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ALCTS Annual Report
2004 ALCTS Awards
Nominations Sought
New ALCTS Acquisitions
Guide
LRTS Position
Announcement
Interest Group Procedures
New ALCTS
Papers Series Editor
Ann Sandberg-Fox
Obituary
Acquisitions
Libraries Roles Survey
Catalog Mentoring
Program Pilot
Digital Preservation
Program Funding
New NISO Guide
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ALCTS
Annual Report 2002-2003
Olivia M.A. Madison, ALCTS President
Editor's note: 2002-2003 annual reports for the five sections
of ALCTS and CRG appeared in the August 2003 issue of the ALCTS Newsletter
Online. Previous division annual reports are posted on the ALCTS Web site:
from the home page select "About" and then "Annual Reports."
The strategic mission of the Association for Library Collections and
Technical Services succinctly states that "The ALCTS Division must
continue to be on the forefront of recognizing and influencing these fundamental
changes as envisioned in our strategic plan: ALCTS envisions an environment
in which traditional library roles are evolving. New technologies are
making information more fluid and raising expectations. The public needs
quality information anytime, anyplace. ALCTS provides frameworks to meet
these information needs." During 2002/2003 it was my distinct privilege
to lead this vital and distinguished division of the American Library
Association in meeting this challenging mission.
As I mentioned in my first presidential column, we continue to face dynamic,
challenging, and increasingly legalistic times within our profession.
Our times are characterized by fundamental changes in the nature of our
collections, acquisitions processes and policies, Web-based online catalogs
and systems, and evolving bibliographic, authority and preservation standards.
These changes are deeply embedded in rapid technological advances and
a difficult narrowing yet expanding marketplace. Furthermore, we are in
a demanding transition where the traditional and the new must coexist.
These fundamental changes impact not only how we conduct business, build
online access tools, and preserve our collections but also on shifting
staff needs to develop effective expertise and technical skills. Collectively
we met these challenges and made extraordinary progress in carrying out
our strategic goals and strategies.
This annual report reflects the ALCTS Division's many and diverse accomplishments
as they relate to its six strategic goals: Standards, Best Practices,
Education, Professional Development, Interaction and Information Exchange,
and Association Operations.
STANDARDS AND BEST PRACTICES (Goal #1 and Goal #2)
Standards development and best practices were essential program themes
at the annual conference and included:
- Don't Be Dysfunctional: How to Put FRBR in Your Future
- Getting the Most Out of Subject References
- ISBDs - Do We Still Need Them?
- Metadata Harvesting
- Options for Circulating & Reference Collections
- Two Thumbs Up: Preservation Film Festival
- Print & Electronic Approval Plans in the 21st Century
ALCTS remained highly involved in several issues related to the Library
of Congress Action Plan's action items for bibliographic control of Web
resources. Last year the ALCTS Board charged a task force to review the
plan's "Bibliographic Control of Web Resources" and recommend
action items suitable for ALCTS to develop in partnership with the Library
of Congress. Karen Calhoun is serving as the task force chair. The task
force appointed three subgroups to carry out the work of three identified
action items (Task Force Report (March 23, 2003):
- Library Information Science (LIS) Education (chaired
by Beth Picknally Camden with Ingrid Hsieh-Yee serving as principal
investigator) - prepare educators and trainers to teach metadata and
cataloging
- Continuing Education (chaired by Carol Hixson) - prepare practitioners
to do metadata and cataloging work
- Metadata Enrichment (chaired by Judith Ahronheim and Marcia Bates
serving as principal investigator) - explore ways to enrich metadata
records
During the Toronto meeting, the Board approved ALCTS co-sponsorship with
Library of Congress, OCLC, and ALISE of a forum at the 2004 ALA midwinter
meeting on preparing metadata and cataloging educations and trainers.
the Board will invite Beacher Wiggins or John Byrum to attend the Board's
midwinter meeting to update the Board on the progress that has been made
on the LC Action Plan for Bibliographic Control of Web Resources.
EDUCATION AND PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT (Goal #3 and Goal #4)
Education and professional development successes abounded this year -
virtually, physically, and within and outside conference venues. Moreover,
in recognition of significant contributions of our ALCTS colleagues, we
conferred major awards and citations to many outstanding recipients and,
with heartfelt memorial resolutions, formally noted three of our respected
colleagues who died this year.
- Program and Professional Development
The "Fundamentals of Acquisitions" Web course was given four
times during the year, twice to more than 110 people. The AACR2 and Metadata
Institute was given also four times - in Arlington, Virginia and Chicago,
Illinois in November; Orlando, Florida in February; and in San Jose, California
in April.
Unfortunately ALCTS's scheduled preconferences suffered from the lower
registration levels for the annual conference. While the Knowledge Without
Boundaries Pre-Conference was cancelled due to low registrations, we still
provided three noteworthy preconferences - Business of Acquisitions: Working
Together to Get it Done - Acquisitions Librarians as Collaborators; Dewey
Decimal Classification 23 and Beyond: An Introduction to the New Edition
of the Dewey Decimal Classification; and Serials Cataloging Cooperative
Training Program (SCCTP): Electronic Serials Cataloging Workshop - Integrating
Resources Cataloging Workshop.
The annual conference programs covered an extensive and exciting array
of current topics, including digital rights/wrongs, repair options at
the point of circulation, ISBDs - is there still a need, mentoring library
school students for cataloging, consortial pricing processes, metadata
harvesting for the deep Web via OAI, training for effective subject cataloging,
approval plans for today and tomorrow, preservation reformatting, and
getting published.
The President's Program Committee (Jennifer Younger (Chair), Pamela Bluh,
Anne Kinney, Joyce Ogburn, Helen Reed, and Anne Kinney) did a superb job
of building upon last year's highly successful president's program in
Atlanta, which focused on the theme of workplace. How do we reaffirm and
build upon the need for a positive work environment? At the 2002 annual
conference, Dr. Edward Hallowell and a panel explored interpersonal connection/disconnection
in the workplace - the value of the human moment (how we connect) in an
increasingly isolated technological environment. For the Toronto conference
we continued to explore the theme of a positive work environment. Lynne
Lancaster (of Bridgeworks) was the featured speaker and Jessica Albano,
University of Washington, serving as a respondent. Ms. Lancaster, an author
and consultant, in a highly enjoyable manner with thought-provoking examples,
described the characteristics of four generational groups, and explored
generational differences encountered within general and library workplaces.
She offered pragmatic suggestions for ways staff of all generations could
work together effectively, be successful in recruiting individuals from
all generations, and meet the needs for an effective work environment.
Jessica Albano gave an equally enthusiastic response by personally underscoring
Ms. Lancaster's points regarding the joys and, at times, difficulties
in mixing generations within the library workplace. The program ended
with virtually all attendees remaining to participate in a lively question
and answer period - testament to their interest in and the quality of
both presentations. Ms. Lancaster and her publisher, HarperCollins, generously
provided the audience with free autographed copies of her latest book,
When Generations Collide (co-authored with David Stillman).
At the midwinter meeting we held our first ever midwinter symposium "Managing
Electronic Resources: Meeting the Challenge." It was a sell out according
to the report written by Pamela Bluh published in the ALCTS Newsletter
Online (v.14, no.1) article - "On Friday, January 24, 2003, a
bitterly cold Philadelphia morning, an attentive audience of approximately
150 librarians, vendors, publishers and other industry professionals assembled
to hear presentations from eight speakers on managing electronic resources
� [which] provided a broad overview of the topic as well as a variety
of specific options for organizing the universe of electronic resources."
ALCTS is planning a second midwinter symposium for San Diego that will
also address the management of electronic resources.
A vital part of any staff development program is recognizing excellence.
ALCTS and its sections annually recognize significant achievements and
accomplishments of our members. Our awards and their honored recipients
for 2003 were:
Best of LRTS Award
Recipient: Richard Fyffe, University of Kansas
Article: "Technological Change and the Scholarly Communications
Reform Movement: Reflections on Castells and Giddens" Library
Resources & Technical Services 46 (2): 50-61, April 2002.
Sponsor: ALCTS
Award: $250
Blackwell's Scholarship Award
Recipient: Richard Fyffe, University of Kansas
Article: "Technological Change and the Scholarly Communications
Reform Movement: Reflections on Castells and Giddens" Library
Resources & Technical Services 46 (2): 50-61, April 2002.
Sponsor: Blackwell's
Award: $2,000 Scholarship recipient: Simmons College Graduate School
of Library and Information Science (Michele Cloonan, Dean)
Bowker/Ulrich's Serials Librarianship Award
Recipient: Frieda Rosenberg, University of North Carolina
at Chapel Hill
Sponsor: R.R. Bowker, Inc.
Award: $1,500
First Step Award/Wiley Professional Development Grant
Recipient: Dianne Ford, Elon University
Sponsor: John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
Award: $1,500
Leadership in Library Acquisitions Award
Recipient: Julia Gammon, University of Akron
Sponsor: Harrassowitz
Award: $1,500
Margaret Mann Citation
Recipient: Thomas J. Delsey
Sponsor: OCLC, Inc.
Award: $2,000 Scholarship recipient: University of Western Ontario
Faculty of Information and Media Studies (Catherine Ross, Dean)
Esther J. Piercy Award
Recipient: Karen E.K. Brown, State University of New York
at Albany
Sponsor: YBP, Inc.
Award: $1,500
Paul Banks and Carolyn Harris Preservation Award
Recipient: John F. Dean, Cornell University
Sponsor: Preservation Technologies, L.P.
Award: $1,500
Hugh C. Atkinson Memorial Award
Recipient: Wendy Pradt Lougee, University of Minnesota
Sponsors: Association of College and Research Libraries, Association
for Library Collections & Technical Services, Library Administration
and Management Association, and Library and Information Technology
Association
Award: $2,000
In addition to these formal ALCTS awards, I had the honor of awarding
three ALCTS Presidential Citations at our membership meeting. While each
year ALCTS and its sections give several prestigious awards, the ALCTS
President, beginning last year with Past President Bill Robnett, also
has the special opportunity to give presidential citations to recognize
important contributions that would not easily "fit" the criteria
used for other standing division/section awards. From many excellent nominations
suggested by the ACLTS Board of Directors, Past-President Bill Robnett,
President-Elect Brian Schottlaender and I selected four outstanding individuals
for recognition.
John Attig - in recognition of his leadership in the transformation
of the communication processes for AACR2 rule revision, thereby enabling
CC:DA to focus on content rather than mechanics; for his contributions
to cataloging and his dedicated service on CC:DA; and for the example
he has set of hard work, generosity, and passion within ALCTS and
our professional community.
Laura Sill and William Sill - in recognition of their technical
and creative work in building a database infrastructure to support
the maintenance of the Division's Strategic and Tactical Plan. The
database facilitates tactical planning initiatives from conception
through implementation. It ensures that the ALCTS leadership has access
to more precise management information with which to guide the Division's
business activities.
Ann Swartzell - in recognition of her excellent leadership
and enthusiasm as chair of the ALCTS Organization & Bylaws Committee,
particularly through the discussions and documentation of the proposed
bylaws changes involving interest groups. Even with these extensive
time commitments to the division, she has contributed greatly to the
leadership and programs of the Preservation and Reformatting Section.
I would also like to mention that an extremely valued and contributing
ALCTS colleague, Ross Atkinson, was recognized as the Academic/Research
Librarian of the Year by the Association for College and Research Libraries.
Ross had just completed a three-year term as the ALCTS Division Councilor.
The award committee chair, Susan Nutter, noted "Ross Atkinson is
arguably the foremost thinker in collection management in libraries today."
- In Memory and Recognition �
The ALCTS Board of Directors also formally recognized three of our ALCTS
colleagues through memorial resolutions: Seymour Lubetzky, Marilyn Nordstedt,
and Ellen Rappaport. The complete resolutions may be found in the ALCTS
Newsletter Online (ANO).
Seymour Lubetzky was an esteemed cataloging
theorist, librarian and teacher. His Cataloging Rules and Principles
(1953), once the most influential works in library and information
science, was the foundation of the Statement of Principles adopted
at the 1961 International Conference on Cataloguing Principles and
formed the basis for the Anglo-American Cataloging Rules. He
was an admired and beloved professor at the School of Library Service
at the University of California, Los Angeles from 1960-69. In 1955
he received the prestigious Margaret Mann Citation, and in 2002 he
received an Honorary Membership, ALA's highest honor that recognizes
outstanding contributions of lasting importance to librarians and
librarianship. (ANO, v.14, no.3)
Marilyn Nordstedt was an esteemed librarian and valued
member of the serials cataloging community. She was an active participant
in ALCTS, particularly in the Serials Section. She served as the chair
of the Bowker/Ulrich's Serials Librarianship Award Committee and was
a member of many ALA sections and divisions. (ANO, v.14, no.2)
Ellen Rappaport was a long-standing member of ALCTS
and the Serials Section and was nationally recognized in her work
with serials and holdings standards. She served as co-chair of the
NISO Standards Committee AL that developed the standards for holdings
statements, served as a member of the Committee to Study Serials Standards
and was a member of many other ALA divisions and sections. Ellen Rappaport
also represented the American Association of Law Libraries as its
liaison to the Book and Serial Industry Communications. (ANO,
v.14, no.4)
INTERACTION AND INFORMATION EXCHANGE (Goal #5)
Our strategic plan calls for ALCTS to "create opportunities to interact
and exchange information with others in the library and information communities."
(ALCTS Strategic Plan: 2001-2005). We do this in numerous ways,
including providing venues for informal interactions and promoting the
use of technology to increase communication between conferences.
- Communications and Information Exchanges Structures
Improving communications is always a critical issue for organizations,
no matter how small or large they might be. ALCTS has a membership of
over 5,000 individuals across the United States and from 47 countries.
Moreover, it has probably the most expansive divisional/sectional committee
structure within ALA. As such, a strong and extensive communications program
is important for such a vital organization as ALCTS, and it was a focal
point of activity for seeking ways to increase our abilities to interact
and exchange information.
- ALCTS Newsletter Online increased its publication
pattern from four to six issues a year. ANO provides announcements,
columns, short articles, committee meeting and program reports, conference
meeting schedules, etc. Miriam Palm serves as its superb and steadfast
editor!
- Our new ALCTS Web site was substantially changed with a new organization
that provides clearer access to an extensive network of documents
and information. It includes the ALCTS Manual, notices of continuing
education opportunities, publications, forms, membership rosters,
and pivotal divisional, sectional, committee governance documents
(e.g., current/past agendas, meeting reports/minutes, etc.) and links
to the ALA Web site and other Web sites of interest to ALCTS members.
Many thanks to Kirsten Ahlen (ALCTS Office) for her creative technical
Web work and design!
- All boards, committees, task forces, etc. may now use unique list
serves to assist their members in conducting business, particularly
in between conferences.
- There are now new membership brochures targeting law librarians
and archivists that tell the story of ALCTS and its importance to
these focused professional constituencies. New targeted focused brochures
are in the works. The ALCTS Board approved the ALA-ALCTS Joint International
Membership proposal. Our ALCTS Membership Committee, under the strong
leadership of its chair Manuel Urrizola, has been extremely busy this
year!
- Also under the coordination of the Membership Committee, we jointly
staffed a booth with LAMA at ALA Toronto. It was a successful opportunity
for conference attendees to drop by and say hello to their ALCTS colleagues
and learn about ALCTS initiatives.
- Publishing Program
Our publishing program, whether through Library Resources and Technical
Services (LRTS), the ALCTS Paper Series, Web publishing
through ALCTS Publishing, or publishing our scholarship through Scarecrow
Press, has made significant progress.
Two search processes were initiated for new editors of LRTS and
the ALCTS Paper Series. While the search proceeds for the permanent
LRTS editor, the ALCTS Executive Committee appointed Peggy Johnson,
Associate University Librarian at the University of Minnesota and former
ALCTS President, as the interim editor through volume 48 of 2004. Edward
Swanson is serving as the LRTS Book Review Editor during her tenure
as LRTS Editor.
The Publications Committee, under the dynamic leadership of Genevieve
Owens, continued its serious review of the publications program. The committee
assumed oversight of the Library Materials Index Committee, now a subcommittee,
and finalized an ALCTS Web site policy (subsequently approved by the ALCTS
Board of Directors). The ALCTS publications catalog is now available on
the ALCTS Web site, the US Periodicals Price Index & Serials Pricing
will be accessed through the ALCTS Web site, and LMPI will be published
via LRTS. The result of all this hard work is a revitalized, proactive,
and forward-looking ALCTS publication program.
The Publications Committee also reviewed/approved several manuscripts
for publication, two of which will be published by Scarecrow Press in
its guide series:
2001 North American Title Count
Guide to Licensing and Acquiring Electronic Information.
Collection Management and Development Guide, No.13. Scarecrow
Press
Guide to Out-of Print Materials.
Acquisitions Guide, No.12. Scarecrow Press.
Research Topics & Essay Suggested Methodology in Cataloging
and Classification: A Summary of the Literature, 1995-.
Compiled by the Policy and Research Committee of the ALCTS Cataloging
and Classification Section. ALCTS Publishing, 2002.
- Institutes, pre-conferences, conference programs, etc.
As mentioned earlier in this report, ALCTS continued its extensive educational
and staff development programming through the ALA conference structure
and through an innovative Web-based course, Fundamentals of Acquisitions.
The hardworking Education Committee (chaired by Peggy Johnson) and Program
Planning Committee (chaired by Helen Reed) were responsible for guiding
the division and sections in the creation of an impressive array of programs,
pre-conferences, workshops, courses, etc. - all of which fit comfortably
in our tactical plan. For the first time, we held a symposium at the midwinter
meeting, and at the annual conference we held a large number of successful
pre-conferences and programs, despite concerns regarding conference attendance.
The Planning Committee is developing a "Program Planning Highlights"
for future leadership orientation sessions and is conducting a well-needed
survey to be sent to program planners for the 2003 conference. This is
a new initiative that is designed to solicit input from program planners
on how the process worked, where they ran into problems and ways to streamline
the process. All of which should help all program planners be successful!
Perhaps the most sweeping governance change for promoting interaction
took place when the ALCTS membership approved the ability for ALCTS members
to form interest groups. This change ensures that "any group of ten
or more individuals with a common interest within the scope of ALCTS may
establish a forum to exchange ideas and experiences; sponsor formal conference
programs, institutes, and seminars; or prepare publications" ("Procedures
for Establishing an ALCTS Interest Group", ALCTS Web site).
ASSOCIATION OPERATIONS (Goal #6)
Throughout the division, ALCTS governance received substantial attention
this past year by emphasizing the role and function of the Board of Directors,
examining a governance mechanism to promote interaction and information
exchange - Interest Groups, and creating a more focused legal definition
for division officers. ALCTS is ending the year in good fiscal health
and is blessed with an efficient, dedicated, responsive, and far-sighted
Office Staff - under the excellent leadership of our Executive Director,
Charles Wilt.
Under the able leadership of Carlen Ruschoff as committee chair, the
ALCTS Nominations Committee (Myron Chase, Williams Garrison, Linda Smith
Griffin, Debra Hackleman, Karen Schmidt, and Nancy Stanley) identified
a superior slate of nominations for ALCTS leadership positions. The ALCTS
membership elected Carol Pitts Diedrichs as Vice President/President-elect,
John Duke as Member-at-large, and Cynthia Clark as the Council for Regional
Groups Vice Chair/Chair Elect.
- Board Restructuring and Governance
The Board of Directors and Executive Committee have spent much of the
year exploring the future role of the ALCTS Board of Directors as part
of divisional management and as it is articulated in divisional governance
policies. The goal of the review was to enhance the board's policy role
and lessen its functional management role with an outcome of a more facile
and agile division management (using the often repeated phrase of ALCTS
Past President Bill Robnett).
To these ends, the Board of Directors approved the following governance
changes at its annual meeting in Toronto. Several of them will be submitted
for approval by the ALCTS membership with its first electronic vote later
this fall:
- Add the Chair of Organization & Bylaws Committee
to the Board of Directors, thereby including three key business committee
chairs as board members.
- Make the Chairs of the Planning, Budget & Finance, and Organization
& Bylaws Committees ex-officio, voting board members, thereby
increasing the connection between the board and the committees. Non-voting,
ex-officio members would be the ALCTS Newsletter Online Editor
and the ALCTS Executive Director.
- At the end of each annual conference board meeting, the ALCTS President
will turn the agenda over to the President-Elect with all new board
members in attendance. This should provide the new Board opportunities
to discuss the next meeting agenda and initiate business topics for
the forthcoming year.
- Change the officers of the association to be the president, president-elect,
and past-president. This would add the past -president as an officer
thereby ensuring greater continuity for the officers, and streamlining
the membership by removing the division councilor, Chair of Council
of Regional Groups, and ALCTS Executive Director as officers.
- Assign board liaison responsibilities to the elected officers and
directors-at-large for select divisional business committees. These
liaisonships should provide more direct relationships between the
board and these committees.
- Interest Group (IG) Formation and ALCTS Committees
As mentioned above, the ALCTS Membership approved the concept of Interest
Group with the spring ballot. The Board of Directors and the Executive
Committee had begun serious discussions on the viability of adding interest
groups as a new governance unit under the previous presidency of Bill
Robnett. The interest evolved out of our strong emphases on programming
and our long-standing interests in bringing more people together who are
interested in the same topics. Both groups, along with the Organization
and Bylaws Committee (O&B) concluded that IGs could efficiently merge
the best of the committee structure and the discussion group structure
into one entity (i.e., the programmatic and publications functions of
committees and the broad open forum nature of discussion groups). Moreover,
IGs could be easily created or dissolved as interests grow and ebb. At
the request of the Executive Committee, O&B (under the enthusiastic
and dedicated leadership of Ann Swartzell) prepared enabling language
for IGs at the division and section level for the midwinter meeting and
essential background information for the ALCTS membership. At the Board's
midwinter meeting, it was agreed to put forward enabling language for
divisional and sectional interest groups on the spring ballot. The membership
subsequently approved overwhelmingly the creation of interest groups.
At its annual meeting, the Board recommended the discontinuation of seven
ALCTS committees with the expectation that they would be reconstituted
as either discussion groups or interest groups or dissolved permanently:
Catalog Form and Function, Commercial Technical Services, Legislation,
Media Resources, and Networked Resources and Metadata, Publisher/Vendor-Library
Relations, and Research and Statistics. The Board plans for these committees
to remain constituted through the midwinter meeting with the expectation
that the individuals present from each committee (and with any others
present) would decide whether or not to reconstitute the respective committee
into an interest group or discussion group. The Board changed the four
ALCTS awards committees into juries (Blackwell's Scholarship Award, Paul
Banks and Carolyn Harris Preservation Award, Best of LRTS Award,
and Esther Piercy Award) and left the remaining ALCTS committees as currently
constituted.
- Strategic and Tactical Planning
Strategic and tactical planning has been central to ALCTS for the past
several years - the current planning process started under the past leadership
of Brian Schottlaender when he chaired the ALCTS Planning Committee. The
ACLTS Planning Committee (chaired this year by Laura Sill) worked closely
with divisional committees and sections to identify and update tactical
initiatives - including programming and education initiatives. The result
was a broad-based continuing planning process that involved the entire
divisional and sectional governance structure thereby ensuing its overall
success. This year the Strategic and Tactical Planning Database became
operational and it received positive feedback from users. Laura Sill and
William Sill built the database infrastructure to support the maintenance
of the Division's Strategic and Tactical Plan - it facilitates tactical
planning initiatives from conception through implementation. The committee
is now working to develop qualitative measures for determining successful
outcomes of our divisional and sectional initiatives as reflected within
our strategic and tactical plan.
- General Financial Condition
The overall financial state of ALCTS remains generally positive for the
fiscal year ending on September 30, 2003. The Executive Director, Charles
Wilt, and the Budget and Finance Committee (chaired by the long-term member
Judith Niles) provided strong leadership and foresight on carefully managing
the current budget and forecasting the needs for the following fiscal
year. We continue to have a healthy reserve for unexpected financial shortfalls
- an amazing accomplishment for a division with a recently constituted
single-office structure. Given the positive state of the division finances,
the Budget and Finance Committee (as part of its annual review of membership-based
revenue) did not recommend any increases in the various dues categories.
In brief, the Metadata Institute and fund raising successes were key
reasons why the budget should remain on target this fiscal year. Overall
registration revenues were not as expected due to cancellation of two
key pre-conferences, Knowledge Without Boundaries for the Toronto conference
and an anticipated pre-conference at the IFLA annual conference held in
Berlin. Membership and royalty revenues remained stable; however, advertising
and subscription revenues remained below expectations. Strong reliance
must continue on an aggressive continuing education program, continued
development of pre-conferences and institutes, a profitable publications
program, a steady reliable increase of our membership base, and a successful
fundraising program.
- Fundraising Accomplishments
The Fundraising Committee (ably chaired by Pamela Bluh with Frank D'Andraia,
Susan Davis, Harriet Lightman, Ann Sandberg-Fox, Basil Sozansky, and Dale
Swensen) garnered outstanding successes in raising support for our midwinter
reception, the midwinter symposium, and an extensive array of prestigious
sponsors for our annual conference. Our partner sponsors included:
The Business of Acquisitions
Principal Sponsor: The Library Corporation
Sponsors: Casalini Libri, Majors Scientific Books, and Midwest Library
Services
ALCTS Midwinter Symposium
Sponsors: Springer Verlag New York and Swets Blackwell,
Inc.
ALCTS Membership Reception
Sponsor: Yankee Book Peddler
AACR2 & Metadata Institute, 2003-Berlin, Germany
Sponsor: Harrassowitz
ALCTS President's Program for 2003 Annual Conference
Sponsor: Elsevier Science, Inc.
Sponsor: HarperCollins (through providing copies of When Generations
Collide to all program attendees)
ALCTS PARS Film Fest
Sponsor: Library Binding Institute
ALCTS SS Program: Serials Pig in the Aggregators Poke III
Sponsor: Collection Development & Management Interest
Group, Canadian Library Association
ALCTS CMDS Program: New Seal of Approval: Print & Electronic
Approval Plans in the 21st Century
Sponsor: Collection Development & Management Interest
Group, Canadian Library Association
The Board of Directors and the Fundraising Committee benefited from a
superb workshop on ALCTS Sponsorship Fundraising with Irene Hoffman as
its facilitator. The outcomes were a much clearer view of fundraising
opportunities and an awareness that all ALCTS members should assist in
our sponsored fundraising efforts. The committee also drafted a revised
list of giving levels and benefits of corporate sponsorship that was approved
by the ALCTS Board.
The ALCTS Office staff has the challenging tasks of scheduling over 300
meetings in any given year; supporting 100 committees, subcommittees and
task forces, 39 discussion groups, and 47 discussion lists (20% of all
ALA-sponsored lists); managing an impressive array of staff development
programs (in and out of conference as well as physical and virtual); and
supporting the appointment process for all nominating officers and the
annual election process. The staff also faced the enormous tasks of completely
redesigning the ALCTS Web site (in concert with ALA's redesign) and implementing
a new content management system for maintaining the ALCTS Web site. All
these activities were accomplished by only four people - Charles Wilt
(ALCTS Executive Director), Julie Reese (Continuing Education and Meetings),
Kristen Ahlen (Publications and Membership), and Andrea Tobias (Administrative
Services). Furthermore, we have a staff that ALA looks to for leadership
within the ALA organization. Kirsten Ahlen served on two ALA staff committees:
Web Advisory Committee and Membership Marketing Committee. Charles Wilt
served on a working group to examine distance learning possibilities (Web-based,
audio, etc.) for ALA, a working group to re-write part of the ALA/Division
operational practices on telecommunications, and a task force to establish
criteria for allowing ALA members to participate in electronic meetings.
He also organized the ALA-sponsored division leadership program for division
president-elects.
CONCLUDING REMARKS
In conclusion, I am pleased to report that the ALCTS Division is operating
at full capacity and it is due to the service of hundreds of talented
ALCTS members, and an energetic and dedicated office staff. Its accomplishments
for 2002/2003 are clearly reflected by this report. The Association for
Library Collections and Technical Services has a bright and demanding
future ahead of it and a formidable infrastructure (a futuristic and practical
planning process, technical know-how and systems, and financial backing)
to ensure the continuation of its many challenging activities and strategic
programming for an engaged membership and the professional communities
it serves.
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