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Thursday, February 21st, 2008 09:27 am
For two days in a row now, I have driven by my closest branch library on my way home from outings with Robinson. Both times, I spotted two rather forlorn looking picketers, and both times I honked loudly and waved. The picketers beamed at me and waved back. I don't think they're getting much of that, which is unfortunate.

I would exhort all the locals on my flist to follow my example, were it not for the fact that except for [livejournal.com profile] wendymc I think none of you has a car! Somehow it wouldn't surprise me if [livejournal.com profile] lidocafe had not been down there with hot chocolate and oranges, though.

For those on my flist who are NOT local, and have no clue what I'm talking about, and especially for those two or three who are librarians, you will be interested to know that our library staff is locked out. They have been in negotiations with the city for wage equity for months and got nowhere. Among their minor job actions has been a refusal to collect fines, and the city is using lost revenue (!!!) from this as an excuse to lock them out.

I'm not normally very political, but this issue really gets me steamed. The wage imbalance (a parking lot attendant makes more money per hour than the person who checks out books in the library) stems more from gender issues than anything else - library workers are more likely to be female than are parking lot attendants, road workers etc, and I think the city is banking on the fact that the public will get pissed off fairly quickly if they are unable to access the library. I hope people will keep up the solidarity, but I can imagine frazzled mothers with young children wanting books and videos, or seniors, or those who just need a place to go for company or to stay warm, beginning to lose patience with having their libraries closed down.

I shall try and drive by a branch every day and honk and wave.
Thursday, February 21st, 2008 06:04 pm (UTC)
I also often feel uncomfortable with wage equity arguments on gender grounds, and you're absolutely right that there are women parking lot attendants and male library clerks. I think that the differences are often historical, though, and built into the system.
And actually, I think that wage negotiators often do compare wages for similar jobs at different institutions and ask for equity - I know that's been done with college teaching positions, for example. Not that they always get it, but it's a common tactic. Especially when they are public service jobs, funded by the government, so the institution is arbitrarily choosing how to use the funding. It's a bit different in the private sector, where there is competition, but often then wages will be used as a way to get and keep good people.
But I respect your position - no doubt there are lots of others who share it! And unfortunately the longer they are out the more impatient and unsympathetic people will be.
Friday, February 22nd, 2008 05:48 am (UTC)
I don't know about the gender argument either, but I do know that the union has clearly opted not to shut the place down, and I have been grateful for that. It is the library board that has shut the library down, and the notion that they are losing revenue strikes me as suspicious. After all, are late fines in place to keep people from returning books late and thereby inconveniencing other members or are they there as a source of revenue? I'd like to take a look at the books if it is the latter. I am not much at financial matters, so I could be wrong, but it seems to me that saying they can't any longer pay the librarians 100% of their wages to do 75% of their jobs makes for a specious argument. They aren't having to pay anyone to provide Internet access or educational programming, for instance, because no one is doing it. Therefore, while patrons may have suffered from certain services not being available, it's hard for me to understand how the library administrators have suffered, since no one pays for those services and no substitute labour has been paid.

The library is to me one of the last great public institutions, and it is worth its weight in taxes. I'd be happy to have a greater share of tax money go to it.

No, I haven't been down with chocolate and oranges, but I did visit today when i was downtown! Oranges next time, perhaps!