Libraries & Sustainability: Programs and Practices for Community Impact – THE BOOK

New book project with Rene, Monika, and Adrian is out!

I could not be more excited to announce that a project many years in the making has arrived for public consumption! This project came out of work from the American Library Association’s Special Task Force on Sustainability. I was lucky enough to co-chair that task force with the amazing René Tanner and we got to work with Monika Antonelli and Adrian Ho – our co-editors of the book – through that task force. One of the 52 recommendations that was provided in the final report of the task force was to produce a book with ALA Editions to highlight the topic and the good work going on the field. So here it is!

“As a core value of librarianship, sustainability is not an end point but a mindset, a lens through which operational and outreach decisions can be made. And it extends beyond an awareness of the roles that libraries can play in educating and advocating for a sustainable future. As “Libraries and Sustainability: Programs and Practices for Community Impact,” published by ALA Editions, demonstrates, sustainability can also encompass engaging with communities in discussions about resilience, regeneration, and social justice. Edited by René Tanner, Adrian K. Ho, Monika Antonelli, and Rebekkah Smith Aldrich, members of ALA’s Sustainability Round Table and ALA’s Special Task Force on Sustainability, this book’s many topics include:

  • a discussion of why sustainability matters to libraries and their user communities;
  • real-life examples of sustainability programming, transformative community partnerships, collective responses for climate resilience, and green building practices;
  • lessons learned and recommendations from library workers who have been active in putting sustainability into practice;
  • the intersection of sustainability with the work of equity, diversity, and inclusion;
  • suggestions regarding the revision of library and information science curriculum in light of the practical need to build community resilience;
  • an examination of how libraries’ efforts to support Doughnut Economics can bolster the United Nations’ work on the Sustainable Development Goals, which seek to address the global impacts of climate change; and
  • potential collaborators for future sustainability-related initiatives.

Tanner is the Science Librarian and Head of Research Services for Olin Library at Rollins College in Winter Park, Florida. She has previously published on the topic of seed libraries and their importance in the development of food appreciation and local knowledge of food crops. Ho is coordinator of digital scholarship at the University of Kentucky Libraries in Lexington. has given presentations about libraries, sustainability, and resilience. His ORCID ID is https://orcid.org/0000-0002-7417-7373. Antonelli is an outreach librarian and professor at Minnesota State University, Mankato. She is the co-editor of the book “Greening Libraries,” which in 2013 received the Best Business Book award at the Green Book Festival. She has earned permaculture certification, and currently serves on her university’s Environmental Committee. Aldrich (MLS, LEED AP) is Executive Director, Mid-Hudson Library System (New York). She is the sustainability columnist for Library Journal. She is the co-founder of the Sustainable Libraries Initiative and a founding board member of the American Library Association’s Sustainability Round Table. Named a Library Journal Mover & Shaker, she is a frequent national presenter and writer on the topic of leading libraries forward in smart, practical, and effective ways.”

The Library of Local Project is Here!

Launch Event for The Library of Local at the Kingston Library

So. In 2020, in the middle of a pandemic, we decided to launch a new project: The Library of Local.

With our new friends from Partners for Climate Action Hudson Valley we created four hub libraries in the Mid-Hudson Library System that boast special collections of books, seeds, and tools that address climate solutions, specifically in year 1: food security.

We finally felt comfortable enough to bring people together to celebration this at the Kingston Library this month. It was joyous and hope-filled. Just what the doctor ordered.

On a personal note, this was the first public speaking I did in an actual public setting since the pandemic hit. I’ve been “on screen” for over a year. To say I was nervous was an understatement. My voice shook. I was having trouble controlling my breath. I was overwhelmed with emotion to see my friends and colleagues in person finally. What a great re-entry though. I could not be more proud of this project and the libraries that stepped up to try out this idea. Can’t wait to see what happens next!

LJ Winter Summit: Building the Next Normal

I’m looking forward to kicking off this upcoming FREE event with a talk about The Just Transition. Don Lemon from CNN is the keynote!

The Just Transition

If the pandemic had any silver lining, it brought systemic economic, environmental and societal inequities into focus, and the time for change is long overdue. Rebekkah Smith Aldrich, Executive Director of the Mid-Hudson Library System and author of Sustainable Thinking and Resilience from ALA Editions, will discuss the opportunities library leaders have to build community resilience in light of recent events and co-create a new future for their library and their community using regenerative thinking.

Rebekkah Smith Aldrich, Executive Director, Mid-Hudson Library System

Register online today!

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Power to the People

“As we think through the lessons we have learned over the past four years, one thing is quite clear: the way “we’ve always done things” is not sustainable for the well-being of our communities. We need to seek out those patterns that are emerging to systemically change the policy landscape of our society, economy and the environment and respect that leadership may look different in the coming years.”

Rebekkah Smith Aldrich, Library Journal, December 2020

Check out my latest column in Library Journal where I take a look at lessons from nature, The Just Transition, and the new wave of Black activists to help guide how we move forward in the face of the chaos of 2020.

Library Journal logo

Fire and Flood, Philippe Petit, and a Pork Chop

Check out the new book from ALA Editions, Libraryland: It’s All about the Story edited by Ben Bizzle and Sue Considine. I devoted my chapter to telling the story of The Phoenicia Library in the Catskill Mountains of New York State. That library may sound familiar, I talk about it a lot as it will be the first Passive House certified library in the United States!

Cover of the new title from ALA Editions, Libraryland: It’s All about the Story

What the World Needs Now

My latest column for Library Journal is up!

Library Journal logo

“The massive change in life circumstances over the weeks since my last column have been strange, terrible, and beautiful—often all at once.

I have watched my colleagues around the world roll up their sleeves and learn new skills, produce programming they never imagined, nurture new partnerships, and accelerate community-wide implementation of plans they’ve had in the hopper for months, if not years. From early literacy programming, to helping bridge the digital divide, to providing social gathering spaces online—it has been a magnificent thing to watch libraries respond to the COVID-19 crisis.

Libraries are doing immediate, deep work to address social inequalities. Here are a few examples I’ve gathered in the past weeks…” Read the full article here.

Matthew Bollerman Named LJ Mover & Shaker!

Matthew Bollerman, 2020 Library Journal Mover & Shaker

It is very exciting to see Matthew Bollerman, the co-founder of the Sustainable Libraries Initiative and the first councilor to represent the ALA Sustainability Round Table, awarded the Library Journal Mover & Shaker designation. Matt is an innovative, forward-thinking library leader who has done much good in our profession both at the state and national level. Congrats to Matt!