My first day at the library will be May 22!

Today I attended a volunteer orientation at the Monrovia library. There were about 15 of us, mostly women, and mostly much older than me, but all very friendly and motivated. The volunteer coordinator is a warm and enthusiastic leader, and our first activity was a tour through the brand-new library. As we walked under the entrance arch and the ceiling opened up above us in the main circulation area, I felt a shiver of delight. The library was empty of people, but filled with an expectant air, awaiting its grand debut on Saturday. All of the books and tapes and movies and CDs and computers were in position, seeming almost eager for new hands and new uses. We walked past the stacks, and I tried to stay focused forward, but there were books on every side, calling out for attention with colorful covers and intriguing titles. I could dive right in and swim happily through this library for days on end.

We came back to Earth after our tour and discussed what our duties will be. Their prime need right now is for greeters (referred to as Library Orientation and Support Technicians, or “LOST” volunteers, I kid you not) to guide patrons to the right areas of the new library, answer basic questions, point the way to the restrooms, and so on. After doing this for a few weeks, we can keep doing it or move on to other volunteer needs around the library, such as sorting and mending books, helping out in the Friends of the Library bookstore, literacy tutoring, etc. The great news is that I can immediately start as a greeter, while they are still processing my application and figuring out when best to inject me with tuberculins. The other jobs await full application review. We passed around a signup sheet, and my first stint as a volunteer will be 3-5 p.m. on May 22.

I learned that:

  • The new library offers both computer workstations and (free) wireless access (library card required).
  • There are self-checkout machines!
  • Volunteers agree to a minimum of 5 hours per month and a 6-month commitment. Not a problem, as I’ve reserved all of Fridays for as much volunteering as I like.
  • There is a confidentiality requirement in library assistance; you are expected not to share what questions a given patron has asked, unless you anonymize the query. Good to know.

I’m very much looking forward to the library’s grand opening on Saturday. Not only is Ray Bradbury speaking at 3:30 p.m., but they are also holding a children’s spelling bee at 11 a.m.! I’m tempted to go along and see what kind of words show up at this one. :)

4 Comments
2 of 3 people learned something from this entry.

  1. Susan said,

    May 13, 2009 at 5:13 am

    (Learned something new!)

    I didn’t know about the confidentiality of queries! That’s pretty cool.

    The library sounds dreamy.

  2. Marcy said,

    May 13, 2009 at 9:12 am

    (Knew it already.)

    I’m so glad that you found your way to library volunteering! There’s something magical about spending time in the library, and I love that you’re helping make it awesome for others. I really enjoy the shelf reading that I do – so soothing.

    All libraries have worked very hard to allow their patrons the freedom to read anything and ask anything. For instance, they no longer keep track of what you had checked out once you return it and have fought the FBI when they asked who had checked out a certain book. The librarian who kicked this whole thing off is from my greater library system and I saw her speak once. Truly inspirational to see a stereotypical-looking librarian who stood up for Right.

    http://www.usatoday.com/news/opinion/editorials/2005-05-17-librarian-edit_x.htm

  3. Katie said,

    May 13, 2009 at 12:07 pm

    (Learned something new!)

    Very nice, Kiri! That sounds like a great volunteer opportunity! Where is the new library?

  4. wkiri said,

    May 13, 2009 at 10:27 pm

    Marcy, what an awesome and inspiring article — thank you for sharing!

    Katie, the library is built on the old library’s location, in Monrovia (on Library Park, bordered by Myrtle, Lime, Palm, and Primrose streets). I don’t know if you’ve ever been here? It’s a lovely block, with trees and an awesome statue of Mark Twain sitting on a bench (great fun to pose with him).

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