Posted on 05/18/2002 2:07:23 AM PDT by sarcasm
The Tacoma Public Library has issued a ban on bedrolls and any package too large to fit under a chair. Obviously, the ban is aimed at the homeless but not without reason.
Tacoma's downtown library is next door to the county courthouse and jail, across the street from a mission, and nearby to a food bank and a day-labor office. There are many men with no place to go, and they go to the library. It is warm, safe and charges no money. Most of the homeless are well-behaved. And yet, with their bundles and scruffy clothes they set a tone, and if there are too many of them they will drive the other users out.
That is a problem everywhere. Libraries are places to look things up, check things out and simply to read; they are for schoolchildren, the retired, working people and all citizens. Libraries were not built to be homeless shelters. And yet, by their own code, they are open to all, and not only people with jobs, money or even addresses.
Libraries must be made to feel inviting and safe for everyone. One way to do that is to limit the size of packages, as Tacoma has done. First, the load of luggage can be a problem: some vagabonds block aisles or spread their bundles over entire table tops. Yesterday, a man attempted to enter the Tacoma library with a backpack, a large plastic bag of clothes and an ice chest on wheels.
The second reason, propounded by police, is that since Sept. 11 packages are a security threat. This may be more of an excuse to attack a problem of patron discomfort rather than to measurably increase safety. If it is, that is all right. In Chicago's library, every backpack and package is searched, both as a security measure and a discouragement. Librarians need excuses.
They have other problems. The Tacoma library made national news several years ago when it installed "sharps boxes" in the men's and women's rooms for the disposal of hypodermic needles. The boxes are still there; and though the admission of drug use might discomfit middle-class patrons, sharps boxes are an improvement over syringes in the toilets or needles on the floor.
Since 1994, the Seattle Public Library has required shirts and shoes; has banned pets, sleeping, drug use, patrons who stink and patrons who bathe in the restrooms. Still the homeless come, still they are conspicuous, and still they change the tone within the library. Seattle thinks it is doing a good job, considering and yet some people will tell you they don't like the downtown library anymore and won't go there. It is not a problem that has been solved or can be solved under the constraints we have put on ourselves. It can only be managed. That is what Tacoma is doing, and it is right to do so.
Huh?
In Washington DC, about 12 years ago, the public library system was essentially the city govt's dumping ground - instead of spending money to maintain playgrounds it figured let the kids come inside the library and get rambunctious, instead of spending money on senior adult day care let them fall asleep at the library tables, etc., what they weren't spending money on was the libraries themselves - plenty of them had virtually no money to buy new books or renew subscriptions, some of them had leaky roofs and broken copy machines, etc.
Considering that librarians are paid less than school teachers, they were saddled with doing the work of recreation directors, outpatient therapists, crowd control, everything but what they were trained and hired to do.
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