Boston.com THIS STORY HAS BEEN FORMATTED FOR EASY PRINTING
IT'S ALL HAPPENING AT THE LIBRARY

It hurts to lose support network

WE ALL know that times are hard and cutbacks are necessary. But when a library loses certification, it loses the network and state support that makes it possible for patrons to access materials, from books to job-hunting information, that may not be available in their own library. Supporting your local library is not just about getting the latest bestseller.

In one hour at my job as a librarian, I found tax forms online for elderly patrons (they were unavailable on the table with the paper forms), showed a seventh-grader how to use an index in a book on Italy for his school project and helped him identify the books he needed, set up a free e-mail account for a job hunter, taught a patron how to open and type a Word document, answered a phone request about museum passes, pulled material for a homeowner trying to settle a tax dispute, and saved one unemployed man $1,500 by finding, for free, the testing material for a heavy equipment operating license that someone was going to sell him.

If you or your family make use of this resource, then call your city or town hall - a reference librarian can easily get you the number - and tell your elected officials that you support your local library.

Jacquelyn Miller

Woburn 

© Copyright The New York Times Company