a teacher can have in a student's life, it's funny which seemingly inconsequential things stand out.  (On a related note, she was the type of teacher who began each day with “Oh Canada” and ended it with “God Save The Queen” – I don't think that's allowed anymore.)

The war songs in today's clip were always a couple of my favourites during these lessons (and not just because we got to sing the line quoted in the title of this post – something else kids likely wouldn't be allowed to do today) which only grew in resonance as I grew older and learned more about the world wars. 

Since this is a Remembrance Day-themed post, I'll add an especially sad note – that teacher, who would probably be cited as a favourite teacher by most of my classmates, who regularly bought her classes ice cream treats or doughnuts, who would get 300+ kids to her house at Halloween when a neighbour on the same street might get 50, suffered from depression and committed suicide later in her life after she'd retired from teaching.  Absolutely tragic. 

I know Remembrance Day is meant to remember the soliders who fought and died for us over the years.  But I hope you spare a moment tomorrow to think not only of war but perhaps others, now gone, who have touched your life as well.

Two of Pace's Favourite New Tricks Are Climbing and Jumping…

When you combine them, you get…pro wrestling?

(I think it's extra funny that he says “no, no, no” right before he jumps each time, as if he knows he shouldn't be doing it!)

Two Month Anniversary

Today is the two month anniversary of me being at Regina Public Library.  Hard to believe it's been that long already but in some ways, I have to work to remind myself that it's only been a short time overall (I often counseled our new branch librarians at Southeast Regional Library not to feel overwhelmed soon after they started since it would take at least a year with them going through every element of the job – from Summer Reading Club to year-end reports – to feel truly comfortable.  My old boss trumped this, telling me that he believed people weren't comfortable in a job until they'd done it for 5-7 years!)  I hope it doesn't take me 5-7 years to feel comfortable at RPL but there's probably some truth in that view too – I guess it all depends on how you define “comfortable.” 

Anyhow, with those thoughts in mind, I decided that it might be fun to compare and contrast working in a rural system with working in an urban system.

At RPL, if I have a meeting at a branch, it's a 10 minute drive, no matter which branch.
At SRL, I once made a four-hour round-trip to attend a tea for an hour in honour of a librarian who was retiring.

At RPL, there are about 30 professional librarians, the majority located in Central where I work so there is lots of opportunity for exchanging ideas and thoughts.
At SRL, there were exactly four professional librarians of which, three were in the building where I worked in and only two in my half of the building.

At RPL, there are support staff to assist when you are planning an event or workshop or designing a poster or whatever.
At SRL, I found myself doing everything from stuffing the information packages to designing the posters to ordering Dilly Bars for our snack breaks at our staff workshops!

At RPL, saying the word “parking” (at least at Central) is akin to yelling out “Goddamn!” in church.
At SRL, there was parking but it was a gravel lot that turned to slush in rain or snow.

At RPL, I take the bus for twenty minutes in the morning and twenty minutes back in the afternoon meaning I don't have to start my car, fight traffic and I get a lot extra reading done.
At SRL, it was a five minute drive to work.

At RPL, I stay for lunch because there's not enough time to get home, even if I drove myself instead of taking the bus.
At SRL, I was home for lunch nearly every day.

At RPL, my time feels a lot more flexible in terms of when I take breaks, etc.
At SRL, because of the small size of the organization, all staff started the day, ended the day, and took their coffee and lunch breaks at the same time with very few exceptions.

At RPL, there's a lot of cutting-edge work being done with technology including blogs, wikis and all that good stuff.
At SRL, there wasn't (though I did manage to utilize a few things – sometimes with permission, sometimes without! )

At RPL, DVD's are one of the highest circulating items.
At SRL, every local libray board decides if they want DVD's in their community so they're much less prevalent, even as they're equally popular in the rural system as in the city system.

At RPL, I will likely not have any direct interaction with board members (unless I do something *really* dumb!)
At SRL, I sometimes attended local library board meetings and occasionally had to interact with or present to the regional library board as well.

At RPL, staff access is restricted to the library's open hours plus a few extra hours before the library opens in the morning. 
At SRL, almost all staff had 24-hour access to the building.

At RPL, I share an office with the library's webmaster (which is not a big deal – we get along very well and share many common interests.  Plus the design of the office makes it seem like we almost have our own offices.)
At SRL, I often joked that I had two offices since I had an office of my own but frequently went into the office of the person I'd replaced to look up documents or take advantage of the extra space in his office.

At RPL, the library is only closed for Christmas and Boxing Day.
At SRL, the library (HQ anyhow) was closed for the week between Christmas and Boxing Day (though staff had to use their own holiday time to do so – but I don't think anybody min
ded!)


Anyhow, those are some comparisons and contrasts of my two public library jobs so far.  Knowing very well that people from each organization read this blog, I hasten to add I make these points not to say that one is better or worse than the other – each has its own strengths, weaknesses, advantages, disadvantages and if forced, I honestly don't know if I could pick a favourite betwen them.  (Er, on second thought, since I'm now at RPL, I'd likely pick them – especially dependent on who was asking!

Friday Fun Link – BoMoMo (Nov 7, 2008)

Today's link is a fun variation on the idea of an online painting program

(And speaking of painting a picture, how about a map from two short years ago showing how Barack Obama stacked up in a hypothetical race against John McCain.)