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Dick Eastman Online
9/26/2001 - Archive
More on the Re-constitution of the NGS Library
This week, Curt B. Witcher, President of the National Genealogical
Society, released the text of the announcement made at the annual conference
of the Federation of Genealogical Societies.
Here is the announcement by Mr. Witcher:
First, let me say that your NGS Board of Directors is committed
to providing the highest level of information, services, and products possible
to NGS members. That is why we are immersed in a strategic directions initiative.
We are looking to provide more services to our members with the same number
of staff and the same level of resources. And as I am sure you can imagine,
our financial resources continue to be rather modest, particularly in this
time of economic downturn.
Despite rumors, stories, and musings to the contrary, the
National Genealogical Society Library is not closing, nor are its collections
being randomly dispersed to other libraries. It is important for me to state
again for the record: the National Genealogical Society Library is not closing.
Rather it is being reconstituted in a manner more conducive to providing
better services to the society's membership.
Historically, the book loan collection has been under-utilized
by the society's membership. Yet no one, absolutely no one, is interested
in terminating the book loan service. The NGS staff and board of directors
appreciate that while little used by the majority of members, the book loan
service is highly valued by a number of members. The challenge before us
was to find a way to continue making the book loan service available while
freeing the NGS librarian and her staff to provide more valuable reference
services for our members-services that would make NGS an increasingly invaluable
part of more genealogists' lives.
After much study and deliberation, the NGS board voted to
create the nation's largest family and local history book loan collection
through a partnership with the St. Louis County Library (SLCL). This partnership
creates some of the most exciting growth opportunities for a book loan collection
the genealogical community has ever seen. As specified by the agreement,
all of the books SLCL receives from NGS must be made available for loan,
making the entire NGS book loan collection as close as your nearest public,
college, or university library. The two organizations have committed to
meet at least yearly to review the status of the arrangement and modify
as needed to make the books as accessible as possible.
I believe it is important to also note that having the NGS
Book Loan Collection at the St. Louis County Library carries the following
additional benefits.
- Book loan requests will be filled five days a week, rather than just one
day per week as we had been doing at Glebe House. The service will be much
more responsive.
- Neither the St. Louis County Library nor the NGS Library will have to
close to perform the interlibrary loans. In the past the NGS Library had
to close to perform loan functions.
- The St. Louis County Library has a much larger staff to handle loan requests.
- The St. Louis County Library is committed to assisting NGS with reference
questions that result from use of the loan collection.
- Housing the loan collection in St. Louis means that the book loan collection
will be in one place and in one consistent order. Currently, the NGS book
loan collection is in two different facilities on the Glebe House grounds
as well as two different remote storage facilities.
- The St. Louis County Library will market the book loan collection in ways
NGS was never able.
- The St. Louis County Library will be offering programs at national conferences
on the riches and use of the loan collection.
- The St. Louis County Library will be enhancing web access to the loan
collection, and creating pathfinders and use-aids for the collection as
well as highlighting unique items.
- The staff of the St. Louis County Library is most competent, professional,
and very excited about making this arrangement truly benefit both organizations.
The administrative, special collections, and interlibrary loan staffs in
particular are truly extraordinary. I know this from months of personal
experiences and interactions with them.
Both SLCL and NGS are committed to growing the book loan collection
in very dramatic ways. While we are not yet at the announcement stage, we
are contacting numerous genealogical libraries, societies, and other organizations
that heretofore would not give their duplicate materials to NGS because
of the way we ran our loan program. We are asking these entities to reconsider
enhancing our national loan collection by designating this new partner collection
as the repository of their duplicates.
In addition to finding a much better way to conduct the society's
book loan program, I believe the NGS board's commitment to enhancing its
library and information services can be evidenced in a number of significant
ways.
- The NGS librarian remains an important, full-time position on the society's
staffing table, on par with other professional staff employed by the society.
- The society's valuable manuscript collections (including the marvelous
Richardson Dougall European Manuscript Collection), its archive of Bible
records, the AMA files, and the MAC chart files are all being maintained
at the Glebe House Library. Indeed, efforts will continue to be explored
to acquire other such unique collections of materials.
- The society is maintaining its contracts with CAPCON (the OCLC library
cooperative in the DC-VA-MD area) and The Library Corporation (TLC). Access
to OCLC will allow NGS staff to assist members in finding important family
and local history books worldwide. Maintaining our online catalog through
TLC will allow staff to eventually catalog our many manuscript collections,
making them far more accessible to our members. The TLC system can also
be used for providing new member services in the information arena.
- The look-up services of NGSearch (e.g. Germans to America, Italians to
America, etc.) will be maintained and expanded.
- The society will continue to accept donations for both its reference collection
being maintained at Glebe House and the book loan collection.
- A new service to retrieve information and records from Washington, DC
area repositories is being explored as a new service to members.
- A new, members-only Help Desk will be established as a part of library
services to provide personalized guidance to researchers just getting started,
getting started again, and those who have reached an impasse of some kind.
Toll-free help lines, designated email addresses, and partnerships with
other genealogical libraries to investigate a 24-7 reference assistance
model are all being explored. Indeed, I believe you will be pleasantly surprised
and pleased when all of our plans for the expansion of services in our newly
reconstituted library are unveiled.
Regarding the governance of the society, please know that
the NGS Board of Directors is comprised of hard-working, forward-thinking,
every-day genealogists like you and me. They are elected by the membership
to provide strategic direction to the society and to explore ways of enabling
the society to fulfill its core educational mission. Directors are chosen
from across the entire United States. I would hope that you would feel represented
in some fashion by the entire elected board.
Your Board of Directors truly believes this new partnership
with the St. Louis County Library will make for a stronger and more responsive
society as well as a stronger and more vital library at Glebe House. Thank
you again for contacting me with your concerns.
Sincerely,
Curt B. Witcher
President, National Genealogical Society
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