Longer Hours
On
Weekdays,
But Now Closed
On
Saturdays
By AMY
ROSE
Staff Writer
In the past few
months, use of the Greeneville-Greene County Public Library has increased by at least 15 to 20
percent, according to Madge Walker, library director.
As a result, the
library began extended weekday hours on Aug. 4 and is now closed on
Saturdays.
The change has been met with both positive and negative
feedback, Walker said, but most library users have said they like the new
hours.
"Very few" persons have been upset by the new hours, Walker said,
noting that most complaints have come from those who use the library's Internet service on
Saturdays.
She noted that the library offers free Wi-Fi Internet service
in the area behind the building, near the Big Spring, and on its front
porch.
Those who are pleased with the new hours include senior citizens
who prefer to visit the library in the mornings before doing grocery shopping and other daytime
errands, Walker said.
Also pleased are younger adults, she said, who like
coming to the library after they leave work.
Before the change, the
library opened at 9:30 a.m. Monday through Saturday and closed at 7 p.m. on Mondays and Thursdays; 5
p.m. on Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Fridays; and 2 p.m. on Saturdays.
Now,
the library is open from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. Mondays and Thursdays and from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesdays,
Wednesdays and Fridays. The library continues to be closed on
Sundays.
Walker explained that the new schedule allows library employees
to work fewer days, so now more employees can work on the same days to assist the growing number of
library users.
She said more employees are especially needed during the
library's busiest time of noon to 4 p.m. on weekdays.
With the previous
schedule, the library often only had two employees during that busiest time, she
noted.
The library has four full-time employees. Normally some part-time
employees are hired during the summer, but no funding was available for those positions this year,
Walker said.
She noted that some volunteers occasionally work at the
library, but not on a regular basis.
Library Use
Evaluated
Walker said the amount of library use on each day was
evaluated for two or three months, and it was determined that the least number of families would be
affected if the library was closed on Saturdays.
She said only 10 to 12
families were using the library regularly on Saturdays, which is nowhere near the amount of use
through the week.
In the first six months of 2008, a total of 56,000
items were checked out from the Greeneville-Greene County Public Library, Walker
said.
The recent increase in library use has occurred while gas prices
have increased and the economy has worsened, Walker noted.
"When times
get tough, libraries get busy," Walker said.
She said that because of the
struggling economy, some people have discontinued their home Internet accounts and newspaper
subscriptions, and are instead coming to the library.
Also, parents may
not be able to afford movie rentals for their children, so they also come to the library for that
service.
During the summer, Walker added, some library users may not have
air-conditioning in their homes, and they are seeking a cool place to spend their
time.
Another increase, she noted, has been the number of people coming
to the library to get paperwork related to the new federal economic stimulus
payments.
The new library hours are in effect until Nov. 2, when daylight
saving time ends. At that time, the library's board will reevaluate the new hours to see if they
need to continue.
The library is located at 210 N. Main
St.
For more information, call 638-5034. On the Web:
www.ggcpl.org.