Referenda: 2019 library ballot measures see success in renewals, less for new funding.
Overall, 2019 was a good year for libraries on ballots across the country. Of the 154 library questions identified by Library Journal and EveryLibrary through tracking and post-election research, 124 were for funding, 24 were for buildings, and the remaining six focused on governance or legal structure. Of the 124 operating levies and budgets, fully 93 percent passed. Of the 24 building or general obligation bonds for facilities, seven out of ten passed. Overall, libraries won at a higher rate than in 2018, when only 88 percent of funding and 61 percent of building questions passed, respectively.
As is usual in off-cycle years, operating levies and annual budgets were highly concentrated in a few states. New York, Ohio, and Colorado together accounted for 88 of the 124 renewals and annual budget measures this year. In several states, libraries were forced to go to the ballot to make up for shortfalls and cuts from county and city partners. There is an ongoing theme of local politicians telling libraries to find alternative sources of revenue to taxes in order to run these public institutions. Several libraries in Colorado were on the ballot, in full or part, to ask voters to remove tax caps that reduce the library’s revenue by a formula or percentage.
With 124 library-related operating tax measures on the ballot, it is good to report that nine out of ten passed in 2019. As in many recent years, renewals and annual budgets were almost all approved. The stability of the renewal cycle is key to the overall financial health and well-being of the entire library sector. However, renewals are not indexed for inflation or personnel costs, particularly in states where the minimum wage is increasing or where pension obligations are outpacing revenues. It is perhaps because renewals are easier to pass that few library leaders want to rock the boat by asking for new resources. As reported by OCLC in its 2018 “From Awareness to Funding” study, the baseline of voter support nationally is now only 58 percent likely to definitely vote yes for libraries. We can see that softness in voter support in the lower passage rate for new funding questions.
Notable campaigns included passage of an operating levy for the Pine River Library District in Bayfield, CO, following a very close nine-vote loss at the 2018 midterms. The leadership team reworked the measure and reengaged a new approach to the community to take it to 59 percent yes this time around. The Wilkinson Public Library in Telluride, CO, was on the ballot for the first time in 22 years—and passed a new funding levy. Like many libraries in recent years, the Ogdensburg Public Library in New York was forced to go to the ballot because of a funding shortfall from its longtime municipal partner. The library failed to pass a funding referendum on the School District ballot. In Ohio, the Louisville Public Library lost its renewal request by 107 votes. This portion of the levy accounts for one third of operations and costs a property owner about $24 for every $100,000 in home valuation. The library will re-run the ballot measure in March 2020. The Huntington Woods Library and Cultural Center in Michigan received one of the highest passage rates, with 91 percent of the community voting yes for the levy; Seymour Library in Auburn, NY saw a 92 percent passage rate.
Back in 2017, New Jersey libraries were given new authority to go to the ballot and request funding above the .33 mil rate that was otherwise the ceiling for voter approval. Mahwah Public Library became the first library to pass a measure under this new law, 72 percent outvoting the 28 percent. While cities can choose to provide supplemental funding–and many communities, including Mahwah, do–this voter-approved funding is stable and cannot be reduced by local politicians. The library leadership team ran an excellent information only campaign, the first in the library’s 117-year history.
Recreational marijuana sales in Craig, CO, are now taxed at a four percent variable sales tax rate that is dedicated to the library and museum for the next five years. This city-level tax backfills shortfalls from Colorado’s Moffat County general fund. County commissioners have made significant cuts to both institutions’ budgets as county tax collection has fallen. It may be the first time that a voter-approved dedicated tax on cannabis is used for libraries. It is also the first time in six years of trying to pass recreational sales in town that a ballot measure has succeeded.
In 2019, six communities considered, struggled, and ultimately voted on the big question of what kind of a community they want to be and whether they see libraries as essential and necessary or a luxury and nice-to-have service. While the library sector thinks there is a settled and obvious answer, voters in Woodland, WA, decided against creating a new limited district to fund library services for everyone. Individuals and families who want a library card can still purchase a non-resident card to use the Fort Vancouver Library, but voters decided against taxes as the way to make library services universally available.
In another part of the state, however, voters eagerly joined their neighboring library district. Voters in College Place, WA, agreed to annex themselves to the Walla Walla County Rural Library District in August. Between 2000 and 2010, the city had a dedicated reimbursement fund for residents who wanted to buy library cards. In 2018, the city council reinstated that program and demand was so high that it decided to ask the voters to formally join the district the following year. The city had been the largest in Washington without library services.
Three years ago, the county commissioners in LaPlata County, CO, cut off funding for public library services that were co-located in two rural schools. The school district, along with the Durango Public Library, had been able to keep the public library services open with short-term grant funding, but that was set to run out at the end of the 2019-20 school year. A dedicated group of community stakeholders did the hard work of drawing a proposed district and fielding a petition to place a new Southwest LaPlata Library District on the November ballot. After a well-built, volunteer-led Get Out the Vote campaign, the new district passed with 52 percent of the vote. The new library board will contract with the Durango Public Library for services.
There is one measure in the “pass” column that is not cause for celebration. In Lafayette Parish, LA, voters approved a $10 million rededication levy put forward by the outgoing consolidated city and parish government. The vote will redistribute funds from the library’s reserves to drainage, roads, and parks projects. While the library is part of municipal government, the levy that supports the library is out of the immediate control of parish officials. However, they were able to place the rededication question on the ballot and succeeded in pitting the issue of flood control against the needs of the library.
Across the county, 24 library building projects appeared on local ballots, and 17 passed. Most were outlined in standalone questions such as the Huntley, IL, expansion project or the new libraries in Meridian, ID. In other places, library projects were components of much larger municipal measures. The Albuquerque Public Library was an anchor project of a citywide GOBond for construction. In Georgia, the Athens-Clark County community passed a SPLOST, or Special Purpose Tax, three to one. It included funding for a new Eastside library and three dozen other projects for fire protection, water, green space, affordable housing, and mental health services. Two building measures that failed to pass in New Hampshire required super-majorities to be enacted. While they both received more than 50 percent of the vote, they failed to reach the required threshold to proceed.
The Flint, MI, library was on the November ballot with two measures. One was the renewal of a 2 mil operating levy that constitutes about half of its day-to-day operational funding. The other was a $12.6 million bond that is part of a $27.6 million renovation and upgrade project. The “Ready to Write a New Chapter” campaign included both capital fundraising efforts and the ballot measure. Both passed, and library will move to temporary quarters on Leap Day 2020 to kick off the renovation project.
Voters in Dorchester County, SC, approved a $30 million bond for new libraries in Summerville and Ridgeville. The Nicholson Memorial Library System in Garland, TX, will put a $21 million bond to work over the next 40 years to improve, equip, and expand library facilities. But in River Grove, IL, the voters heard strong opposition from the city and local elected officials and failed to approve a bond to relocate the library to a different part of town.
If we look deeper into several of the operating levies and referenda, there are facilities projects embedded in that count as well. For example, the Palatine, IL, campaign, which helped win LJ’s 2019 Marketer of the Year award, ensures that the library can make necessary and ongoing repairs, renovations, and upgrades to aging facilities without cutting services and collections in the process. Likewise, it was clear to voters who supported the Union Library of Hatboro, PA, that the .55 mil tax would be for upkeep as well as programs. This approach can appeal to voters who are interested in stability and careful management of the public trust.
At EveryLibrary, we have fielded dozens of questions from library leaders about whether they should be on the ballot in 2020 or not. There is a lot of angst in the library community about voter sentiment, and real uncertainty about how the top of the ticket could impact libraries down the ballot. There are a lot of opinions and conventional wisdom, but without local voter data, it’s all conjecture.
We are well past the time that libraries or advocates can simply put a measure on the ballot and expect it to pass. Trends show a steady decline in voter support nationally over the last decade. The electorate, and politics in general, have not become less contentious; voters are even more partisan in their outlook than any time in the recent past. This decline in core support means that whether you are considering a general election, off-cycle local election, or special election, you need to know what your own voters think, feel, and believe about taxes first—before you learn how they feel about the library.
If the 2017 off-cycle elections were any indication, libraries on Democratic presidential primary ballots may see a higher rate of progressive voters supporting them, possibly as an anti-Trump vote. However, if the 2018 midterms are our guide, library leaders need to be wary of large turnout general elections and under-informed voters. You need a solid plan and proper funding in place for both information-only communications and get out the vote campaigns—or the uninformed voter will behave in an uninformed way. So start polling and developing surveys that are designed to look beyond the user experience and which get at the level and type of support you have among voters. This must include ongoing marketing and outreach designed to build up or solidify that support, regardless whether those voters ever use their library.
LIBRARY GOVERNANCE REFERENDA 2019 |
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LOCATION | LIBRARY | RESULT | % YES | % NO |
COLORADO |
Southwest La Plata County Library District | PASS | 52 | 48 |
IDAHO |
Boise Public Library | PASS | 69 | 31 |
LOUISIANA |
Lafayette Public Library | PASS | 59 | 41 |
WASHINGTON |
Walla Walla County Rural Library District | PASS | 66 | 34 |
Union Gap |
Yakima Valley Regional Library | PASS | 67 | 33 |
Woodland |
Lewis River Library District | FAIL | 26 | 74 |
SOURCE: LJ PUBLIC LIBRARY REFERENDA 2019; Library Governance includes |
BUILDING REFERENDA 2019 |
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LOCATION | LIBRARY | RESULT | % YES | % NO |
ALABAMA Leeds |
Leeds Jane Culbreth Public Library | FAIL | 39 | 61 |
COLORADO Loveland |
Loveland Public Library | FAIL | 48 | 52 |
GEORGIA Athens |
Athens-Clarke County Library | PASS | 78 | 22 |
IDAHO Meridian |
Meridian Library District | PASS | 67 | 33 |
ILLINOIS Huntley |
Huntley Area Public Library District | PASS | 67 | 33 |
SOURCE: LJ PUBLIC LIBRARY REFERENDA 2019 |
BUILDING REFERENDA 2019 |
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LOCATION | LIBRARY | RESULT | % YES | % NO | LOCATION | LIBRARY | RESULT | % YES | % NO | |
COLORADO | OHIO | |||||||||
Bayfield | Pine River Library District | PASS | 59 | 41 | Ada | Ada Public Library | PASS | 63 | 37 | |
Brighton | Anythink Libraries | FAIL | 48 | 52 | Ashtabula | Ashtabula County District Library | PASS | 50 | 50 | |
Craig | Moffatt County Library - 2A | PASS | 55 | 45 | Bellevue | Bellevue Public Library | PASS | 71 | 29 | |
Craig | Moffatt County Library - 2B | PASS | 65 | 35 | Bryan | Williams County Public Library | PASS | 77 | 23 | |
Eagle | Eagle Valley Library District | PASS | 65 | 35 | Canton | Stark County Library District | PASS | 51 | 49 | |
Gunnison | Gunnison County Library District | PASS | 56 | 44 | Eastlake | Willoughby-Eastlake Public Library | PASS | 65 | 35 | |
Hotchkiss | Delta County Library District | FAIL | 44 | 56 | Eaton | Preble County District Library | PASS | 57 | 43 | |
Manitou Springs |
Pikes Peak Library District | PASS | 50 | 50 | Elmore | Harris Elmore Library | PASS | 73 | 27 | |
Pueblo | Pueblo City-County Library District | PASS | 59 | 41 | Euclid | Euclid Public Library | PASS | 78 | 22 | |
Rifle | Garfield County Public Library District | PASS | 53 | 47 | Fayette | Normal Memorial Library | PASS | 76 | 24 | |
Telluride | Wilkinson Public Library | PASS | 73 | 27 | Forest | Forest-Jackson Public Library | PASS | 75 | 25 | |
CONNECTICUT | Gnadenhutten | Gnadenhutten Public Library | PASS | 71 | 29 | |||||
Cromwell | Cromwell Belden Public Library | PASS | 75 | 25 | Granville | Granville Public Library | PASS | 80 | 20 | |
Madison | E.C. Scranton Memorial Library | PASS | 67 | 33 | Holgate | Holgate Community Library | PASS | 82 | 18 | |
Stafford | Stafford Public Library | PASS | 58 | 42 | London | London Public Library | PASS | 76 | 24 | |
ILLINOIS | Lorain | Lorain Public Library System | PASS | 68 | 32 | |||||
Palatine | Palatine Public Library District | PASS | 65 | 35 | Louisville | Louisville Public Library | FAIL | 49 | 51 | |
Rockton | Talcott Free Library District | PASS | 69 | 31 | McComb | McComb Public Library | PASS | 76 | 24 | |
Romeoville | White Oak Library District | FAIL | 49 | 51 | McConnelsville | Kate Love Simpson Morgan County Library | PASS | 71 | 29 | |
IOWA | Mechanicsburg | Mechanicsburg Public Library | PASS | 65 | 35 | |||||
Des Moines | Des Moines Public Library | PASS | 68 | 32 | Nelsonville | Athens County Public Libraries | PASS | 66 | 34 | |
Oxford | Oxford Public Library | PASS | 68 | 32 | North Ridgeville |
Lorain Public Library System | PASS | 75 | 25 | |
Tiffin | Springmier Community Library | PASS | 56 | 44 | Oberlin | Oberlin Public Library | PASS | 90 | 10 | |
MICHIGAN | Orrville | Orrville Public Library | PASS | 73 | 27 | |||||
Alpena | Alpena County George N. Fletcher Public Library |
PASS | 71 | 29 | Pemberville | Pemberville Public Library | PASS | 77 | 23 | |
Chelsea | Chelsea District Library | PASS | 66 | 34 | Portsmouth | Portsmouth Public Library | PASS | 68 | 32 | |
Dorr | Dorr Township Library | FAIL | 46 | 54 | Rock Creek | Rock Creek Public Library | PASS | 75 | 25 | |
Flint | Flint Public Library | PASS | 77 | 23 | Rockford | Rockford Carnegie Library | PASS | 87 | 13 | |
Inkster | Leanna Hicks Public Library | PASS | 69 | 31 | Shelby | Marvin Memorial Library | PASS | 76 | 24 | |
Marshall | Marshall District Library | PASS | 89 | 11 | Steubenville | Public Library of Steubenville and Jefferson County |
PASS | 71 | 29 | |
Pleasant Ridge | Huntington Woods Library and Cultural Center | PASS | 91 | 9 | Sunbury | Community Library | PASS | 70 | 30 | |
Portage | Portage Area District Library | PASS | 59 | 41 | Warren | Warren-Trumbull County Public Library | PASS | 59 | 41 | |
NEW JERSEY | West Jefferson | Hurt/Battelle Memorial Library | PASS | 72 | 28 | |||||
Mahwah | Mahwah Public Library | PASS | 72 | 28 | West Milton | Milton-Union Public Library | PASS | 75 | 25 | |
NEW YORK | Youngstown | Public Library of Youngstown & Mahoning County | PASS | 66 | 34 | |||||
Apalachin | Apalachin Public Library | PASS | 53 | 47 | OREGON | |||||
Auburn | Seymour Library | PASS | 92 | 8 | Corvallis | Corvallis Public Library | PASS | 73 | 27 | |
Aurora | Aurora Free Library | PASS | 74 | 26 | Newport | Lincoln County Library District | PASS | 73 | 27 | |
Baldwin | Baldwin Public Library | PASS | 81 | 19 | PENNSYLVANIA | |||||
Ballston Spa | Ballston Spa Public Library | PASS | 85 | 15 | Hatboro | Union Library of Hatboro | PASS | 72 | 28 | |
Barker | Barker Public Library | PASS | 74 | 26 | Macungie | Lower Macungie Library | PASS | 54 | 46 | |
Beekman | Beekman Library | PASS | 64 | 36 | WASHINGTON | |||||
Catskill | Catskill Public Library | PASS | 73 | 27 | Castle Rock | Castle Rock Public Library | FAIL | 26 | 74 | |
Chester | Chester Public Library | PASS | 59 | 41 | Lopez Island | Lopez Island Library District | PASS | 69 | 31 | |
Clifton Park | Clifton Park–Halfmoon Public Library | PASS | 82 | 18 |
Newport |
Pend Oreille County Library District | PASS | 64 | 36 | |
Cortland | Cortland Free Library | PASS | 70 | 30 | Seattle | Seattle Public Library | PASS | 73 | 27 | |
Elbridge | Elbridge Free Library | PASS | 75 | 25 |
Spokane |
Spokane County Rural Library District | PASS | 55 | 45 | |
Eldred | Sunshine Hall Free Library | PASS | 84 | 16 | WEST VIRGINIA | |||||
Fair Haven | Fair Haven Public Library | PASS | 72 | 28 | Elkins | Elkins-Randolph County Public Library | FAIL | 34 | 66 | |
Freeport | Freeport Memorial Library | PASS | 81 | 19 | Logan | Western Counties Regional Library System | PASS | 90 | 10 | |
Gardiner | Gardiner Library | PASS | 70 | 30 | Martinsburg | Martinsburg-Berkeley County Public Library | PASS | 65 | 35 | |
Garrison | Desmond-Fish Public Library | PASS | 62 | 38 | Nitro | Nitro Public Library | PASS | 89 | 11 | |
Glens Falls | Crandall Public Library | PASS | 66 | 34 | Princeton | Mercer County Public Libraries | PASS | 66 | 34 | |
Great Neck | Great Neck Public Library | PASS | 79 | 21 | Union | Monroe County Public Library | PASS | 63 | 37 | |
Jordan | Jordan Bramley Library | PASS | 77 | 23 | Welch | McDowell Public Library | PASS | 89 | 11 | |
Lake Carmel | Kent Public Library | PASS | 69 | 31 | Wheeling | Ohio County Public Library | PASS | 67 | 33 | |
Mahopac | Mahopac Public Library | PASS | 83 | 17 |
SOURCE: LJ PUBLIC LIBRARY REFERENDA 2019 |
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Middle Island | Longwood Public Library | PASS | 80 | 20 | ||||||
Middleport | Royalton Hartland Community Library | PASS | 80 | 20 | ||||||
Moravia | Powers Library | PASS | 77 | 23 | ||||||
Newburgh | Newburgh Free Library | PASS | 73 | 27 | ||||||
Norwood | Norwood Public Library | PASS | 68 | 32 | ||||||
Ogdensburg | Ogdensburg Public Library | FAIL | 40 | 60 | ||||||
Ovid | Edith B. Ford Memorial Library | PASS | 67 | 33 | ||||||
Owego | Coburn Free Library | PASS | 57 | 43 | ||||||
Peekskill | Field Library | PASS | 65 | 35 | ||||||
Phoenicia | Phoenicia Library | PASS | 61 | 39 | ||||||
Port Byron | Port Byron Library | PASS | 62 | 38 | ||||||
Putnam Valley | Putnam Valley Free Library | PASS | 53 | 47 | ||||||
Red Hook | Red Hook Public Library | PASS | 74 | 26 | ||||||
Rensselaerville | Rensselaerville Library | PASS | 69 | 31 | ||||||
Seneca Falls | Seneca Falls Library | PASS | 76 | 24 | ||||||
Tivoli | Tivoli Free Library | PASS | 75 | 25 | ||||||
Union Springs | Springport Free Library | PASS | 87 | 13 | ||||||
Victor | Victor Farmington Library | PASS | 83 | 17 | ||||||
Warwick | Albert Wisner Public Library | PASS | 88 | 12 | ||||||
Weedsport | Weedsport Public Library | PASS | 78 | 22 | ||||||
Wyandanch | Wyandanch Public Library | FAIL | 45 | 55 |
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