The Olympian: Timberland Regional Library board votes to hit pause on branch-closing capital facilities proposal

After two hours of discussion and public comment, the seven-member board that serves Timberland Regional Library voted unanimously Wednesday to hit pause on a branch-closing capital facilities proposal until next August.

By Rolf Boone

The Olympian

rboone@theolympian.com

After two hours of discussion and public comment, the seven-member board that serves Timberland Regional Library voted unanimously Wednesday, Oct. 10, to hit pause on a branch-closing capital facilities proposal until next August.

The motion that was approved by the board also calls for the creation of a committee to drill down on the details of the proposal and come up with specific line-by-line decisions.

“To explore what is appropriate to do in terms of solving the financial issue,” said board member, Joe Wheeler, about the financial hole the five-county library system faces.

Although the board pressed pause on closing branches, they did leave the door open to possible cuts to library hours and staff before Aug. 1.

The library system released its capital facilities proposal in late September and it quickly became controversial after it outlined sweeping changes, including the closure of rural library branches to cut costs. Timberland faces $700,000 budget deficits in 2019 and 2020 because revenue continues to fall as expenses rise in the form of salaries and benefits.

The three members of the board who make up the capital facilities committee — Brenda Hirschi, Corby Varness and Brian Zylstra — met last week and agreed the proposal needed to be rejected.

Varness reiterated their position to the entire board Wednesday night.

“Reject the proposal as it stands and use it as a background document to create a new plan,” she said.

Two board members — Wheeler and Jenna Noll — said they weren’t ready to reject the proposal. Noll said there were ideas worth exploring in the plan and Wheeler said the board needed to do more than just reject it.

“If we say no tonight, we haven’t solved anything,” he said.

Noll also pointed out that when the library system turned 50, she traveled to 11 branches and learned some had no patrons, she said.

The average use of the library is down, Wheeler said, so he urged the more than 50 people who gathered at the Tumwater service center Wednesday night to use their library and drive those numbers higher.

He also asked for specific ideas to help the library system, saying it wasn’t enough for people in the community to simply say, “think outside the box, find some other solution, do something else.”

And then Wheeler shared an idea of his own, which eventually became the motion approved by the board.

Before they voted, the board heard from about a dozen library patrons during public comment. No one expressed support for the capital facilities proposal.

Hoquiam Mayor Jasmine Dickhoff, which would see its library close under the plan, as well as libraries in Montesano and Tenino, called the proposal an insult because the city has spent more than $1 million to restore its Carnegie library building.

“I’m saddened and appalled to even be having this discussion,” said Susan Barrett of Tenino. She said the library in a rural town is the “center of town,” a place where rural people “want it, need it, appreciate it and get value out of it.”

Chris Thomas of Montesano said he and his children use the library weekly.

“The physical place is valuable,” he said. “You can’t lose sight of those physical places.”

He added: “I believe every single one should be kept open.”