<i>Interface</i>, state libraries, continuing education, professional development, Delaware Division of Libraries (DDL), Northeast Document Conservation Center (NEDCC), preservation
The Delaware Division of Libraries (DDL) has entered into an agreement with the Northeast Document Conservation Center (NEDCC) to offer a full day workshop in Delaware titled "How to Survey Your Preservation Needs."
Volume 29, Number 3, Fall 2007
Delaware Begins Preservation Initiatives
Lisa Olson, Delaware Division of Libraries
The Delaware Division of Libraries (DDL) has entered into an agreement with the Northeast Document Conservation Center (NEDCC) to offer
a full-day workshop in Delaware on Wednesday, September 26, 2007, titled "How to Survey Your Preservation Needs." The Maine State Library
has deposited $10,000 with NEDCC for each interested state library in the northeast to promote preservation planning; this opportunity
also will fund, in part, on-site assessments at libraries that have unique historical items.
The goal of the NEDCC’s program is to enable state libraries to analyze the preservation needs of critical collections in public
libraries. The initiative grows out of a desire to stimulate a multi-state preservation effort as a focus for developing a new
relationship (based on a fee-for-service model) between the state libraries in the region and the NEDCC, resulting from the restructuring
of the center’s governance.
The expected outcomes of the program are to enable the state libraries to develop a better picture of the preservation needs of public
libraries in their states, to help individual libraries understand their needs and priorities for action, and to advance any existing
funding programs for preservation and help shape new ones. In addition, the program will be useful to the DDL in identifying critical
collections that might be part of a future, state-wide digitization initiative.
So far, thirteen libraries have requested the on-site assessments which will take place between November 2007 and April 2008. There
also were sixteen participants registered for the September workshop at the time of this writing.
The NEDCC initiative is just one of three related preservation projects for the state of Delaware. DDL is involved in a second initiative
with another state agency, the Delaware Digital Preservation Readiness Team. This group is working towards assessing the current state of
digital preservation and developing a plan that can later be implemented to preserve state and government information.
DDL also is partnering with the Delaware Public Archives to promote awareness and action for a statewide disaster consortium. This
group, the Delaware Disaster Assistance Team (DDAT), is composed of individuals statewide from libraries, museums and other cultural
organizations. The goal is to have each organization update its disaster plan and to create a central location in each county containing
disaster supplies. DDAT applied for a grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) to bring a consultant to Delaware who
will provide guidance with the group’s strategy to develop disaster planning awareness and assistance statewide. The results of the
grant award will be made in January 2008.
For more information, contact Lisa Olson.
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