Outreach, Partnerships & You

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High Strung, rooftop of
Kansas City Public Library
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300 public libraries in 48 states, &
Cuba
Featured on NPR’s This American Life
in August of 2005, 2006
Don’t Ask for Permission
2. Form Partnerships & Take it to the
Streets
Talk – Action = Irrelevancy
Don’t be lazy
3. Make it Fun!
Fun = Tax Revenue
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Why Partner
What is this all about
Advocacy
Think big, start small
Follow these steps
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More than ever, libraries need to prove they
are
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Innovative
Deeply connected to their communities
Essential to the success of these communities
It’s all about building community
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Partnerships and outreach mean:
◦ You are spending resources wisely by combining
forces with other groups
◦ Strength in numbers
◦ You are not sitting in the building and waiting for
people to come to you
◦ With each new effort, you are creating new
advocates for the library
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Partnerships and outreach mean:
◦ You are taking advantage of the creativity,
networks, and expertise that exist in all
communities
◦ You are redefining the role of the library so no one
considers it a frivolous or unnecessary service
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It all comes down to money
Ultimately, partnerships and outreach are key
to sustaining funding levels and support
through good times and bad
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Find out who the movers and shakers are in
your community
Remember, the people we need to reach are
many and varied
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Direct Outreach
Grassroots
Word of Mouth
Talk-Action = Irrelevancy
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Partnerships and outreach shouldn’t be
considered separate tasks but an integral part
of your daily work at the library
It’s all about advocacy - as are your everyday
good customer service and dedication
‘You need to be advocates because you and
those who work in your library are the first
line of defense against claims of
irrelevance, displacement by technology,
demotion on the list of community
priorities, declining literacy, and ultimately,
erosion of the memory of our collective
communities’
 - Libraries Prosper with Passion, Purpose and Persuasion
(PLA Toolkit)
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Partnerships can take time to start
Once they are up and running, they should be
beneficial and save time for all involved
THINK BIG BUT START SMALL
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Get together with colleagues to discuss:
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I wish we could serve…
I wish we could offer…
I wish we could do a program on…
I wish we could…
Think outside the box
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Prioritize your list of ideas
Think of ideas for how to accomplish them
Choose a project and make a realistic outline
of how it could be accomplished
Review ideas with co-workers
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Think about who to approach. Think big.
Consider:
◦ people you or your colleagues know personally or by
reputation
◦ local nonprofits and businesses (especially those that are
new or expanding)
◦ other libraries in the area
Think about where you might want assistance
◦ money, publicity, materials, purchasing power, helping
hands, ideas, logistics, meeting space, volunteers, etc.
Think about how your proposal will benefit your potential
partners
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Select only one project to start with
Consider approaching more than one partner,
but start with the partner most likely to say
yes
Don’t be afraid to do some cold calling
Be open to the partner’s ideas
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Make sure details are worked out and
communicated clearly in advance
Consider what statistics or evaluations will be
collected
Publicity should be done jointly with all
partners to reach people outside the library’s
regular networks
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This is the fun part: You and your partner
come together to host a program or kick off a
service
Make sure to give recognition
Proper planning and full publicity should
make for a smooth event and big crowd
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Evaluate collectively and individually
Evaluation questions could include:
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How well did the program work?
What can be learned from statistics?
What kind of comments were made?
Should this be done again?
How could it be improved?
How did the timing work out?
Would additional partners be helpful?
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Worse case scenario
◦ Someone tells you no
◦ You have a list of ideas
◦ Ask for feedback
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Best case scenario:
◦ No program but you form a solid partner
◦ You make yourself look good
◦ You make the director look good
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Outreach is partnerships / partnerships are
outreach
Consider every interaction an opportunity to
do outreach and build partnerships
Make everyone look good
Don’t assume it’s someone else’s job
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Enjoy the snowball effect
Be ready to adjust your expectations and
adapt to partners’ changing needs
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Learn from other professions
◦ networking
◦ marketing
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Make it fun
◦ Create buzz and be creative
◦ Fun = tax revenue
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The first step is the hardest
Ask yourself:
◦ What’s the worst that could happen?
◦ What’s the best that could happen?
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Write down the first idea you got today and
follow the plan when you get back to work
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Remember:
Partnerships and outreach are advocacy and thus a
core part of your job.
Doing this could make the difference the next time
you need to ask for community funding or support.
Don’t Ask for Permission
2. Form Partnerships & Take it to the
Streets
Talk – Action = Irrelevancy
Don’t be lazy
3. Make it Fun!
Fun = Tax Revenue
1.
Program Title: Artist In Residence
Program Description:
The artist-in-residence program is a joint project between the Chelsea Center for the Arts and the Chelsea District Library.
The artist-in-residence program is designed for a nationally-known artist who works in the community through the
library to deliver various services as they see fit. In addition to instructional and consultative activities, the artist-in-residence
enriches the local arts scene by his or her presence, but may also offer writing workshops and other writing related events, plus
programming.
What’s It All About:
New blood each year
Remember what I said about finding the experts? Let them
do the work for us!
How many libraries, let alone public, let alone small
public libraries think to sponsor an artist in residence?
Bring in recognizable authors & artists
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Program Title: Midwest Literary Walk in Downtown Chelsea
Program Description:
Michael McClure, famous Beat Generation and 1960s counter-culture poet and writer, will make a rare appearance in downtown
Chelsea at the first-ever Midwest Literary Walk, April 18.
McClure, associate of Allen Ginsberg and close friend of Jim Morrison, is the author of 14 books of poetry, eight books of plays,
and four books of essays. He wrote the song “Mercedes Benz,” popularized by Janis Joplin, and authored the play “The Beard,”
which became a cause célèbre in the 60s for testing censorship laws in San Francisco and other cities. Now 78, McClure was
immortalized by Jack Kerouac in his novel Big Sur and by Martin Scorcese in his film “The Last Waltz.”
Oprah Book Club novelist Bret Lott, of South Carolina, and suburban Detroit novelist Michael Zadoorian will also read from
their work, along with Michigan poets Keith Taylor, Janet Kauffman, Macklin Smith, and Bill Harris.
Free and open to the public, the event is the brainchild of Detroit poet ML Liebler, current artist-in-residence at the Chelsea
District Library and Chelsea Center for the Arts, cosponsors of the Walk. All locations are within a two-block area.
1 pm, Keith Taylor and Macklin Smith, River Gallery
2 pm, Michael Zadoorian and Bill Harris, Chelsea Gallery
3 pm, Bret Lott and Janet Kauffman, Cranesbill Books
4 pm, Community Open Mic with ML Liebler’s Workshop, Zou Zou’s Café
5:30 pm, reception and book signing with Michael McClure, River Gallery
7 pm, Michael McClure and ML Liebler, Chelsea District Library
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Moby Grape
Program Title: Songwriter’s Workshop
Program Description:
Join the Chelsea Center for the Arts and the Chelsea District Library for a most exciting, memorable and entertaining songwriting workshop from Chelsea's artist-in-residence, M.L. Liebler. Plus Detroit quartet the High Strung, hailed by Rolling Stone,
the New York Times, and Village Voice as one of the best rock & roll bands in America. Registration required. Space is limited!
Call the CCA 734-433-2787 or e-mail programs@chelseacenterforthearts.org to register for this workshop.
Basics:
Saturday Afternoon from 12 to 4
Bring “School of Rock” to your town
Serve Pizza
Film it
Great way to get young people and old alike together
Perfect for Outreach
Take the School of Rock concept and apply it to seniors!
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Program Title: A Day in the Life of Chelsea
Program Description:
If your house is anything like our library, it has a shelf full of cookbooks – most of which are filled with dazzling photos of all kinds
of food dishes. Some of them are mouth-watering to look at. We are giving you 24 hours to document a delicious dining experience
through your eyes, from the way it’s prepared, to its presentation, to the way it is eaten. Pick up a disposable camera at the library.
Photos will be posted in a special exhibit on the library web site. Registration required.
Topics:
Photography
Community
Basics:
Registration is Required
Try to limit numbers to 15 or 20
Buy 15 disposable cameras from local camera shop and work out a deal (lean on them about promoting locally)
Notify patron when the galleries are on the library’s web page
You can use multiple themes, or make it more generic
Extras:
Make double copies of prints so patrons can keep copy
Marketing
Newsletter, website, and around town
The editor of the Ann Arbor News write an editorial pronouncing me a genius and wishing more libraries got in the business of
“preserving our local heritage,” and encouraging libraries all over the country to follow my lead.
Program Title: Chelsea District Library Comedy Showcase
Program Description:
Together with the Ann Arbor Comedy Showcase, the library will be staging a series of stand-up comedy showcases from some of the
region’s most popular comics. Once a week our cut-loose comedy series will present the comedy of 12 of the current rising stars in
the area and beyond.
Topics:
Stand up comedy
Basics:
Every Thursday in June
Partner with local comedy club
Bus seniors over from residential homes
Held outdoor in the library’s outdoor ampitheater
Marketing
Newsletter, website, and around town
Stories in the Chelsea Standard and Ann Arbor News
Streaming video or YouTube clips of comics
Coverage on Ann Arbor Comedy Showcase website
Comics
Mike Green
Horace HB Sanders
Kevin McPeek
Chili Challis
Gary George
Program Title: Purple Rose Theater
Program Description:
The Purple Rose and Library recently received a $17,000 grant to support a new play development
partnership .
In 2008, the PRTC and CDL created a partnership to foster mutually beneficial programming and
community collaboration. Since the inception of this partnership, these institutions have worked
together to bring concert readings of new plays, adult playwriting workshops, and acting workshops
for teens to the library, all free of charge to participants. The partnership has proven especially
effective in the play development process of several PRTC world premieres, including “Bleeding Red”
by Michael Brian Ogden and “Wake” by Carey Crim; both plays received public readings at the CDL
before rehearsals began.
The mission of the partnership is threefold: to develop new works by Midwestern playwrights for
potential production; to involve community members in the script development process; and to
inspire young writers to create their own works for the stage.
Program Title: Cemetery Ghost Hunt
Program Description:
Haunted houses? Cemeteries with ghosts? Explore the supernatural as the Ghost Hunters of Southern Michigan (GHOSM) reveal
evidence of paranormal phenomena captured during their investigations. Then, join the Ghost Hunters of Southern Michigan
(GHOSM) on a search for ghostly activities at Chelsea’s Oak Grove Cemetery. Registration is required.
Topics:
Paranormal investigations
True” Stories
How to go on a ghost hunt
Speakers:
Local ghost hunters group. They are everywhere. Just do a Google search, you’ll find one.
Basics:
Length – Two sessions (presentation – 1 ½ hours; ghost hunt – 2 hours)
For the ghost hunt, people will need to bring flashlights, warm clothes (if you do it after dark around Halloween), tape recorder,
video recorder, and cameras.
Be prepared to address the issue of the occult. You have to have guts to do a program like this, because staff and members of
community will give you grief about it. Don’t be afraid to take risks, even if you don’t buy into this stuff you have to remember that
we are here to serve all walks of life, plus a little controversy at the library is always a good thing. Helps keep us on the map!
Extras:
Invite member of historical society to lead a guided tour of cemetery before the extra ghost hunt. Not only will it remind people that
you aren’t introducing the occult, but its all about fun.
Marketing:
Library newsletter and website, which is all you need as people will literally come out of the woodwork to attend this program. I’ve
done in four or five times, not just with seniors, but with teens too. Patrons who didn’t know the library even existed will come as if
making a trek to Mecca. Be prepared to be overwhelmed.
Program Title: Meet the Beatles
Program Description:
An informal look at all aspects of The Beatles (their songs, films, album concepts, fiction, poetry, theater, essays, cartoons, and
more). We’ll look at the history, the myths, the legends, the secrets, the lies, and the reality of it all. M.L. Liebler, professor at Wayne
State University, will lead the discussion and supply rare essays and writings of The Beatles in addition to seldom seen Video/DVD
footage. Registration is required.
Topics:
The Beatles
Pop Music
Speakers:
Local expert or professor
Record store owner
Musician
Radio DJ
The librarian
Basics:
Length – 5 part series at 1 hour each
Theater style seating
LCD projector w/laptop, audio equipment for playing CDs or DVDs
Extras:
Beatles book (of which there are no shortages) display for checkout
Decorate room with posters
Get the audience involved by asking them where they were when the Beatles appeared on Ed Sullivan
Encourage patrons to bring their own memorabilia and stories to share
Marketing:
In addition to marketing in library newsletter and website, hit the schools, coffee shops, record and book stores
Program Title: Flower Arranging with Gigi
Program Description:
Flowers can make a gray day bright. Isn’t that sweet? An artfully arranged bouquet can become a focal point of a room. Many senior
patrons like to know how to create their own gems. This program will give them the tools to get started plus a chance to take home a
free bouquet. Invite a local florist, local garden club member to demonstrate floral arrangement.
Topics
Flowers
Flower Arrangements
Speakers:
Florist
Member of Garden Club
Staff Member
Basics:
Length – 1 ½ hours
Several tables set up in big square
Participants should bring scissors or a knife and a bag to carry the finished product free, but you must pay for the flowers and the
time of the local florist if they don’t agree to donate their time
Extras:
Display books and videos on floral design, flower arranging, and decorating with flowers
Seniors will be able to take the floral arrangement home
Ask them to talk about where to buy fresh and silk flowers, how to select colors, and how to create designs
Marketing:
I’ve always had to turn people away because we’ve exceeded capacity
Chances are patrons will be quit familiar with the person who owns the flower shop and love to have a chance to walk away with a
free flower arrangement, particularly around the holidays
Distribute flyers at library, senior center and residential homes, plus the florist, and gardening centers
Program Title: Slice of Life Pizza Tasting Competition for Seniors
Program Description:
Whether you prefer a traditional Neapolitan or Chicago style pie or the modern pizza versions established by fast food chains like
Little Caesars, you'll agree most of us have a love for that delectable food we call - Pizza.
Topics:
Pizza
Speakers:
Adult Services Librarian
Basics:
So why not host a Pizza Tasting contest for Senior Citizens?
With the support of local Pizzerias, you can dish out cheese and pepperoni pizzas for the judging.
Participants will sample each type of pie in a taste test and voted on their favorite cheese and pepperoni pizza.
The categories included: Best in Show, Best Crust, Cheesiest, and Best Sauce.
Extras:
While the seniors filled their bellies with the sampling of pies, they also received recipes and ideas on how to create their own
unique pizza creations.
The votes were tallied and the race was tight. The winner for best in show was Brooklyn Pizza. The champion for best cheesiest in
Chelsea was awarded to Thompsons.
Marketing:
Newsletter, website, flyers to senior centers, churches, funeral homes, and residential facilities
Be sure to thank all of the participating restaurants for their involvement in this successful event. There were certainly no leftovers
and truly no losers!
Program Title: Pollinate Your Mind – Summer Reading Program
Program Description:
Just for adults, register to get rewards and win prizes for using the library. This year’s program is as flexible as ever. Participants
can read, listen to music or audio books, watch movies, or attending one of our great lineup of programs and win great prizes,
like an iPod, dinner at Common Grill, tickets for the Purple Rose Theater, Chelsea Cash, and more!
Basics:
Nobody ever thinks about designing a program strictly for adult, change that!
Don’t go cheap on prizes. If you can’t afford anything more than the crap you buy from the Oriental Trading Catalog, don’t bother.
People won’t be interested
Choose a theme, this year we picked gardening
Here's how you get started:
Register to get a reading log, and then start reading from May 15 through July 30.
Earn stamps by reading a book, newspaper, or magazine, watching a movie, listening to an audiobook or music CD, using the
library's online resources, or attending our great lineup of events.
Choose your prize as you reach 5, 10, and 15 stamps. Books earn 3 stamps each; all other activities are worth 1 stamp each.
Earn 15 stamps and you'll get a free paperback book plus an entry for the grand prize drawing, held during the closing event ice
cream social on Wednesday, July 30.
Prizes
Win prizes like:
a bird feeder
garden tools
books
a video iPod
Program Title: Pollinate Your Mind – Summer Reading Program
CDs
clay pots
dinner at the local fancy restaurant
hose guides
seeds & planters
Gift Certificates to Local Business
DVDs
painted watering cans
Local bookstore gift cards
plant markers
fair-trade chocolate
a garden tote bag
tickets to the local theater
bird seed
Marketing:
Both the library and senior center newsletters, distribute fliers to hospitals, churches, nursing homes, and senior residential
facilities.
By far the best thing to do is find a major event, like a Senior Expo, set up a booth and sign people up at the event. Or, find
something similar, call, and ask to be a part of it.
C’mon, hardly anyone designs decent summer reading programs for adults. Get on board!
Program Title: Senior Lock-In
Program Description:
Together with the Chelsea Senior Center, join us for the first ever Senior lock-in at the library. The library will close at 6pm and
reopen at 6:30pm. We will feature a host of activities including a Hawaiian rib dinner, massage therapist, flower arranging with
Gigi’s Flowers, Fortune Teller, Nintendo Wii, and more. Don’t miss out on this exciting event. Space is limited so register now!
Topics:
Video Games
Food
Massage Therapy
Flower Arranging
Tarot cards
Card games
Speakers:
Local Flower shop owner
Local massage therapist
Senior center activities director
Adult Services Librarian
Tarot Reader
Basics:
If your library isn’t big enough, you may have to host this offsite at a residential facility or senior center
Cater in dinner
Set up programming room cafeteria style to serve dinner
Separate staging areas or rooms for the massage therapist, tarot reader, card tables (Bridge), Nintendo Wii, flower arranging activity
Stage lock-in on a Friday or Saturday night from 6:30 to 10pm
Program Title: Senior Lock-In
Extras:
Cold beverages and cookies for people to snack on since this is a long night
Make sure you recruit volunteers to help set up, coordinate, and clean up after everyone leaves
Marketing:
Library newsletter and website, distribute fliers at senior centers, nursing homes, and senior residential facilities
Notes:
The best senior program I’ve ever done, and maybe the first of its kind at any library
It’s expensive, but you can find ways to do it cheaper
Program Title: Nintendo Wii for Seniors – Not Your Grandkids’
Nintendo Anymore!
Program Description:
Put your virtual bowling skills to the test. If you are not familiar with the Wii, please join us for our kick off event. We will be setting
up bowling leagues, golf, tennis, and more. Wii approximates the motion of the games you enjoy because it requires players to
swing a motion-detector controller like a bowling ball, tennis racquet, or golf club. This is the hottest thing going! Everyone is
welcome to participate and become part of the fun. Don't let your grandkids have all the fun!
Topics:
Video Gaming
Speakers:
You
Basics:
Nintendo Wii (retails for $250 – If you can’t afford it, ask the Friends to purchase it)
At least four Wii game controllers
TV or a big screen projector if you have it
Ideal for partnering with senior center, nursing home, or residential home
Be patient, this is a very hands-on project. Many of them probably never played a video game in their life
Extras:
You need to offer cold drinks as people will work up a thirst
Cookies, light snack
Marketing:
Both the library and senior center newsletters, distribute fliers at nursing homes, senior residential homes
To hype it, do a demonstration for your staff and the Friends of the library so they understand why the library is investing in it.
Local History Programming
 Local history matters
 Preserving the history of the community
 Same concept as partnering, don’t wait for the information to come to you
 Rebrand the library by creating your own content
 Tie programming into your local history
 Great PR for the library
Program Title: Historic Chelsea Interest Group
Program Description:
Second Thursday of every month, 7-8:30 p.m., McKune Room. Registration not required.
The library and Preservation Chelsea host this group of people researching historic homes or buildings in the Chelsea area. Each
session features a guest speaker and time for members to share questions, ideas, or stories uncovered through their own
research.
Topics:
Local history, buildings, homes
Speaker:
Speaker – local guest or member of historical society
Basics:
Length – 1 to 1 ½ hours
We’ve even had local, Emmy-award winning film makers out to talk about Tiger Stadium and the old Hudson’s building and the
importance of historical preservation
Extras:
Refreshments and light snack
Literature about the library’s local history resources, class information
Marketing:
Newsletter, website, flyers to senior centers, churches, funeral homes, and residential facilities
Oral History Projects
Program Description:
We experimented first by inviting three local veterans of WWII to participate in a panel discussion about their
experiences during WWII. To create hype for the event, we worked with the Chelsea Senior Center and staged a special
luncheon to honor our veterans. The luncheon was provided by and held at the CSC. The following week we invited
the community to come to the library for the panel discussion, which we captured on film.
We asked each veteran a series of questions and gave them time to respond. After, we encouraged the audience to ask
questions as well.
Why does this work?
Remember what I said about not waiting for the information to come to you, be in the business of creating content.
Rebrand the library and you’ll help us all remain relevant
As you know, WWII veterans are dying off at a rate of over 1000 per day. We wanted to take action and capture some
local hero’s testimonies and preserve it for historical record.
With our video editing software, our plan is to convert their testimonies to tape and burn them on a DVD which we will
then place in our collection. My dream was that 50 years from now their great, great, grandchildren could come in and
see for themselves their relative on tape.
Again, we are creating the content instead of waiting for it to come to us
Wonderful way for you to network and partner with local historical groups and museums, who often struggle for
funding themselves. We work together to achieve common goals and then share our materials
Can you imagine the goodwill you create in the community when sons, daughters, and grandchildren come back to us
and bend over backwards to thank us for recognizing their parent in this way. You can’t buy that kind of feedback
One Room Schoolhouse Project
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Due to the success of this World War II project, the Chelsea Senior Center and the library partnered again and
we were recently awarded with a $6000 grant to do another, more extensive oral history project about oneroom school houses.
At one time, there were 24 one-room school houses in the Chelsea area. Our idea is to interview the students
and teachers about their experiences at these institutions. Although this started as a partnership, you better
believe this is something that the entire community is going to rally around, from the schools to the historical
museum.
The concept is the same. We interviewed and captured on film these people and preserved it for the historical
record.
There has been a tremendous buzz and we have had people contacting us from all over the country, who grew
up in Chelsea and wanted to be a part of this special project.
We staged special events to set up an environment in which to film former students and capture their stories,
including:
- Special luncheons
- A picnic at a local farm
- A visit to a one-room school house that is still functional and standing
One Room Schoolhouse Project
Oral History Project: Next Phases
Five-Year Plan:
Year One: Veterans History Project
To collect and preserve the stories of wartime services of local veterans
Our primary focus is on first-hand accounts of U.S. Veterans from the following wars:
* World War I (1914-1918)
* World War II (1939-1945)
* Korean War (1950-1955)
* Vietnam War (1961-1975)
* Persian Gulf War (1990-1995)
* Afghanistan and Iraq Conflicts (2001-present)
Year Two: Landmarks of Chelsea
Collect interviews with the surviving workers and members of the plant as well as provide a history of
the facility and its ultimate fate. Federal Screw Works began in 1913 in Chelsea. The plant moved to
its location on South Main in 1917 due to its closeness to a Consumers Power substation, which
powered the Detroit Urban Railroad. The plant survived the depression to make a strong recovery
during World War II, when it produced artillery shells and other weapons for the war effort. From a
post-war peak of 250 employees in 1959, the plant declined to 131 employees by 1997, and only 37 in
2005, when it closed its doors during a restructuring.
To include the following: Federal Screw Works, Hospital, Clock Tower, CRC, Old prison, old mill, the
Library
Oral History Project: Next Phases
Year Three: Village Life: Founding Families of Chelsea/Family Farming
Whether your family came from Germany in the early 1800s and has lived in the Chelsea area ever
since or you moved here from Detroit in the 1920s, we want to collect a record of the many different
experiences that have added to our community over time, as told by Chelsea area families.
Year Four: Chelsea’s Advancement As Arts Community
As told by stories of Purple Rose, Jeff Daniels, Common Grill, Chelsea Center for the Arts, River
Gallery, Chelsea Gallery, Sounds & Sights, SummerFest.
For ex., interview people who visit Purple Rose & Common Grill (Why did you come? Where did you
come from? How did you hear about it?)
Ask businesses, why did they choose Chelsea?
Year Five: History of Jiffy Mix
Chelsea Milling Company has been operating by a family whose roots in the flour business dates back
to the early 1800s. The family has been milling flour in Chelsea for over 120 years.
Cynthia Furlong Reynolds, author of Our Hometown and Jiffy book could be our project “go to”
person.
Stories of Chelsea
About:
Formed in 2009, the Library-Biz Connect includes Washtenaw Community College, the Chelsea
District Library, Small Business Development Technology Center (SBDTC), Food System Economic
Partnership, Art Meets Business, and SCORE
Goal:
The group’s aim is to educate the business community about resources available through their local
libraries and business service organizations; offer library programming that will guide small
business owners to results-driven resources, and combine current resources to broaden the
boundaries of its impact. The mission of the Library-Biz Connect is to provide access to a network
of business and support services for new and existing small businesses.
What We Provide:
One on One Counseling
Business Workshops (Business, Plans, Marketing Plans, Funding, Start Up, etc.)
Program Title: Low Vision Service Center
The Library and Lions Club of Chelsea have joined forces to help people with vision impairments maintain their
independence through the use of optical, non-optical, or electronic vision aids. With the help of a $3,000 donation
from the Lions Club, we plan to install a low vision service center in the first floor lobby, which we hope will become
the resource center for people with macular degeneration, diabetic retinopathy, and other eye diseases resume
activities like hobbies or work that they thought they could no longer do because of their vision.
The Center will consist of a glass case that will house low vision equipment including a variety of magnifiers ranging in
power, which may be borrowed for up to three weeks for an at-home trial, free of charge. Nearly two dozen state of the
art, handheld and stand magnifiers will be available, all of which incorporate an LED light that has a life span of up to
10,000 hours, illuminating the magnifier’s entire visual field! The equipment is lightweight and can be placed on top of
a newspaper or book page allowing the user to slide the magnifier across the text with relative ease.
In addition, the library will also feature a Merlin Reading Machine, a powerful, auto-focus desktop magnifier that
benefits those with poor eyesight. The reading machine can be used to magnify photo images, book pages, magazines,
or newspapers. The operation is user friendly and requires only basic instructions. Boasting an ergonomic design, this
flexible desktop magnifier allows you to pivot and adjust the screen to suit your most comfortable viewing position.
Program Title: Kids Read Comics
Program Title: Kids Read Comics
About the Convention
Generations of kids have grown up reading and loving comics. And it’s not hard to see why comics have
captured the imagination of kids and teens — with their unique blend of words and pictures, even the most everyday
comics stories open up worlds of wonder.
And beyond the sheer joy of comics is the fact that they can help turn kids into more active and engaged
readers. They also provide a model for young readers to explore and develop their own creativity.
But comics are no longer the mass medium they once were. Far fewer kids are exposed to them today, and
many of the comics they find are intended for older readers. That’s where Kids Read Comics comes in!
Our Kids Read Comics Convention is a totally free event that unites kids, teens, parents, teachers and
librarians with professional artists and writers from the comics and animation fields. Our goal is to introduce kids to
worlds of imagination while unlocking their creative impulses, and to serve that goal, the convention features:
hands-on workshops
panels and presentations for kids, families, and educators
a chance for kids to meet and chat with comics and animation professionals
the opportunity for kids to have their own art portfolios reviewed
KRC also works throughout the year to promote comics and creativity for kids and teens. We’re building a
recommended reading list; gathering resources for parents, teachers and librarians; and organizing artists and writers
who can bring presentations and workshops to libraries around the state of Michigan and beyond.
Kids Read Comics was founded by youth and teen librarian Edith Burney of Chelsea, cartoonist and educator
Jerzy Drozd of Ann Arbor, comic shop owner Dan Merritt of Dearborn, and comic book writer Dan Mishkin of East
Lansing. You can reach us at kidsreadcomics@gmail.com.
Notes:
The Michigan Council for Arts and Cultural Affairs awarded the Chelsea District Library, on behalf of Kids Read
Comics, a grant of $5600!
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