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	<title>Caledon Citizen</title>
	<link>https://caledoncitizen.com</link>
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	<pubDate>Wed Jun 17 19:53:42 2026 / +0000  GMT</pubDate>
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			<title>Caledon chief librarian concerned over provincial cuts to libraries</title>
			<link>https://caledoncitizen.com/?p=30327</link>
			<pubDate>Wed Jun 17 19:53:42 2026 / +0000  GMT</pubDate>
			<guid isPermaLink="false">https://caledoncitizen.com/?p=30327</guid>
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<p>Written by: JOSHUA SANTOS</p>
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<p>An immediate change has come to the Caledon Public Library
with fears of more forthcoming.</p>
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<p>Delivery of the library's inter-library loan program, where
Caledon libraries collect thousands of books from other libraries, has freeze
as the service has been postponed. It is distributed by the Southern Ontario
Library Services (SOLS), where the Province slashed 50 per cent of their
budget.</p>
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<p>“We have access to over 70,000 titles on behalf of Caledon
residents through that shared collection and that's larger than some large
municipalities have access to,” said Colleen Lipp, CEO and chief librarian of
the Caledon Public Library. “We really rely on their purchasing power and
ability to negotiate book purchases on our behalf. It really is a far more
efficient way to get more bang for tax payer dollars then every library trying
to negotiate those deals on their own.”</p>
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<p>Lipp said they received correspondence from SOLS stating
they're working with the Ministry of Tourism, Culture and Sport who are looking
at all their services and that there will be more information forthcoming.</p>
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<p>“I hope it will be in the coming days, but I don't know what
that is going to look like yet,” said Lipp.</p>
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<p>Lipp thinks the Ford Government was not aware of the
implications cutting services to libraries would have on patrons. She said the
Ministry of Tourism, Culture and Sport assured the day-to-day operations of libraries
will not change, which she believes is not true</p>
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<p>“I don't think they specifically targeted libraries,” said
Lipp. “I think they are making cuts across a wide dearth of sectors, and that's
one of the reasons why it's so challenging. It's very difficult for us to rally
troops in support of this, where there are cuts going on across education and
services for autism and flood plain management and healthcare; sadly, we're in
good company.”</p>
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<p>People may think of libraries as a soft service but Lipp
said it's essential to residents and patrons, who use it for many reasons like
searching for job or researching a diagnosis from a doctor.</p>
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<p>“I think what a library does now, is so much more than what
a lot of people might think of as a library, if they haven't been in the
library for a long time,” said Lipp. “We still do the traditional services that
people would come to think of, when they come to the library, but really we're
evolving and shifting to the answer to what people need in any point of
transition. </p>
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<p>“When somebody moves to a new community, whether they're new
to Canada or new to a neighbourhood, very often their local library branch is
the first place they stop. When somebody is a new parent, and they're at home
with a new baby and they want to come out and be part of a community and see
some grown-ups for a change and bring their child to story time. That's as much
for the baby as it is for the parent.”</p>
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<p>Although the Caledon Public Library receives 97 per cent of
their budget from the Town, they do receive an annual public library operating
grant from the Ministry of Tourism, Culture and Sport. She heard that it is safe
for now and they will continue to receive it.</p>
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<p>“While we are not ungrateful for that, that funding has not
changed in over 20 years,” said Lipp. “The purchasing power of what we receive,
which is $58,171, in 2019 versus what we received at the end of the 90s, has
significantly weakened.”</p>
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<p>Further, she is more concerned that the Town will be
downloading provincial expenses to municipalities, which in turn will have
implications on how the library receives their money to operation.</p>
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<p>“With various cuts and changes to legislation across so many
sectors that has implications for downloading to the municipality and therefore
there is simply less funds to go around at that level,” said Lipp.</p>
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<p>“the size of the pie is not getting any bigger, but the way
it is divided up has certainty changed over time.”</p>
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<p>She said there has been a lot of media awareness raised and
discussions across a number of other libraries.</p>
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<p>“We are supportive of SOLS and are very appreciative of the
work that SOLS has done in supporting libraries, and I think they've allowed us
to be as efficient as we could be and they've always allowed us to deliver the
best service we could, and I think we're just disappointed that we're not going
to be able to always get what we could for patrons, in the way that we had
previously,” said Lipp.</p>
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			<excerpt-encoded><![CDATA[]]></excerpt-encoded>
			<wp-post_id>30327</wp-post_id>
			<wp-post_date>2019-05-16 11:16:36</wp-post_date>
			<wp-post_date_gmt>2019-05-16 15:16:36</wp-post_date_gmt>
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