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COOPERATION IS UNIVERSAL, by LTLS Executive Director Jan Ison


LTLS is in the business of cooperation and collaboration and has been for more than forty years.  However, 40 years is relatively young for the cooperation business in general, as many cooperatives are very old institutions.  For example, the International Co-Operative Alliance (ICA) was founded in 1895 and represents over 800 million members.  Many institutions of varied types participate in cooperatives.  These institutions range from the local credit union to rural electric cooperatives to marketing cooperatives like Land O’Lakes.   Cooperatives exist to help varied institutions and individuals that share similar values and similar needs.  According to the ICA, “Co-operatives are based on the values of self-help, self-responsibility, democracy, equality, equity and solidarity.”  Members generally “believe in the ethical values of honesty, openness, social responsibility and caring for others.” The values and guiding principles of Lincoln Trail are very similar and include democracy, respect, good of the whole, and diversity of community. According to Ian MacPherson from the British Columbia Institute for Co-operative Studies, one out of every four people who live in the U.S. are part of a cooperative.  He has also noted that while many cooperatives emerged in rural America, cooperatives are no longer limited to rural locations.  There are housing co-ops, senior co-ops, “ethnic” co-ops and more; all of these contribute to the overall improvement of service for the members of the cooperative.

What does this mean for Lincoln Trail and other library cooperatives worldwide?  First and foremost, it validates the work that libraries have been doing in this arena.  One of the underpinnings of cooperative library service has been resource sharing.  Resource sharing is essential in the library environment because no matter how big or small a library, the fact is that no institution can supply all the resources that the customers of that library need or desire.  It is essential to cooperate and partner with other agencies to achieve quality customer service. Lincoln Trail’s largest member library, the University of Illinois, borrows more from the partner libraries in total than it loans to those same partner libraries.  Likewise, many smaller libraries loan more items in total to larger libraries than they borrow and, in fact, contribute a larger percentage of their collection to resource sharing activities.  This is about providing opportunities for our customers to get the best that we have to give to meet their needs and to be able to serve them quickly and efficiently. 

Libraries in Illinois and Lincoln Trail have been doing this good work for more than forty years and, during that time, have encountered many challenges and possibilities.  Among the challenges for cooperatives are reinvigorating the old and nurturing and accepting the new.  Many times in libraries and in other cooperatives we become complacent with what we have and expect the services and products to remain the same.  Our customers, however, expect our institutions to be relevant in the 21st century world.  Libraries change slowly and so do cooperatives but we are finding ourselves in a time when change happens at a lighting pace.  For example, how can we be where our customers are?  Our customers are at Google or they are on their local work or company Web site or intranet.  They are on CNN, on Yahoo or Amazon, or any of thousands of other places.  How can our library catalogs be where they are?  OCLC has provided an opportunity for libraries to make resources more available.  Worldcat.org lets visitors search for items in libraries very easily.  A library, a business, or a personal Web site can download a “search box” and have it installed on their local Web site.  (This is featured on the left side of the LTLS home page.)  Once downloaded, customers can search the world cat and get back to the LINC catalog to see what is currently available in the libraries and immediately request the materials. What, however, if this was easier?  What if a customer could put our catalog or an Illinois catalog on his or her Web site and get to the catalog with only one click to instantly see if the resource needed or desired is available in the local library?  How can we make that possible and are we willing to reinvigorate our service and accept and nurture this new type of service?  It is only one possibility but it does present a challenge. 

At the same time more basic changes are needed.  Every library must have a Web site to compete in today’s environment.  All librarians must know about social networking tools so that they can be where many of their customers are.  New modes of cooperation must be developed so that libraries can keep up and provide possibilities for the clients.  At Lincoln Trail we are working to make that possible for the libraries.  Beginning on Friday, November 10, the first of the Online Social Networking classes will be offered.  Topics include Blogs, Flickr, RSS, Wiki, Polling software, and more.  It is important that staff of member libraries take advantage of this opportunity to delve into this wonderful opportunity to learn new things and get further connected with the customers.  If you doubt that social networking is moving into libraries, think about all of the blogs you’ve been hearing about that are connected with ALA and ILA conventions, groups, and discussions.  Now libraries are moving into Wiki’s as ALA has just announced the creation of the official Wiki site for the 2007 Midwinter Meeting.

Cooperatives evolve just as libraries evolve and we must keep pace with our customers in order to meet our mission and to achieve our vision.  Library cooperatives have made a difference in our world, but they must be nurtured to remain relevant and vital.  At Lincoln Trail we want to reinvigorate cooperation and expand the opportunities for collaborative efforts and partnerships.  At the same time, we want our members to recommit to the continued ownership and participation in the cooperative.





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Library
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be nurtured
to remain
relevant
and vital.

 


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