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The Problem Is Poverty | Blatant Berry 

Shake the view that service to the poor is a gift from above...

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John N. Berry III Jun 15, 2011

Sanford Berman is American librarianship’s first and leading champion of library service to the poor and homeless, as Steve Lilienthal points out (“The Problem Is Not the Homeless”). Decades ago, Berman worked with the Minnesota Library Association’s Social Responsibilities Round Table (SRRT) to develop a strong resolution on library service to the poor and homeless. It was passed in Minnesota, and they took it to the American Library Association (ALA) conference that year, where it was made a policy of ALA, eventually becoming ALA Policy 61.

The policy is a strong one and, like so many ALA pronouncements, asks for much more than most libraries deliver in practice. Part of the opening paragraph of Policy 61 makes the point:

The American Library Association...recognizes the urgent need to respond to the increasing number of poor children, adults, and families in America. These people are affected by a combination of limitations, including illiteracy, illness, social isolation, homelessness, hunger, and discrimination, which hamper the effectiveness of traditional library services. Therefore it is crucial that libraries recognize their role in enabling poor people to participate fully in a democratic society, by utilizing a wide variety of available resources and strategies. Concrete programs of training and development are needed to sensitize and prepare library staff to identify poor people’s needs and deliver relevant services....

Lilienthal’s article made me realize that a talk with Berman was long overdue. I’ve known Sandy for 40 years, and he has taught me plenty. I need the intellectual and ideological renewal and the update on the world that I always get from Berman. I need it all much more often in these impoverished times.

Sandy was ready, as he always is, and generous with the tutorial I needed. He recalled how ALA leaders had tinkered with the policy after it was adopted.

“At first they just rearranged it, made deletions and changes. Then nothing happened for years,” Sandy said. SRRTers John Gehner and Lisa Gieskes revived it and pushed for action. ALA did survey the situation. Karen Venturella compiled and edited her Poor People and Library Services, now through its eighth edition with North Carolina publisher ­McFarland.

“Direct services to the poor are the easy part,” Berman said. He reminded me that the poor and homeless are not the problems; poverty and the lack of affordable housing are. He said libraries should try to shake their condescending attitudes that service to the poor and homeless is to be delivered as a gift from above.

Library staff must work to build understanding in all people of the reasons for poverty and homelessness. In their collection development schemes, libraries have to strive to get beyond the celebrated and strong academic and scholarly voices like those of Barbara Ehrenreich (Nickel and Dimed: On (Not) Getting by in America) and Michael Harrington (The Other America). Libraries must collect the authentic voices of the poor like those of Welfare Warriors and its publication Mother Warriors Voice and the street newspapers now in every city. Those papers were created to give the poor and homeless a product to sell and a place to air their views. Berman said few libraries collect the authentic words that tell us all what it is like to be poor and what the poor want and need.

Most libraries are still unwilling to give up institutional barriers to access for the poor and homeless, Berman asserted. He cited fines and fees that the poor could simply not afford, or, more important, the unwillingness of many libraries to accept the shelter or the street as an address when a homeless person tries to register for a library card.

“If you are serious about poverty, you have to give up that old saying, ‘the poor will always be with us.’ That idea is not valid. Poverty can be ended,” Berman concluded.

My thanks to Sandy Berman and Steve Lilienthal. If Berman, who is my age, is still engaged in the struggle, then so am I. Sandy straightened me out, once again.

Berry(SideBox)


Author Information
John N. Berry III (jberry@mediasourceinc.com) is Editor-at-Large, LJ



Reader Comments (4)


Forgive me, but as a librarian in an inner city library, this article sounds like it was written by a suburban liberal who has little or no interaction with actual poor people. Certainly poverty is a problem, and we must do what we can to reduce it, but the attitude that the poor and homeless are all victims of fixable social ills doesn't last long in contact with actual poor and homeless people. Sure, they are victims, but many are victims of themselves and their shortcomings. In the actual inner city you will meet people who are homeless because they simply refuse to do what it takes to keep a home. And substance abuse? There are no magic treatments; "treatment" in practice means helping those who actually want to be helped. You can't force it on anyone. Nothing in the world is perfect, and I see no reason to believe that anything ever will be.

Posted by Jim Schneider on June 17, 2011 05:47:44PM

Here Here, Jim Schneider! Well said! Also, let's keep in mind that most libraries only have fines for items that ARE NOT RETURNED on time or dammaged. This has NOTHING at all to do with poverty or homelessness. NOTHING AT ALL. They are both, perhaps, symptoms of the same disease. As to the "lack" of affordable housing... what is this he's talking about? Does affordable mean free? I mean, without working how can anything be affordable?

Posted by Spencer on June 21, 2011 12:42:20PM

I don't think that the saying "the poor will always be with us" is invalid at all, or that it is incompatible with the notion of working to eradicate poverty. It's a quote from Jesus, not just a vague old saying without meaning. Taken out of context, it does seem to be a pat excuse to be dismissive of the problem. But many Christians believe that the teaching is actually meant to encourage people to recognize that there will always be a need to address poverty and take care of the least among us. I will never give up that saying, because it teaches me to work for the kingdom of God here on earth.

Posted by Lisa on June 22, 2011 09:20:42AM

I agree with Lisa about the quote. Actually, not only do I believe it to be true, but it is the reason *why* I do whatever I can to help those who have already fallen through one or more of the holes in the safety nets (which holes are growing day-by-day).

Posted by Former Library Director on June 22, 2011 09:33:09AM

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