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The State of America's Libraries Report - 2007
 
Macey Morales
Manager,
PIO Media Relations
312-280-4393
mmorales@ala.org
 
Jennifer Petersen
PR Coordinator
312-280-5043 
 
 
 

Loriene Roy

 
   
 

Keith Michael Fiels

 
 

ALA President Loriene Roy and Executive Director Keith Michael Fiels discuss America's libraries

 
 

Jenifer Grady

 
 

ALA-APA Director Jenifer Grady discusses National Library Workers' Day (NLWD)

 

 
 

Denise Davis

 
 

Denise Davis, ORS Director, discusses library services and programs for non-English speakers

 

 
 

Julie Walker

 
 

AASL Executive Director Julie Walker discusses school libraries

 
   
 
 
 
The State of America's Libraries
 
 
Funding and Salaries
 
   

Library programs take a hit at the federal level

 

Federal funding for library programs had a roller-coaster ride in Washington in 2007 and wound up in a valley. Congress passed a fiscal year 2008 appropriations bill for Labor, Health and Human Services, Education, and Related Agencies that would have funded the Institute of Museum and Library Services (IMLS) at $277 million, an increase of 12 percent from the previous year; the Library Services and Technology Act was funded at $224 million, with $172 million for the State Grant program.

 

President Bush vetoed the bill, and the House was unable to override the veto. Congress combined the 11 remaining appropriations bills into an omnibus bill and, in order to avoid another veto, lowered the funding levels for many programs. The compromise bill gave the IMLS the authority and resources to carry out the mission of the U.S. National Commission on Libraries and Information Science and called for the National Center for Education Statistics survey on libraries to be moved from the Department of Education to IMLS. The President signed the omnibus appropriations bill in December.

 

 

Federal funding for selected programs

FY 2007

 

FY 2008

 

Change

Library State Grants

$163,746,000

 

$160,885,000

 

–1.7%

Native American Library Services

$3,638,000

 

$3,574,000

 

–1.8%

National Leadership Grants for Libraries

$12,375,000

 

$12,159,000

 

–1.7%

Recruitment of Librarians for 21st Century

$23,760,000

 

$23,345,000

 

–1.7%

 

 

 

Budget struggles continue at the local level

 

State and local/regional budget cuts continued to bedevil school library media centers in 2007.

Nationally, school library expenditures per pupil decreased to $13.67 in 2003-2004 from $19.14 in 1999-2000, a drop of almost 30 percent, according to data from the National Center for Education Statistics (NCES), a division of the U.S. Department of Education. The percentage of public schools with school library media centers has risen slightly in the past four years, but the vast majority of states have decreased their spending on books and other materials and staff, the NCES said.

 

If this trend continues, according to Keith Curry Lance, an independent researcher and consultant, the national per-pupil expenditure in the 2007-2008 school year will be down to $9.76 — a drop of more than 50 percent from 1999-2000. Lance was formerly director of the Library Research Service at the Colorado State Library.

 

The national funding picture for public libraries improved in fiscal 2005, the most recent year for which complete data are available. Public libraries nationwide received a total of $9.7 billion dollars in funding, 81.4 percent of which came from local sources and 9.9 percent from state sources (the federal government accounted for 0.5 percent of revenue, and “other” sources for 8.4 percent.) The fiscal 2005 funding total represented an increase of 6.3 percent from the previous fiscal year. A complete report on funding for and usage of U.S. public libraries in fiscal 2005 is available on the IMLS Web site.

 

At the local level in 2007, the funding situation for public libraries was mixed; some narrowly escaped sinking, others sailed on successfully with expansion and renovations — and some had to sail and bail at the same time.

 

The controversial closing of the 15-branch Jackson County, Oregon, library system was reversed in October, thanks to a responsive county commission. In Minneapolis residents hailed the opening of a splendid new high-tech Central Library — while cuts in state and local funding forced the system to close three branches and reduce hours. In Chicago, library champion Mayor Richard M. Daley linked his budget proposal to library services, banking on public affection for the thriving Chicago Public Library system to soften the blow of an $83.4 million property tax increase. In New York City, a $59 billion budget agreement announced in June funded the city’s public libraries for six-day-a-week service for the first time in six years. On the other hand, some libraries in Florida and Massachusetts struggled to keep their operations afloat as tax caps and rollbacks took their toll.

 

Mean salaries edge up at public, academic libraries in 2007 surveys . . .

 

Analysis of 2007 data from more than 800 public and academic libraries showed the mean salary for librarians with ALA-accredited master’s degrees increased 2.8 percent from 2006, up $1,550 to $57,809. The median ALA MLS salary was $53,000. Salaries ranged from $22,048 to $225,000, according to the 2007 edition of the ALA-APA Salary Survey: Librarian — Public and Academic. Salaries for 62 positions not requiring the MLS ranged from $10,707 (federal minimum wage) to $143,700, according to the 2007 ALA-APA Salary Survey: Non-MLS Salary Survey.

Published by the American Library Association-Allied Professional Association (ALA-APA), the surveys show aggregated data from more than 7,500 ALA MLS librarians and almost 20,000 non-MLS individual salaries at the state and regional levels.

 

. . . and professionals at research libraries do even better

 

The salaries of professional staff at member libraries of the Association of Research Libraries fared even better, outperforming inflation. The combined median professional salary in U.S. and Canadian ARL university libraries was $59,648 — a 4.5 percent increase from the previous year. Over the same period, inflation was 4.1 percent in the United States and 2.4 percent in Canada

The ARL Annual Salary Survey 2006–07 analyzed salary data for all professional staff working in the 123 ARL member libraries in 2006–07 (9,824 in the 113 university ARL libraries and 3,832 in 10 non-university libraries).

 

 

 
 

 

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Supporting Materials

ALA Fact Sheet
Number of Libraries in the United States Fact Sheet 
Number Employed by Libraries
The Nation's Largest Libraries: A Listing by Volumes Held
Quotable Facts About America's Libraries

Key Issues

Library Funding
School Libraries & You
Standards for the 21st-Century Learner

Serving Non-English Speakers in U.S. Public Libraries

Gaming and Libraries: Intersection of Services

 

Censorship
Librarian Recruitment
Downloads
State of America's Libraries Logo
National Library Symbol

Library Staff Salaries 2007

 

Libraries Connect Communities: Public Library Funding & Technology Access Study 2006-2007 Report 

Diversity Counts
American Library Association Youth and Library Use Study

Web Site Links

American Library Association
Issues & Advocacy
The Campaign for America's Libraries

Banned Books

 
     
     

 



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