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Mike Harvey (1947-2023)

We are deeply saddened by the passing of Mike Harvey. Mr. Mike was an institution at our library, sharing his kind and generous spirit, his passion for lifelong learning, and his silly sense of humor with us for over 50 years. He touched the lives of generations of library patrons and will be dearly missed by all.

We invite you to come to either library location and share your favorite memories of Mr. Mike on the posters by the front entrance of both library buildings, as well as upstairs in the Youth Services Department at Jeffersonville. We would also love to hear your memories and stories online here or on our social media pages like Facebook and Instagram.

You can view Mike’s obituary and share condolences with his family on the Newcomer funeral home’s website here

Here is Mr. Mike talking about one of his favorite books, Hotel Bruce by Ryan T. Higgins:

A Message from our New Director

Greetings to all of our patrons and potential patrons! My name is David Seckman and as of August 31st, I am the Director of the Jeffersonville Township Public Library (JTPL). I have been very impressed with the warm welcome I have received from everyone I have met and I look forward to making Southern Indiana home. Just briefly about my background, I grew up in Central Illinois but had the pleasure of going to IU for my library training. My library career took me to Florida and Washington state but I always hoped I could someday make it back to Indiana. I can truly say that the opportunity to lead JTPL is a dream come true.

I want you to know that we are open for business both in our physical buildings and virtually. You can visit us and do traditional library activities like browse for a book, use a study room, fax, copy, have something notarized, or use a computer. We have also recently opened the amazing Tom and Mary Frances Koetter Makerspace which offers a recording studio, 3D printing, laser-cutting and engraving, photo editing, a sewing machine, serger, and media conversion to name a few.

If you would like to check out a book or DVD but are leery of coming in our buildings, we are still offering curbside service and will continue to do so as an added service. You can put a library item on hold and when you receive notice that it is available, drive to the library, give us a call, and we will bring it to your car for you.

We are also offering many of our services virtually. Currently, we are providing a wide range of programs for all ages that you can access via zoom. Our virtual programming will likely continue into the foreseeable future because it is a great way to reach people who might otherwise not be able to come into the physical library. We also offer many online services including downloadable books, streaming services, language learning, and genealogy resources all free with your library card.

My vision for the library is to be a welcoming space that serves everyone in our community and reflects the needs and interests of the people who live here. I want the library to be known as a place where people receive fantastic service and can find the resources they need easily and conveniently. I see the library as a center for life-long learning and creativity, and a place where the free exchange of ideas can take place with courtesy and respect. Please let me know of anything I can do to make your library experience better than ever!

Support #ebooksForAll

Did you know that JTPL has promoted eBooks and eAudiobooks usage for nearly 10 years, long before it was as popular as it is today? In fact, in the last 12 months, JTPL cardholders checked out 21,313 eBooks and eAudiobooks (that’s 19% higher than the previous 12 months) through platforms like OverDrive’s Libby app and Hoopla. These digital copies are great not just for their portability, but also for readers with visual impairments who are able to enlarge the font in an eBook to make it easier to read.

However, we know there are some frustrations: we don’t have every single title on Libby; there are long wait lists for new books; you can only check out 5 items on Hoopla per month. Our goal is to get the eBook and eAudiobook content you want, but we are limited by cost and our shrinking budget.

Our two platforms have different pricing models: on OverDrive we purchase licenses for eBooks and eAudiobooks at a set cost, and each licensed copy may only be checked out by one user at a time; on Hoopla, we pay for an item only when it is checked out, and that cost ranges from $0.99 to $3.99, but the content can be checked out simultaneously by an unlimited number of users. There are pros and cons to each model: on Hoopla, we know the cost value of each checkout but the more checkouts there are, the more the library pays; on OverDrive, we get a better value from the set cost we pay the more patrons checkout a title, but we have no way of accurately predicting a title’s popularity.

You’re probably already aware that the consumer prices for eBooks aren’t much cheaper than the price for print books, and you probably know that eAudiobooks are even more expensive. What you may not know, however, is that the cost for libraries is significantly higher.

For example, you as an individual could buy Stephen King’s newest book The Institute for your Kindle for just $14.99. The library’s price for one digital copy on OverDrive? $59.99. You could also purchase the eAudiobook on Audible for $30.62 (or “free” with an Audible subscription). The library’s cost for one eAudiobook copy is $99.99.

These prices are all determined by the publishers, not our platforms like OverDrive and Hoopla — in fact, Steve Potash, founder and CEO of OverDrive, wrote a great letter about why these models are harmful to libraries, readers, and authors. What’s more, most of the “Big 5” publishers require libraries to repurchase eBooks after 2 years (regardless of how many times it was checked out) or after a set number of checkouts. They call this metered access. So if we decide we want to keep an eBook of The Institute in our library’s digital collection, we’ll have to pay $59.99 every two years. This used to only apply to eBooks but now Hachette is leading the way to force this model on eAudiobook lending, too.
[fvplayer id=”7″] In addition to higher prices and metered access, publishers like Macmillan and Blackstone are starting to embargo new titles. MacMillan recently announced that starting on November 1, libraries, no matter their size, will only be able to buy one digital copy of their new titles within the first eight weeks of publication. One digital copy that only one patron will be able to check out at a time. After that eight-week mark, libraries will be able to buy more copies, but those copies will be twice the price and expire after two years (regardless of how many times they are checked out).

Embargoes, higher prices, and metered access aren’t new; in fact, MacMillan has already done this once in 2018 with a “test” that placed a four-month embargo on new titles in their Tor imprint. However, now that more publishers are moving to metered access without lowering their prices significantly, there’s going to be a long-term impact on library collection budgets and our patrons. Our mission has always been to identify and meet the informational, technological, and entertainment needs of our community, and we’ve done our best to keep up with digital demand. But these changes will make it increasingly difficult to do so, which effectively means these new restrictions are limiting access for readers like you!

What can you do?

Macmillan claims this new embargo is because library book lending is cannibalizing their authors’ sales, even though multiple studies have shown the exact opposite is true. Help us show publishers that libraries are collaborators, not competitors:

  1. Sign and share ALA’s petition against the Macmillan embargo
  2. Write an op-ed or letter to the editor
  3. Share feedback on these lending terms with the Big 5 publishers:
  4. Continue to use our digital collections. We can’t demonstrate the value and need for access without your support in this way.

New digitization project underway

We are proud to announce the commencement of a new oral history digitization project, running from now until April 30, 2020. At the end of the project, researchers and genealogists around the world will have free online access to audio recordings of interviews with people who lived through the most terrifying chapter of Jeffersonville’s history, the Great Flood of 1937.

Each interview was recorded on audio cassette in 1984. The digitization project includes interviews with approximately 35 Jeffersonville residents, as well as interviews with workers from Quartermaster Depot and a rediscovered interview about the concrete industry in Indiana.

You can read more about the project in an article from the October 1, 2019 edition of the News and Tribune, which features interviews with our Genealogy and Local History Librarian Diane Stepro and Digitization Technician Eden Kuhlenschmidt.

This project was made possible by a grant from the Institute for Library and Museum Services, administered by the Indiana State Library.

Top Titles in 2019

Now that 2019 is on the books, we wanted to look back at the most popular titles at the Jeffersonville Township Public Library last year:

Top 10 Books

  1. Becoming by Michelle Obama
  2. Where The Crawdads Sing by Delia Owens
  3. Dog Man Unleashed by Dav Pilkey
  4. The Reckoning by John Grisham
  5. Educated by Tara Westover
  6. The 18th Abduction by James Patterson
  7. Diary of a Wimpy Kid: The Meltdown by Jeff Kinney
  8. The House Next Door by James Patterson
  9. Long Road to Mercy by David Baldacci
  10. Turning Point by Danielle Steel

Top 10 DVDs

  1. Game of Thrones
  2. Midsomer Murders
  3. Venom
  4. Bohemian Rhapsody
  5. Smallfoot
  6. Ant-Man and the Wasp
  7. Shazam!
  8. Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle
  9. A Star is Born
  10. Green Book

What were your favorite books and movies of 2019?