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Texas Libraries served by LSSI
Page history last edited by Jeanne Wingate 1 yr ago
Texas Public Libraries Contracted with LSSI
Lancaster, TX
*Population: 30,304
The Lancaster Library began in 1924 in The White Bank. On May 6, 2001 the new Lancaster Veterans Memorial Library (LVML) opened. In July, 2001, the City of Lancaster contracted with the library management corporation, Library Systems & Services LLC (LSSI) to run the library. “Laurie Iwanicki, assistant to the city manager, said that a sudden change in the city's sales tax base caused serious budget problems, especially for the library.”
SOURCE: “Lancaster PL, TX, Outsourced to LSSI.” Library Journal, 8/1/2001, Vol. 126 Issue 13, p182p.
Leander, TX
*Population: 15,874
Leander, Texas is a rapidly growing city of 20,000 five miles north of Austin, Texas at the edge of the Texas Hill Country. The Leander Public Library, managed by Library Systems & Services, LLC (LSSI), opened in a state-of-the art 15,800 sq. ft building in December, 2006. http://www.netls.org/JOBS/NonNETLS.htm/
Red Oak, TX
*Population: 6,444
"Red Oak, TX is a fast growing small community south of Dallas. The library is new and programs for the summer are active and well attended. The Lead Librarian and Library Aides provide the library services and programs." http://www.redoakpubliclibrary.org/employment.htm
San Juan, TX
*Population: 46,483
“Small Texas City Contracts with LSSI.” By Norman Oder -- Library Journal, 6/1/2007. http://www.libraryjournal.com/article/CA6446348.html
The city of San Juan, TX, which lost its one librarian last October and has a library budget of less than $7 per capita, has signed a contract with Library Systems and Services, LLC (LSSI), to staff and operate the city library through September 2012. LSSI will add at least four open hours weekly, to 56, and has already installed a degreed librarian. San Juan city manager Jorge Arcaute told LJ that the city had had trouble hiring a degreed librarian on the library’s $220,000 annual budget. Until 2000, the community in the generally poor Rio Grande Valley had a one-person library in borrowed space. Arcaute in February announced his plans to resign in June; the city lost two other top officials last year.
City officials learned of LSSI at a Texas Municipal League conference. “It seemed like the right thing to do at this point,” said Arcaute. The current staff of five will be offered jobs with LSSI, which gives its employees a 401(k) rather than pension benefits. The library could increase hours and grow beyond its 2500 square foot facility, Arcaute said, if the city invests more. San Juan belongs to the Hidalgo County Library System; members contribute to a shared automation system but are independently funded and governed.
*Population figures obtained from Public Library Directory and Statistics at the Texas State Library and Archives Commission
Texas Libraries served by LSSI
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