Fraser Valley Regional Library Explained

Library Name:Fraser Valley Regional Library
Established:1930[1]
Num Branches:25[2]
Items Collected:Books, CDs, DVDs, Online Resources[3]
Collection Size:1,318,502[4]
Pop Served:700,000
Members:360,620

Fraser Valley Regional Library (FVRL) is a public library system in British Columbia, Canada, with 25 community libraries serving a population of 778,000, including over 360,000 library cardholders.[5] Established in 1930, it is governed by a board of elected officials who represent 15 municipalities and regional districts.[6]

History

Fraser Valley Regional Library (FVRL) was established in 1930 in the Fraser Valley area of British Columbia (BC).

In 1927, the Provincial Public Library Commission organized a province-wide survey[7] of library services in BC. From FVRL's website,

The key finding from the survey was that large administrative library districts based on cooperation and resource sharing between municipalities and school districts should be created to serve BC’s rural communities that could not afford to provide a library service on their own.[8]

Demonstration project, 1930-1934

As a result of the survey, the Commission secured a $100,000 grant from the Carnegie Corporation of New York to establish and maintain a rural library project for five years. In 1930, the library’s first director, Dr. Helen Gordon Stewart, launched the Fraser Valley Book Van, which served as the public library to the rural residents from Ladner to Hope. This traveling library displayed books along its outside shelves and travelled through the valley to small towns and villages, stopping at grocery stores, schoolhouses, and gas stations. The Book Van system operated in conjunction with local libraries in located in the larger towns throughout the valley. It covered an area of approximately 2,600 square km, containing 24 separate governing bodies. Administrative headquarters for the project were located in New Westminster, while Chilliwack served as the main distribution center.

Creation of the Fraser Valley Union Library

To continue library services for the Fraser Valley after the Carnegie funds were exhausted, residents were asked to vote whether they wished to support the library through local taxes. A referendum was scheduled for January 1934. The timing was difficult since taxpayers were asked to vote in favor of higher taxes during a severe economic depression. Stewart and her staff launched a massive campaign of public meetings, handouts, posters, and newspaper articles to gain support. Twenty of the original 24 areas voted "yes" so the Fraser Valley Union Library created the first regional library system in North America. The first operating budget was established by the board at a per capita rate of 35 cents.

The resources of the Carnegie Demonstration Project were turned over to the new Library Board of Management on September 28, 1934, during a ceremony held in Chilliwack, BC. At this time, Stewart left the Fraser Valley to organize other regional libraries. Soon after, the library headquarters was relocated to its present location in Abbotsford, British Columbia.

Present day

In 1951, the official name was changed to the Fraser Valley Regional Library District (FVRL). FVRL is the largest public library system in British Columbia.

FVRL is governed by a board of directors and financially supported by its member municipalities and through a Government of BC operating grant. Board members are elected officials of its member municipalities.[9]

Special collections

World Languages

The FVRL has allotted $80,000 per year to its World Languages Collection, which provides both adult and children's fiction and non-fiction books, DVDs, and CDs in languages other than English. The collection is split between the 24 branches and consists of over 42,000 items in 14 languages.

Lifelong learning programs

FVRL supports lifelong learning and literacy. To promote ongoing learning and literacy within the community FVRL offers various programs and workshops for all age groups from toddlers to seniors. Programs include:

Awards

YearAwardGiver
2011People's Choice Award (Chilliwack Library)Harrison Agassiz Chamber of Commerce
2011Inclusive Environment Award (Chilliwack Library)[10] Fraser Valley Cultural Diversity Awards
2011Merit Award for Programs & Services (for the Festival of Aboriginal Arts)[11] BC Library Association
2011Sheila Nickols Heritage Achievement Award for Community History and Heritage Teaching (Maple Ridge Library)[12] District of Maple Ridge
2009Merit Award for Programs & Services (for Aboriginal Outreach Services)BC Library Association
2006Merit Award for Programs (for the Reading Link Challenge)BC Library Association
2006Marketing Award (Aldergrove Library)Fraser Valley Cultural Diversity Awards
2006Innovator of the Year Award (for launch of Live Homework Help)Tutor.com
2006W. Kaye Lambe Award for Services to Seniors (Maple Ridge Library)[13] Canadian Library Association and Ex Libris Association

Locations

FVRL has an Administrative Centre located in Abbotsford and 25 community branches located in 14 municipalities.[14]

MunicipalityLibrary Branches
AbbotsfordAbbotsford Community, Clearbrook, Mount Lehman
AgassizAgassiz
Boston BarBoston Bar
ChilliwackChilliwak, Sardis, Yarrow
DeltaLadner Pioneer, George Mackie, Tsawwassen
HopeHope
City of LangleyCity of Langley
Township of LangleyAldergrove, Brookswood, Dean Drysdale, Fort Langley, Muriel Arnason, Murrayville
Maple RidgeMaple Ridge
MissionMission
Pitt MeadowsPitt Meadows
Port CoquitlamTerry Fox
White RockWhite Rock
YaleYale

References

  1. http://www.fvrl.bc.ca/read/history.htm FVRL History
  2. http://www.fvrl.bc.ca/read/libraries.htm Branch Locations
  3. http://www.fvrl.bc.ca/pdf/board/2007annualreport.pdf Annual Report 2007
  4. http://www.fvrl.bc.ca/pdf/board/2009_FVRL_Annual_Report.pdf Annual Report 2009
  5. Web site: Claxton . Matthew . January 15, 2021 . Fraser Valley Regional Library budget not enough to keep up with booming population . February 28, 2024 . Surrey Now-Leader.
  6. Web site: Fraser Valley Regional Library Board of Directors - Members . 2024-03-26 . fvrl.diligent.community.
  7. 1927-1928 BC Library Survey
  8. Web site: About FVRL . 31 March 2024 . Fraser Valley Regional Library.
  9. Web site: FVRL - Who We Are 2011 . 2011-06-14 . 2011-10-06 . https://web.archive.org/web/20111006225209/http://www.fvrl.bc.ca/pdf/board/Who%20We%20Are%20-%20May%202011.pdf . dead .
  10. Web site: Previous Cultural Diversity Award Recipients . 2024-03-31 . Cultural Diversity Awards . en-CA.
  11. Web site: Past Award Winners . 2024-03-31 . BCLA . en-CA.
  12. Web site: CHC Heritage Awards . https://web.archive.org/web/20110724120248/http://www.mapleridge.ca/EN/main/municipal/728/4605/chc_heritage_awards.html . 2011-07-24 . 2024-03-31 . web.archive.org.
  13. Web site: W. Kaye Lamb Awards, 2002 to Present [EX LIBRIS ASSOCIATION] ]. 2024-03-31 . www.exlibris.ca.
  14. Web site: Locations . 2024-03-31 . Fraser Valley Regional Library . en-CA.

External links