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In addition to library and council staff, sponsors also made a huge contribution to this event by providing: plasma screen (Vidcom NZ Ltd), champagne, OJ, goodie bags, gift baskets (Woolworths Karori), champagne (Allied Domecq) and the jungle (Berhampore Nursery).
All in all the event was a roaring success!
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Library Express is a new service being offered by Wellington City Libraries to anyone in the region who is unable to personally visit a library. This is a great service for anybody who is ill, injured, or immobilised. It could also be useful for someone with a new baby who can't find the time to visit the library.
For a small charge, our Library Express team can locate, issue and arrange delivery and return of any items required. These can be personally selected from our online catalogue, or we can tailor a selection to suit your personal preferences. From one-off to regular deliveries, this service aims to cater for the personal needs of each user.
Now you can borrow books, CDs, movies and much more without even setting foot in a library!
For more information on Library Express phone Linda on 801-4065.
Book covers are provided by our US library system owners so the illustrations display mainly in areas such as craft, computers, philosophy, mysteries, music, performing arts. (Check out these searches for quilting and computing). New covers and other content is being added every week, meaning that as we purchase more books for our collections, more information become available.
Our new enhanced catalogue now makes it easier to find information about books you might be interested in. We see the covers and additional information in both our online catalogue and MyLibrary Recent Picks as providing another key ingredient in borrowers' informed choice, along with leafing through the books themselves, and other information available through other media such as radio, print and television.
From September you will no longer need to enter a PIN number - simply enter your card number and your last name to access these services.
This will make accessing library services faster and easier for borrowers - it is in line with international library practice and replicates in-library usage where customers can reserve items and check their card details by presenting their library card. Because of these changes it is important to keep your library card in a secure place and preferably not lend it to anyone else. If you lose your card, please contact us as soon as possible.
The Council's Annual Plan decisions for 2005/2006 have resulted in an increase to the daily charge for overdue books and magazines. The daily rate will increase to:
This change will take effect from 1 August 2005. We are making this small increase in fees to encourage people to return items to the library sooner so that they are available to other borrowers. (Current overdue charges)
From 1 September, Super cardholders will no longer receive a Passport to Leisure discount - only Community Services cardholders will be eligible. Passport to Leisure is a Wellington City Council discount scheme providing opportunities for members of the community where price has been identified as a barrier to participating in recreational activities. The Community Services card has been chosen as the new way of measuring this price barrier.
On 21st February 2005 the launch of the partnership between public libraries and Statistics New Zealand was celebrated at Wellington City Libraries. The partnership ensures that member public libraries will continue to receive up-to-date official statistics for their communities. For Wellington City Libraries this means that we will cotinue to receive one free copy of every publication printed by the department. These copies will be found in the Reference Collection on the Second Floor of the Central Library.
Adult CDs and DVDs can only be issued in this area - if you have other library items, you can issue them at the same time. Vision Centre changes
From 1 August 2003, please take extra care to return all items you borrow before the library closes on the day they are due - as overdue charges now start on the next day. The cost of interloaning an item from another NZ library is now $14 (up from $10) to reflect the increase in fee we pay to loaning libraries (more).
Wellington residents are reading, listening and watching more than ever - that's the word from City Libraries Manager Jane Hill who says that over 4.3 million items were issued or read in the library over the 2002/03 period.
"We've had an amazing year! We've had more books borrowed, more people signing up for membership and more people visiting our website than any other year!" said Ms Hill. "At the Central Library alone we had an average of about 4000 people walk through the door each day."
More than 30,000 people signed up for membership in the year, up from 22,000 from 2001/02. The libraries' busiest day was the Tuesday following Easter with over 27,000 issued items returned across the city.
Much of the increase was put down to the libraries' focus on diversification. The extension to Tawa's Mervyn Kemp Library has also significantly resulted in increased business, and strong collections - everything from babies' board books to foreign languages - has had Wellingtonians coming back for more.
Whekenui, the libraries' new computer system, also promoted usage by giving library patrons easy online access to the entire catalogue.
"We had 18,989,673 visits to our website - up from around two million from the previous year. Our libraries' website has had definite spin-offs with people coming to visit the libraries to take out books," says Ms Hill.
Popular items include J K Rowling's Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix, (which had 189 reservation applications before it was released), American political activist Michael Moore's top-selling Stupid White Men, and Yann Martell's Life of Pi.
The most popular non-fiction book - The Road Code for Car Drivers 2003 - had gone out 295 times.