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Access PA (Power Library)

The Library... Then & Now

At the Abington Community Library

View a PowerPoint Presentation by Dennis and Sharleen Martin on the History of the Abington Community Library here!  The file is large - be patient.   New! View a virtual tour of the Abington Community Library and all it has to offer here!  If you would like a live presentation for your group or organization on the Library and what it has to offer, contact the director at 570.587.3440.  We're happy to 'take the show on the road.'

Mission Statement

The Abington Community Library’s mission is to facilitate lifelong learning, provide for leisure-time interests, support student research, and encourage teens, children, and adults to read.  Adopted August 2008


History of Abington Community Library & Facts
Facilities History:  In December 1959 an article in the Abington Journal announced that a meeting would take place in January to establish a library in the Clarks Summit area. This was based on an idea put forth by the Clarks Summit-Abington PTA.  On January 11, 1960 the Abington Library Association was born. The Library, originally located in a storefront in what had been the Abington Fabric Store at 420 State Street in Clarks Summit (now the Young Funeral Home parking lot), opened its doors with 2,000 donated books on June 18, 1960.  The Abington Heights Junior Women’s Club (now the Civic League) was also instrumental in the early years.  The Library was incorporated April 16, 1965.   In 1966 the Library moved to a renovated single-family dwelling located at 500 School Street and continued as an all-volunteer organization until 1967 with the hiring of its first director.   In 1975 the municipalities of Clarks Summit, Clarks Green, and South Abington Township , declared it their ‘official Library.’ In 1982 a referendum creating a dedicated county Library tax was passed and in 1983 the Library became part of the Lackawanna County Library System.
The current Library is located in a building constructed in 1991 on donated property, which opened March 2, 1992. It contains a community meeting room frequently used by local non-profit organizations, the Friends of the Abington Community Library, and for other Library-sponsored programs. Originally ten thousand square feet, the addition of a Children’s Room, opened in October 2002, increased the Library’s total size to approximately 14,500 square feet.   A total of 55 parking spaces are available in two lots.

 

 

2007 Funding:  Lackawanna County & State Support ($557,178 or 90%),        Access PA ($ 25,613 or  4%), Local (Municipal Support, Donations, Fund Drive:   38,252 or 7%).

   

Staff:   The Library currently has a staff of eight full-time staff, and twenty part-time staff including pages.   The full time staff includes the director, head of children’s services, head of young adult and adult services, an assistant in the children’s room, reference/interLibrary loan librarian, chief circulation clerk, and one circulation clerk.  Part-time clerks work anywhere from six to twenty-five hours each week.  Five pages work evenings, Saturdays, and Sundays.  Four staff members have master’s degrees and one is a Provisional librarian (has credits towards a master’s).

  

Collection: At the end of 2007 the Library collection held a total of over 79,000 items, including books, non-circulating reference books, DVDs and videocassettes, talking books on CD and cassette, music CDs and cassettes, filmstrips, and periodicals.  The Library has also added two ways to download talking books and two databases for Genealogy research: Ancestry.com and HeritageQuest.  In 2007, nearly 240,000 items circulated through this Library and 4,650 new items were added to the collection. 

  

The Library over 100 periodicals, most of which can be borrowed for one week.   Newspapers include: Abington Journal , Barron’s, Christian Science Monitor, New York Times, Scranton Times & Tribune, Suburban , USA Today, and Wall Street Journal. Investors may find Value Line, Morningstar Reports, and Standard & Poor’s Outlook useful.

 

InterLibrary Loan and Reference Services:

InterLibrary loan helps meet the needs of our patrons.  In 2007, 872 InterLibrary Loans were made state and nation-wide upon request.  Many, many more loans were made, and sent to, Lackawanna county public libraries.  Reference collections are found in both the adult and children’s areas, with qualified reference assistance available for Library users.  In 2007, over 1,500 reference questions were answered.  

 

Computer Services:   The Library has 12 public access Internet workstations for adult users and 5 for children; in 2007 more than 24,000 reservations were made at this Library.   The workstations also have direct access to Pennsylvania Power Library, a collection of databases provided through Commonwealth Libraries.   Users are also welcome to use the Microsoft programs available on the workstations.   The children’s workstations are loaded with learning games and filtered Internet access. In 2006 the Library received free wireless Internet access for patrons, compliments of Comcast.  Staff is available to help patrons with the online catalog, resources available on POWER Library, brief instruction on using Internet workstations, and readers advisory.   The Library also has a microfilm/fiche reader and the Scranton Times on microfilm from 1895 1990.  

 

Programs: Five five-week story hour sessions are held Monday through Friday throughout the school year for children 2 – 5 years. There is a bi-monthly story hour for children ages 1 to 3, and occasional evening programs. Special summer story hours are held during June and July.   Summer and winter reading programs are available to both children and young adults and numerous book discussions for all ages are available frequently.   Other special and educational programs are frequently offered to children, young adults, and adults throughout the year.   An active teen advisory board plans and conducts book discussions and special programs for teens.   In addition, the teen board plans and holds special programs for younger children.   The popular “American Girl” events and “Pirate Day” are examples.  The Friends assist us with programming for adults and two Used Book Sales, rounding out a full palette of lifelong learning and entertainment.

 
Program Stats: In 2007, there were 3,331 juvenile visits, 958 young adult program, and 1,702 adult visits.

 
Service Hours: The Library is open 71 hours each week.  Holidays and early closings are posted on our website,
www.lclshome.org/abington. Hours of operation are:

                            Monday Friday      9 AM. to 9 PM

                            Saturday        `           9 AM to 5 PM.

                            Sunday                      2 PM to 5 PM.


Service Area:
  Abington Community Library’s service area includes the boroughs and townships in the Abington Heights School District (Abington, Clarks Green, Clarks Summit, Glenburn, Newton, North Abington, Ransom, South Abington, and West Abington) and Scott Township.   As part of the Lackawanna County Library System it offers Library service free of charge to any resident of Lackawanna County . (Population over 28,000 based on 2000 census)

 

Affiliations: The Abington Community Library is a member of the Lackawanna County Library System, a federated system for med in 1982.   The Library holds membership in American Library Association, the Pennsylvania Library Association, and the Public Library Association.   In 2005 the Library became members of the Abington Business and Professionals Association.

 

Awards:  The Lackawanna County Commissioners issued a proclamation declaring September 12, 2006, "Abington Community Library Day."  The proclamation came in response to the Library's recognition as one of three libraries to receive the annual Marketing Award from the Office of Commonwealth Libraries in June 2006.   In 2007 the Library recognized new IDEAL PATRONs: First Lady Laura Bush, and the Honorable Tom Ridge and his wife Michele.

 
Boards: The Abington Community Library has three boards. The Library is incorporated and its business is conducted by a Board of Directors , each serving a three-year term.   Meetings are held monthly.   The Friends of the Abington Community Library (started in 1972) is primarily involved with fundraising through their semi-annual used book sales.   The Abington Community Library ~ Teen Leadership Committee (begun in June of 2002), a teen advisory board, primarily conducts programming for teens and assists with numerous other events both locally and county-wide as needed.

 

 


February 2008