Friday, September 2, 2011

The Unfortunate Tradition



My hometown library, the Seattle Public Library, is closed all week because of budget cuts. It's not the first time this has happened. It's becoming something of a tradition. So much so, the New York Times is starting to write about it.



From the piece...



The Seattle Public Library, a beloved civic trophy in a book-loving city, whose directors are plucked away for plum jobs by presidents and philanthropists and whose buildings are often beacons of design, is closed all week — yet again. The furlough, intended to save about $650,000 from the system’s $50 million budget, has become something of a late-summer tradition in recent years, hardly as welcome as the weather.



“It’s an unfortunate tradition,” said Marcellus Turner, who started as the city librarian on Aug. 15 and promptly got a few days off, unpaid.



“Library Closed Aug. 29 — Sept. 5 Due to Budget Cuts,” say the bold red signs on the doors at the central library, a jolt of glass and steel by the architect Rem Koolhaas.



Foreign tourists walk away disappointed at missing a stroll through a new city landmark. A bicyclist pulls up, looking to return a few DVDs, but a sign tells him to wait until next week — and that he will face no late fees. Internet search engines promise information about the library but instead deliver a page with the closing explained in multiple languages.

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