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Report: ALA discussion on food and drink policies
- To: padg@xxxxxxx
- Subject: Report: ALA discussion on food and drink policies
- From: "Yvonne A. Carignan" <yc38@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Tue, 6 Jul 1999 14:10:30 -0700
- Message-id: <SIMEON.9907061719.O@Libraries.umail.umd.edu>
Report
ALCTS/PARS
Preservation Issues in Small to Mid-Sized Preservation Programs
Discussion Group
ALA New Orleans 1999
Food and Drink Policies in the Library
As a "thank you" to those who responded to our survey on food and drink
policies, we are reporting the results both of the survey and the
discussion at ALA.
We had responses from thirteen institutions, 100% of which had written
food and drink policies compared to 71% of the 72 institutions
participating in the ARL survey reported in ARL Spec Kit #237,
_Managing Food and Drink in ARL Libraries_. Enforcement is equally
divided between little or no enforcement, library staff enforcement,
and a combination of library staff and security staff enforcement.
We asked if any have public coffee bars. Three institutions currently
or soon will have coffee bars. No one reported using the profits from
coffee bars to support preservation efforts, although we know that one
non-responding institution does use coffee bar profits for extra
cleaning and trash pickup in the library.
The discussion at ALA, as advertised, focused on problems and solutions
related to food and drink in the library, as well as on promotional
efforts. Problems included staff resistance both to limiting their own
eating and drinking habits and to enforcing no food and drink policies
with the public. Solutions included "picking your fights" to overcome
resistance and compromise policies allowing certain closed containers
for beverages.
Patricia Palmer described the change in policy at Virginia Commonwealth
University Libraries that seemed to typify many experiences and debates
as policy relaxed to allow staff and patrons to drink from rigid
plastic "approved" containers. Food is still controversial, however,
as it is not allowed in public areas, and staff can have only cold food
in work areas where there are no library materials. Hot meals can be
prepared in staff lounges.
Normandy Simons Helmer, head of the University of Oregon Library's
Preservation & Binding Department, described how her library promoted a
new policy to allow certain kinds of beverage containers. The
Preservation Department created an eye-catching display with
"permitted"and "not permitted" beverage containers. The ARL Spec Kit
included a University of Oregon policy and Web page, but URLs for two
interesting and more recent pages are as follows:
. Why can't I eat in the Library?
http://libweb.uoregon.edu/preservn/eating.html
University [of Oregon] Library System: Food, Drink, and Tobacco Policy
http://libweb.uoregon.edu/policies/food-drink.html
Among our handouts, we included Web pages from Oberlin College which
has a food and drink policy with fines for violations as well as links
to virtual food. The URL for the Oberlin policy is as follows:
http://www.oberlin.edu/library/services/administrative/food_policy.html
We also displayed a bag submitted by Julie Page and specially designed
for use at UC San Diego to hide staff lunches coming into the library.
"EAT A GOOD BOOK LATELY? PLEASE, DON'T EAT IN THE LIBRARY," a
prize-winning poster from Cornell University's Preservation Department,
was also on display.
Thanks again to all who participated in the survey or discussion.
----------------------
Yvonne Carignan Patricia Palmer
Preservation Department Head Head, Preservation Services
McKeldin Library Virginia Commonwealth University
University of Maryland Box 842033
College Park, MD 20742 Richmond, VA 23284-2033
yc38@xxxxxxxxxxxxx phone: 804.828.2287;
VoiceMail: 301-405-9343 fax: 804.828.1051
pepalmer@xxxxxxxxxxx