West Florida Libraries in Transition

Even in a largely routine meeting on March 23, the West Florida Library Board of Governance signaled that the system is moving through a period of change.

  • Background: The West Florida Public Libraries Board of Governance consists of five members appointed by the Escambia County Board of County Commissioners (three members), the Council of the City of Pensacola (one member) and the Mayor of Pensacola (one member).

Clearing the Air

With Christal Bell-Rivera stepping into the role of library director, much of the discussion focused on what comes next for the library system. During the meeting, board members emphasized the importance of longer-term planning, staff input, and giving individual branches more say in what programming and services work best for their particular communities.

Though the Board of Governance recommended two other candidates over her for the position, board chair Kenneth “Blaine” Wall told Bell-Rivera, “We want to see you be successful, but it’s your success, the library’s success, and the community’s success.”

  • More Background: In early March, the Escambia Board of County Commissioners approved, 4-1, County Administrator Wes Moreno’s selection of Christal Bell-Rivera as the county’s library services director over Bradley Vinson and Chris Hare. Read more..

Operational Updates

At the March 26 meeting, Bell-Rivera shared several operational updates. The Molino branch is currently being used as a testing site for patron credit card payments, and the program could expand to other locations if successful.

  • The system is working through several financial and infrastructure challenges. A significant portion of funding is currently being directed towards information technology, including the replacement of computers and laptops over 10 years old.
  • The board discussed how the library system had previously been unable to collect certain fees during a system transition, which were ultimately written off.

Budget discussions showed how complicated the library’s funding really is. The county handles most of the day-to-day operations, while the city owns several of the buildings and covers larger repairs once they pass a certain cost. However, funding is limited and gets used up quickly across multiple locations.

Even within these constraints, the library system continues to look ahead. The board discussed increasing investment in digital resources, such as audiobooks. Branch-level programming is expanding, with ideas such as a possible ballroom-dancing program at the Brownsville library…

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