Marisa Giuliani (left) and Laura Murray are both expecting layoff notices as the Peterborough Public Library carries through with a staff restructuring. (Photo: Will Pearson) The union representing local library workers is voicing concerns about a planned staff restructuring at the Peterborough Public Library (PPL). “The loss of these roles will negatively affect families and communities who depend on the library, its services, and its programs just as much as it will impact all of us working here,” stated Patricia Scoffield, the union president, in the press release. She mentioned this is the first time in her thirty years with the library that layoffs have occurred. Library CEO Jennifer Jones directed inquiries to City of Peterborough spokesperson Brendan Wedley, who claimed that library services would remain unaffected by the changes. “There will be no cuts to programming,” Wedley asserted. The restructuring will ultimately lead to a net reduction of only one full-time equivalent position within a workforce comprising around 50 employees since two new positions are also being created, according to Wedley. However, library workers argue that services will indeed feel the effects of this restructuring and claim that the new roles may not appeal to current staff as much as their existing positions do. Scoffield noted PPL currently employs four librarians. One handles managing the library’s collections while another oversees its information systems including the catalog. The remaining two librarians focus on developing and delivering programming for PPL-one dedicated to children’s activities and another to adult and teen offerings. The programming librarians are responsible for initiatives such as the Parent-Child Mother Goose early literacy program along with the One Book, One Peterborough city-wide reading challenge. Under this new staffing plan, both programming librarian roles will be eliminated and replaced by one higher-paid librarian overseeing programs for all ages alongside a new lower-paid assistant role meant for program delivery. (At present, there are two assistants; after this change, there would be three.) The position held by the librarian managing PPL’s information systems will also be removed with those responsibilities transferred to other team members. The role overseeing PPL’s collections is not affected by layoffs.
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Marisa Giuliani (left) and Laura Murray are both expecting layoff notices as the Peterborough Public Library carries through with a staff restructuring. (Photo: Will Pearson) The union representing local library workers is voicing concerns about a planned staff restructuring at the Peterborough Public Library (PPL). “The loss of these roles will negatively affect families and communities who depend on the library, its services, and its programs just as much as it will impact all of us working here,” stated Patricia Scoffield, the union president, in the press release. She mentioned this is the first time in her thirty years with the library that layoffs have occurred. Library CEO Jennifer Jones directed inquiries to City of Peterborough spokesperson Brendan Wedley, who claimed that library services would remain unaffected by the changes. “There will be no cuts to programming,” Wedley asserted. The restructuring will ultimately lead to a net reduction of only one full-time equivalent position within a workforce comprising around 50 employees since two new positions are also being created, according to Wedley. However, library workers argue that services will indeed feel the effects of this restructuring and claim that the new roles may not appeal to current staff as much as their existing positions do. Scoffield noted PPL currently employs four librarians. One handles managing the library’s collections while another oversees its information systems including the catalog. The remaining two librarians focus on developing and delivering programming for PPL-one dedicated to children’s activities and another to adult and teen offerings. The programming librarians are responsible for initiatives such as the Parent-Child Mother Goose early literacy program along with the One Book, One Peterborough city-wide reading challenge. Under this new staffing plan, both programming librarian roles will be eliminated and replaced by one higher-paid librarian overseeing programs for all ages alongside a new lower-paid assistant role meant for program delivery. (At present, there are two assistants; after this change, there would be three.) The position held by the librarian managing PPL’s information systems will also be removed with those responsibilities transferred to other team members. The role overseeing PPL’s collections is not affected by layoffs.
Marisa Giuliani (left) and Laura Murray are both expecting layoff notices as the Peterborough Public Library carries through with a staff restructuring. (Photo: Will Pearson) The union representing local library workers is voicing concerns about a planned staff restructuring at the Peterborough Public Library (PPL). “The loss of these roles will negatively affect families and communities who depend on the library, its services, and its programs just as much as it will impact all of us working here,” stated Patricia Scoffield, the union president, in the press release. She mentioned this is the first time in her thirty years with the library that layoffs have occurred. Library CEO Jennifer Jones directed inquiries to City of Peterborough spokesperson Brendan Wedley, who claimed that library services would remain unaffected by the changes. “There will be no cuts to programming,” Wedley asserted. The restructuring will ultimately lead to a net reduction of only one full-time equivalent position within a workforce comprising around 50 employees since two new positions are also being created, according to Wedley. However, library workers argue that services will indeed feel the effects of this restructuring and claim that the new roles may not appeal to current staff as much as their existing positions do. Scoffield noted PPL currently employs four librarians. One handles managing the library’s collections while another oversees its information systems including the catalog. The remaining two librarians focus on developing and delivering programming for PPL-one dedicated to children’s activities and another to adult and teen offerings. The programming librarians are responsible for initiatives such as the Parent-Child Mother Goose early literacy program along with the One Book, One Peterborough city-wide reading challenge. Under this new staffing plan, both programming librarian roles will be eliminated and replaced by one higher-paid librarian overseeing programs for all ages alongside a new lower-paid assistant role meant for program delivery. (At present, there are two assistants; after this change, there would be three.) The position held by the librarian managing PPL’s information systems will also be removed with those responsibilities transferred to other team members. The role overseeing PPL’s collections is not affected by layoffs.
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