Help Documents for New Catalog

These two PDF’s will help you navigate searching for items and managing your own account on our new interface.

A couple of notes:

-Once in your account you will be able to choose how you want the library to interact with you when notifying you of overdue items and holds. You can now choose to be notified via text, email, or phone call. The way I understand it you will also be able to text back to the system and a staff member can respond via text to you. You should also choose if you want your reading history saved or deleted and how many years you want it saved.

-The new system is connected with our OverDrive system. This is good because it means OverDrive holdings will show up in our catalog so you do not have to search two places at once. BUT this also means if your account is blocked for any reason, you will also be blocked on OverDrive until your account is cleared.

-For those of you that use Nebraskard you can now search the Kilgore Memorial Library right from our catalog. Look for the “Search Other Libraries” on the top left.

As staff learns the new system we will continue to provide you with more information about your capabilities within the system.

Account-Management-Help

Detailed-Searching-Help

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New Look for the Stromsburg Public Library Catalog

We will be making the switch to a new library system after 5:00 pm on Tuesday, April 28. This means that you may not have access to the library catalog during the evening of Tuesday. We will have a new look on Wednesday, April 29 when you go to our catalog. If you want to get a feel for what the new catalog will look like check out Seward’s online catalog that I’ve linked below.

For various reasons, this move had to happen very quickly so bear with us as we all learn a new system. Part of the reason for switching systems is the enhanced capabilities it gives our patrons in accessing the library and the more user friendly features of the catalog. We will have tutorials and pdf’s available for you on Wednesday teaching you the basics. One of the best things? You can tell at a glance if a book is in or out – green for in, red for out. 🙂

https://seward.biblionix.com/catalog/

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New Update on COVID-19 Procedures

4-21-2020 UPDATE
For the time being we will close the library at 5 pm Tuesday evenings and will not be open Saturdays. We will go back to our regularly scheduled hours as soon as possible. Thank you!

Revised library hours:
Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday 10 am – 5 pm
Thursday – 10 am – noon
Friday 10 am – 3 pm

3-19-2020 UPDATE
Upon the recommendation of Four Corners Health Department to the City of Stromsburg we are now asking patrons to NOT ENTER the library. How this will work:

*Call ahead and the librarian on duty will prepare your “order” for take out! We will bag your books and other materials, place your name on them and set them in the vestibule for you to grab.

OR make your order online through the catalog and will get it ready

OR email us at stromsburgpl@gmail.com

OR Facebook message our page

*Please use the drop box for all returns

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COVID – 19 Updates and Information

UPDATE AS OF 3-15-20
Just a note – I’m encouraging all patrons to not linger in the library. Come, get your materials and continue on. We love you all, but minimal social interactions are being encouraged. ❤️

Did you know you can create a bookbag in our Online Catalog and we can have it ready for you? To log into our Online Catalog, your library card number is your username and your password is your last name, all lower case. This can help in shortening visits. We will check the holds and process them each morning at 10 am.

A Post from the Director:
This is the information for the library at this time. Keep in mind that this is an ever changing situation and things may change quickly. This post will be pinned at the top of our page and noted when there are updates.

As of now, the library has no plans to close. We are open our regular hours Monday – Saturday.

If you do not wish to come into the library but have materials at home there are options available to you. You can call the library 402-764-7681 to renew books and other materials. Also, feel free to drop off items in the drop box.

Keep in mind we have online materials available at nebraska.lib.overdrive.com or through the Libby and OverDrive app.

Below are several useful links where you can find more information about the coronavirus and FAQ’s.

Nebraska Department of Health website on Coronavirus
http://dhhs.ne.gov/Pages/Coronavirus.aspx

University of Nebraska Medical Center Daily Coronavirus Update
https://www.nebraskamed.com/COVID

CDC website on preventing Coronavirus spread in communities
https://www.cdc.gov/coronavi…/2019-ncov/community/index.html

COVID – 19 Updates and Information Read More »

Previously I discussed why you run into so many holds on items in OverDrive and some ways we are working to shorten the hold time for our patrons. Another one of the reasons that we don’t have enough copies of books to go around in due to publishing restrictions.

For some reason, publishers cannot embrace the idea of libraries allowing patrons to use ebooks and audiobooks in the same way as a physical book. Over the last two years we have had publishers increase prices on their books, changed from allowing us unlimited access to a purchased ebook or audiobook to making us buy a new one after 12 months, 24 months or 52 checkouts and even limited the number of books a Consortium can buy. These publishers include Penguin, Simon and Shuster,  and MacMillian who publish such popular authors as Nora Roberts, Lisa Gardner, Stephen King, John Grisham, Lee Child, Lisa Scottoline, Linda Castillo and Kristin Hannah to just name a few.

If you Google MacMillian you will see that they have libraries up in arms with their current policy changes. They are allowing Consortium’s to purchase titles at $30 for the first eight weeks of release. After that, if you want more copies you have to pay $52 or more for a book. Remember the policy I mentioned before of how many copies of a book we would own? Sometimes with books like “Where the Crawdads Sing” it takes time for the buzz to catch on and for the holds to stack up and by then we could be past that first weeks of publishing driving the cost up for purchasing more copies of the  book.

Also, did you catch those prices? How much do you pay for an audiobook or ebook on Amazon? On OverDrive audiobook prices can range from around $45 to over $100 for popular titles. Ebooks can be as low as $5.99 for less popular titles but the popular titles range from $55 – $109. Where book vendors give deep discounts to libraries and book stores for physical purchases, that’s not what’s happening in the electronic world.

OverDrive is a very popular service that we know our patrons appreciate. At the same time it can be very frustrating to see all the books that you want to read have a long wait on them. A suggestion from me is to make good use of the “wishlist” feature on OverDrive. If you want to read a book and it has a long wait, place the book on your wishlist. (There are no limits on the capacity of the wish list, but you are limited to 3 hold at a time.) When you are ready to read a book, go to your wish list, click “filter” and then click “available now.” The list will then show you all the books that you’ve been dying to read that are available at that time. This really eases your frustration of “finding nothing available.” Happy reading!

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OverDrive Holds

Just a reminder that the library will be closed Thursday, November 28 through Sunday, December 1 next week.

Last week in my newspaper article I touched on some of the services the Nebraska Library Commission provides to libraries and patrons across the state. One of those services is being the curator and billing department for the OverDrive Libraries Consortium in Nebraska.

The Nebraska OverDrive Libraries Consortium has 173 participating member libraries sharing over 43,611 ebooks and audiobooks. This partially explains why you sometimes can’t get that hot book you want right now. (Another reason is publishers, we’ll get into that next.)

In an effort to make sure we have enough books to meet the demand of our members the Consortium has instituted a policy on holds.  Our policy is that we will try to keep our hold ratio at 5. Meaning that for every 5 people on hold for a book, the Consortium buys another copy. This ratio started at 8, then 6 and now 5. We say “try” because as licensing models from vendors change sometimes the cost is too prohibitive to continue to buy copies that will expire in 24 months or after 52 checkouts.

Another option became available a few years ago – we as a library could become Advantage members. Meaning, for a small one time additional fee, the library can purchase titles directly from OverDrive that are only available to our patrons. I try to go through the holds list weekly and see what titles patrons have on hold on OverDrive, what number they are in the queue, and then how much that book costs. If the book is reasonably priced (usually in the $20 range or below) I will happily purchase it and then that pushes our patron to the top of the list and they will receive a notification that their title is available. Last year, they offered an additional feature of being able to share those titles with the Consortium with our patrons always having first pick and we receive a small compensation from the Consortium for sharing titles that can be applied to our yearly OverDrive membership fee.

Next week I’ll discuss how publisher licensing rules are affecting purchasing titles from OverDrive.

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