Lissa Staley | Movers & Shakers 2024—Community Builders

Rather than outreach, Lissa Staley focuses on “inreach,” inviting local agencies into the library to assist patrons with mental health screenings, Medicaid and health insurance information, FAFSA applications, workforce support, family legal and emergency aid, GED classes, and small business mentoring. 

CURRENT POSITION

Community Connections Librarian, Topeka and Shawnee County Public Library, KS


DEGREE

MSLIS, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, 2001


FAST FACT

Staley has written 21 NaNoWriMo first drafts but has never tried to edit or publish her own novels.


FOLLOW

linkedin.com/in/lissa-staley-3761a341; tscpl.org/trivia


Photo by Michael A. Foley

Inreach and Outreach

Rather than outreach, Lissa Staley focuses on “inreach,” inviting local agencies into the library to assist patrons with mental health screenings, Medicaid and health insurance information, FAFSA applications, workforce support, family legal and emergency aid, GED classes, and small business mentoring. In collaboration with the United Way of Kaw Valley, she brought in a Community Navigator program, where social work interns and volunteers help residents navigate social services every weekday in Topeka and Shawnee County Public Library’s (TSCPL) dedicated Community Resources office.

Brenda Hough, staff development coordinator at TSCPL, says the Community Navigator project wouldn’t exist without Staley’s tenacity and the trust she has built with community organizations.

Staley also trains staff to use the WellSky Kansas Community Network, a database of healthcare and social service organizations, to connect people to vital community resources. She promotes the database in the community and serves on the advisory panel to ensure that listings are accurate and comprehensive. In addition, she has represented the library through Heartland Healthy Neighborhoods and Heartland Visioning meetings, Greater Topeka Partnership’s Momentum 2022 strategic planning, and Stormont Vail Hospital’s Patient and Family Partnership Council for Quality and Safety. Addressing community members’ needs also means having meaningful conversations. To that end Staley helped add circulating Conversation Kits to the library’s collection, and incorporates them into programming. These kits contain decks of question cards and interactive games, aimed at a range of ages, to spark dialogue on a variety of interests.

“I want each person to feel seen and validated for their choice to come to the library,” Staley says. “I want every person to know we’re glad they’re here.”

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Joni Olson

Hi,
Is Froid, MT the historical town of residence for Odile? If not, how did you come to choose that small town in Montana?

Posted : 2023-02-17 03:33:47


Stephanie Smith

Thank you for a wonderful book. As a teacher at the International School of Paris in the 1990's, I loved the ALP. I could do research there that I used in my history classes.
Thank you, Janet Charles, for a great book.

Posted : 2022-06-08 20:03:08


Anne Brien

Hi, I am curious to know who wrote the letters betraying the library in the book The Paris Library?

Regards
Anne Brien

Posted : 2021-12-15 11:11:34

Angelo Mascaro

Fantastic read, but who wrote the betrayal letters? Margaret Saint James?

Posted : 2022-04-17 17:54:10


Mary Driscoll

Loved this story. It was finished in a few days and I was sad it was over. I always thought what I would of done, living in occupied France. More important, what am I doing today with life events. Touched home for me because I lived in Montana and visited Paris. Disappointed though that I did not know about the American Library, now I need to go back.

Posted : 2021-12-04 03:25:40


Sheila Minogue-Calver

Loved this story. Thanks Janet for a captivating, unheard of before, this book tells this wonderful story. I am reading "Moonlight in Odessa". Loving it too. Another awesome read! Keep on writing such wonderful adventures of interesting women!! Sheila

Posted : 2021-10-21 21:29:34


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