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Bibliographic Details
Format: Recurso educativo Open Access
Language:en
Published: 1979
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=ED183180
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collection Education Resources Information Center
contents Survey of California Public Libraries, 1978-1980: Before and After Proposition 13. Federal Aid Financial Support Library Expenditures Library Services Library Surveys Public Libraries State Aid Tax Allocation A financial survey views the net effect of California's Proposition 13 as effectively lowering financial support of libraries 25 percent. After three years, this reduction in income has resulted in a 22 percent drop in the number of library outlets, a 23 percent reduction in operating hours, and an 18 percent loss in library staffing. Funds for library materials are back to within one percent of 1978 levels, not accounting for inflation; however, the loss of up to 17 percent in purchasing power is resulting in missing titles as these go out of print. To balance this view, volunteer usage is up 282 percent and circulation and reference declines are no more than 12 percent and 8 percent respectively. Although California libraries are still an important community and cultural presence, their continued excellence is in jeopardy given financial constraints. (RAA)
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_ED183180
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 1979
record_format eric
spellingShingle Survey of California Public Libraries, 1978-1980: Before and After Proposition 13.
Federal Aid
Financial Support
Library Expenditures
Library Services
Library Surveys
Public Libraries
State Aid
Tax Allocation
Survey of California Public Libraries, 1978-1980: Before and After Proposition 13. Federal Aid Financial Support Library Expenditures Library Services Library Surveys Public Libraries State Aid Tax Allocation A financial survey views the net effect of California's Proposition 13 as effectively lowering financial support of libraries 25 percent. After three years, this reduction in income has resulted in a 22 percent drop in the number of library outlets, a 23 percent reduction in operating hours, and an 18 percent loss in library staffing. Funds for library materials are back to within one percent of 1978 levels, not accounting for inflation; however, the loss of up to 17 percent in purchasing power is resulting in missing titles as these go out of print. To balance this view, volunteer usage is up 282 percent and circulation and reference declines are no more than 12 percent and 8 percent respectively. Although California libraries are still an important community and cultural presence, their continued excellence is in jeopardy given financial constraints. (RAA)
title Survey of California Public Libraries, 1978-1980: Before and After Proposition 13.
topic Federal Aid
Financial Support
Library Expenditures
Library Services
Library Surveys
Public Libraries
State Aid
Tax Allocation
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=ED183180