================================================================= ALAWON Volume 6, Number 91 ISSN 1069-7799 October 30, 1997 American Library Association Washington Office Newsline In this issue: (181 lines) FRANCIS BUCKLEY, JR. APPOINTED SUPERINTENDENT OF DOCUMENTS GATES LIBRARY FOUNDATION RELEASES GRANT GUIDELINES FOR LOW-INCOME LIBRARIES TO BRING PUBLIC ACCESS TO COMPUTERS AND THE INTERNET; 1000 LIBRARIES RECEIVE FUNDS IN 1998 _________________________________________________________________ FRANCIS BUCKLEY, JR. APPOINTED SUPERINTENDENT OF DOCUMENTS Public Printer Michael F. DiMario announced October 14 that Francis J. Buckley, Jr., director of the Shaker Heights Public Library in Shaker Heights, Ohio, has been appointed as Superintendent of Documents for the U.S. Government Printing Office (GPO) in Washington, D.C. He plans to assume the position in December 1997. Active in ALA since 1974, Buckley currently chairs the Inter-Association Working Group on Government Information Policy which is working on proposals to amend the law governing the print and dissemination of Federal publications. He has also served several terms on ALA Council and chairing the Government Documents Round Table and the ALA Committee on Legislation's Subcommittee on Government Information. He is on the board of trustees of the Cleveland Area Metropolitan Library System and served on the board of trustees of the Online Computer Library Center (OCLC). The Superintendent of Documents oversees a budget of more than $100 million and a workforce of approximately 700. As a unit of GPO, the Superintendent of Documents distributes millions of copies of federal documents to nearly 1,400 federal depository libraries nationwide, where they are available free of charge to the public. The Superintendent also operates a large mail order program and 24 bookstores nationwide for public sales of government information. Additionally, the organization maintains the GPO Access service (www.gpo.gov) which the public uses to retrieve an average of 5 million publications monthly. _________________________________________________________________ GATES LIBRARY FOUNDATION RELEASES GRANT GUIDELINES FOR LOW-INCOME LIBRARIES TO BRING PUBLIC ACCESS TO COMPUTERS AND THE INTERNET 1000 LIBRARIES RECEIVE FUNDS IN 1998 Note: For more information on this press release, contact Rose Berg-Fosnaugh at 206/448-7620, or Carol Lucas at 425/402-6382. REDMOND, Wash. -- The Gates Library Foundation today (October 28)released its first grant guidelines for U.S. public libraries to help provide public access to computers and the Internet across the country. During the first round of funding, the Foundation will work with approximately 1,000 individual libraries, with a special emphasis on serving low-income communities. Grants will be used to provide new computers for library patrons, and portions of the grants also will be dedicated to staff technical training and support. Grants will range from $4,000, for a small rural library requiring only one computer, to $30,000 or more for larger library buildings which will receive 10 or more PCs. The Foundation has targeted libraries in the neediest states and communities, using U.S. Census statistics and a study conducted by the American Library Association on public libraries and poverty to establish eligibility guidelines. The Gates Library Foundation was formed in June, 1997, with a commitment from Bill and Melinda Gates of $200 million to purchase computers for public library patrons and provide technical training and support for library staffs in low-income communities. Microsoft Corporation will donate software for each computer purchased through Foundation grants. "Based on what we've learned from library leadership across the country, we developed three programs: first, statewide partnerships; second, an approach for urban library systems serving large low-income communities; and third, a program for individual library participation," said Patty Stonesifer, president of the Gates Library Foundation. The three categories of grants are: STATEWIDE LIBRARY PARTNERSHIPS--Statewide partnerships are cooperative relationships between the Foundation, state library agencies, schools of library science, and local libraries within a state. The Foundation provides broad funding, technical assistance and training to libraries throughout the state. The aim of statewide partnerships is to dramatically expand public access to computers and the Internet and to help build skills of library staff. For the current round of funding, only those states which, according to the 1990 U.S. Census, had a poverty rate of at least 19 percent are eligible to apply for partnership consideration. Census figures indicate those states are: Arkansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, New Mexico and West Virginia. The Foundation will enter into three statewide partnerships in 1998. The first statewide partnership was awarded last week to the state of Alabama. It will reach more than 200 public libraries across the state and will provide a model for the 1998 statewide partnerships. URBAN LIBRARY LEADERSHIP GRANTS--Urban leadership grants provide funding for large library systems serving the needs of very low-income communities. Grants expand public access to computers and the Internet at multiple branches and provide technical assistance and training to library staff. For the current round of funding, only those library systems serving a population of more than 100,000, and which have at least two library buildings serving areas of extreme poverty are eligible. An area of extreme poverty is a library building service area that has at least 40 percent of its population in poverty as defined by the U.S. Census and identified in the recent ALA study. In 1998, 51 large library systems are eligible and 20 systems will be awarded grants. OPPORTUNITY GRANTS--These grants provide funding and limited technical assistance to libraries serving low-income communities which are planning to expand public access to computers and the Internet. Grants are limited to funding for work at one branch. For the current round of funding, only those library systems which have at least one library building serving an area of extreme poverty are eligible. At least 20 opportunity grants will be awarded in 1998. The full text of the guidelines, as well as application forms, are available at the Foundation's website, www.glf.org, or at the Foundation office, 425/882-1200. Applications are due December 15, 1997, with the first round of grants to be awarded by February 28, 1998. The Gates Library Foundation was founded in June 1997 by Bill and Melinda Gates to partner with public libraries in bringing access to computers and digital information to patrons in low-income communities in the United States and Canada. The Gates' commitment of $200 million is being distributed in the form of grants, technical training and assistance. In addition, Microsoft Corporation has donated software for each grant recipient. The Gates Library Foundation, located in Redmond, Washington, is a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization. The Gates Library Foundation partners with Technology Resource Institute (TRI), a Seattle-based non-profit organization, to provide technical training and support for all grant recipients. For more information contact the Foundation's website, www.glf.org, or call at 425/882-1200. _________________________________________________________________ ALAWON is a free, irregular publication of the American Library Association Washington Office. To subscribe, send the message: subscribe ala-wo [your_firstname] [your_lastname] to listproc @ala.org. To unsubscribe, send the message: unsubscribe ala-wo to listproc@ala.org. ALAWON archives at http://www.ala.org/ washoff/alawon. Visit our Web site at http://www.alawash.org. ALA Washington Office 202.628.8410 (V) 1301 Pennsylvania Ave., NW, #403 202.628.8419 (F) Washington, DC 20004-1701 800.941.8478 (V) Lynne E. Bradley, Editor Deirdre Herman, Managing Editor Contributors: Anne Heanue All materials subject to copyright by the American Library Association may be reprinted or redistributed for noncommercial purposes with appropriate credits. =================================================================