Tuesday, May 13, 2008

Public Presentation at Finance and Corporate Service Committee


rych mills, President of the Waterloo Historical Society, addressed the Finance and Corporate Service Committee and expressed his support for the Central Library project:

(reprinted courtesy of rych mills)

"The current library is nearing the age of the Carnegie Library when it had served its time but 85 Queen North is ready-aye-ready to give many more years of service and the best way to keep it a vital part of not only the downtown but of the entire city and region is to give it the best 'second-life' possible. As a lifeling resident of Kitchener-Waterloo, mostly in this core area of Kitchener, I can recall the old library at Queen and Weber. Libraries were much different then and a young boy certainly tiptoed with sealed lips through the shelves. There is little tiptoeing and few sealed lips nowadays, but that is change. There are future authors, researchers, scientists, business leaders, perhaps even politicians curled up in a chair at 85 Queen North right now as I speak, captured by a book. We must ensure there is proper room for that book, for that chair, for that person.


The councillors of that early 60s era saw the future and took the necessary steps to ensure Kitchener residents had the best possible resource center/library. My old main library, the Carnegie, was gladly discarded to embrace this new, spacious, wide aisled, brightly-lit library, my new library.


Like most citizens, I believe, I think the library is the closest thing I feel that I own in the city as a citizen. I can enter those doors and I can end up anywhere in the world. I can listen to the greatest minds of our civilization talking to me. I can dream of the future or wallow in the past...


Those coucillors of five decades ago had a vision and created a structure which took us form the 19th century into the 20th. I am confident that our current councillors can take a similar step to move our library into the 21th century. Please support Option Three."

Meg Crawford spoke about her passion for the library and her support for the library's plan to renovate and expand the Main Library:

(reprinted courtesy of Meg Crawford)

"It is not an overstatement to say that my experience of living in Kitchener has been hugely enhanced by my experience as a regular library user and I'm grateful that I discovered it right at the beginning of my time here. I always spread the word to friends and co-workers about the great things that are there for you at the library...

I encourage the Council to give this community a first-class library that will meet our needs for many years to come, which I believe is the 3rd option... I envision our new main library as a place that would draw people from all over the city to attend programs, or to sit in the cafe and browse through books and magazines, or to use the computer terminals for Internet access."




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