EDITORIAL: Library the first victim of Convention Center funding

Posted on October 29th, 2008 in News and Commentary

It is tempting to place the blame on board members for the Lancaster Public Library debacle this week whereby six members rejected a million dollars in public and private grants after spending $400,000 on plans and specs. Rather than proceed with the renovation of the library, they aborted the project because they feared not raising an additional $1.2 million over the course of the next year or two and were unwilling to borrow any shortfall from the library’s large endowment fund.

But these are but ordinary citizens, suddenly involved in overseeing a major project, lacking experience and confidence in leadership, and, above all, not all sharing a passion for the undertaking.

Having spurned “half a loaf”, they may yet prove their mettle by achieving both the renovation and the expansion within the next few years. We wish them well.

But the primary cause was the failure to receive $2.5 million in state RCAP funding that the library’s representatives to Senator Gibson Armstrong had indicated was virtually assured. Indeed, the state budget called for the library to receive a $3.5million RCAP grant. Not a cent was forthcoming.

So where did the state money to renovate and expand the Duke Street library end up? Certainly Armstrong, powerful Chairman of the Ways and Means Committee, did not allow it to escape our county.

Perhaps we need look no further for an answer to Armstrong’s repeated trips to the state treasury to channel more and more state funds into the ever growing budget, now approaching $190 million, for the Convention Center Project of questionable merit.

So when the Convention Center opens next spring to pomp and grandeur, let’s keep in mind that about 1500 Lancastrians visit the Duke Street library every day and suffer with a building from 1953 which, by and large, is in substandard and worn condition. If you have any doubts, try to find and then use a rest room.

The true cost of the Convention Center Project isn’t just the plus or minus $180 million in grants and public guarantees plus the impediment it poses to downtown residential growth, but it also must be measured by essentials needs of the community that now and in the future will go unfunded.

Editor’s note: The wife of NewsLanc’s publisher was President of the Board of the Lancaster Public Library until the renovation was voted down.

Leave a Reply

More News

Credo

"....I have never made it a consideration whether the subject was popular or unpopular, but whether it was right or wrong; for that which is right will become popular, and that which is wrong, though by mistake it may obtain the cry or fashion of the day, will soon lose the power of delusion, and sink into disesteem." Thomas Paine, Common Sense, on "Financing the War", March 5, 1782

Blog Archives

Categories

LGH Series

How US Health Care stacks up Against Others

How US Health Care stacks up Against Others

The World Health Organization ranked health care quality by countries.  ...

Nine top LGH executives averaged 50% pay increases in 2008

Second in a series concerning LGH’s 2008 Federal 990 Report In ...

Convention Center Series

January thru June 2006 TimeLine

January thru June 2006 TimeLine

Forty-third in a series by Christiaan Hart-Nibbrig Editor’s note:  The following ...

The Fog of War, Part I

Forty-second in a series by Christiaan Hart-Nibbrig “We – I – ...

Santa Monica Reporter

A human Secret and an inhuman Splice

A human Secret and an inhuman Splice

By Daniel Cohen, Santa Monica Reporter “The Secret in Their Eyes,” ...

Shoot Out in the Art House

By Santa Monica Reporter, Dan Cohen Theaters like Landmark's Ritz in ...