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July 21, 2008

Check it out: Most Morris libraries see more visitors

Staff and wire reports • July 20, 2008

Daily Record

WASHINGTON -- Each year, more than 1 billion people visit libraries to borrow books or videos, log onto the Internet or participate in various community programs.


But government support for libraries, and how much community residents use them, varies widely across the country.

Gannett News Service analyzed data obtained from the federal government's National Center for Education Statistics for 2002 and 2005 and from individual states for 2006.

In some categories, 2005 data was more reliable or complete than information from 2006.

The following are some facts about libraries both nationally and in Morris County:

• Two Morris County municipalities have library systems that include more than one location; Parsippany has three branches while Rockaway Township has two. The Morristown-Morris Township library is the only with a bookmobile.

• The Morristown library has the most registered borrowers -- people with a library card -- more than 44,000 while Parsippany has the most visitors, almost 400,000 a year.

The Morris County Library had the most items borrowed, 588,000.

• Overall in Morris County, 13 of 35 libraries reported a decrease in visits -- the number of times someone comes into the library -- between 2002 and 2006.

More than half of the libraries -- 22 of 35 -- reported a drop in the number of items borrowed despite increases in visits in 63 percent of libraries.

• The Morris County Library has the most computers of any library in the county: 76. The county library also has the biggest budget -- about $7.7 million.

• Visits to libraries nationwide increased roughly 10 percent between 2002 and 2006 to about 1.3 billion.

• The South lags the rest of the country in per-capita visits to libraries, according to the 2006 state numbers.

Mississippi, Arkansas, Alabama, Texas and Tennessee ranked at the bottom.

• Circulation, which measures how often library visitors check out print or electronic materials, increased nationwide about 9 percent, from 1.66 billion to 1.81 billion, between 2002 and 2006.

• The number of Internet-capable computers soared 38 percent between 2002 and 2006 -- from about 137,000 to nearly 190,000.

• Rural states in the Midwest and New England had the highest numbers of Internet-ready computers per capita, according to the 2006 state numbers. Vermont, Kentucky, Iowa, Maine and Indiana were at the top. The District of Columbia, Nevada, Hawaii, California and Delaware were at the bottom.

• Nationally, library spending on day-to-day costs such as staffing and materials was $31.65 per person in 2005. The District of Columbia, and local governments in Ohio and New York topped the list, spending at least $50 per capita. Local governments in Mississippi, West Virginia, Arkansas and Tennessee spent the least -- less than $17.

• In 2005, 42 percent of all circulation in Vermont's public libraries involved children's materials -- the highest share in the nation.

Mississippi had the lowest percentage, at 26 percent.

• From 1995 to 2005, library spending per person grew by $20 in the District of Columbia and Ohio -- the biggest dollar jump nationally.

Spending increases were lowest in West Virginia, Hawaii, Mississippi and Georgia. Library spending in those states grew by less than $5 per capita.

Posted by tumulty at July 21, 2008 11:50 AM

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