Tag Archive for 'correctional libraries'

ALA adopts Prisoners’ Right to Read

On June 29th, the American Library Association adopted the Prisoners’ Right to Read: an Interpretation of the Library Bill of Rights. This important action by the association asserts basic information access rights to all incarcerated individuals. Diane Walden, senior consultant in the Institutional Library Development unit of the Colorado State Library, was the primary drafter of this exceptional document. A year-and-a-half in the making, she guided the document through its many drafts and the ALA Intellectual Freedom Committee’s approval process. Diane crafted a powerful document that will support those working in libraries serving the incarcerated for years to come.

Erica MacCreaigh, also a senior consultant in the Institutional Library Development unit, states, “I think The Prisoner’s Right to Read will prove itself the single most powerful document in the English language for correctional librarians. It carries a weight of authority not found in other writings about correctional libraries. As such, it should prove a substantial asset to anyone striving to uphold the fundamental principles of librarianship in an environment designed to oppose them.”

New Guidelines for Donating to State Prison Libraries

Colorado’s youth and adult correctional facility libraries are the information centers for their residents.  The State Library’s Institutional Library Development team works hard to ensure residents have quality materials to:

  • support efforts toward self-improvement and successful reintegration into society
  • increase literacy levels
  • promote reading as a constructive use of leisure time
  • teach effective use of libraries

Assistance in helping us meet these goals is greatly appreciated.  To help the public donate useful materials, there are new guidelines for Department of Corrections libraries.

For more information about how you can donate to any state institutional library, contact Teresa Allen, acquisitions and youth institutions consultant at the State Library.

ALA Midwinter librarians “go directly to prison!”

Written by Erica MacCreaigh

On a very frosty evening, January 26, nine intrepid ALA Midwinter attendees braved the cold — and perhaps some trepidation at the thought of razor wire, locked gates, and Erica’s driving — to tour the Denver Women’s Correctional Facility and library.

Diana Reese, Erica MacCreaigh, and Lt. Gary Dolan were joined by academic, school, and public librarians, a corrections librarian, and an MLIS student for a two-hour tour of DWCF’s programs and housing – including the rehabilitative Therapeutic Community unit and the lively minimum security dog training unit –which culminated in a visit to the facility library. Continue reading ‘ALA Midwinter librarians “go directly to prison!”’

Library Services to the “Max”

Colorado State Library correctional library consultants Diane Walden and Erica MacCreaigh conduct a formal library orientation program for new Colorado Department of Corrections library staff.  Gena Carini’s report on her library orientation experience provides an insight into the unique challenges and reward of correctional librarianship.

“I found dedicated, professional, and creative staff at all these facilities. I observed veteran library staff interact with offenders tactfully, confidently, and professionally, but also with real interest in them as library patrons. I saw different ways to make a library a welcoming place without sacrificing security.

Colorado State Penitentiary

I think the most moving library experience for me was visiting CSP. As this is a maximum security facility, the library staff must deliver materials to and retrieve them from the offenders daily. Our group was able to follow [the librarian] as she made her morning unit rounds. I was able to see a very organized, professional, yet calming and supportive staff member interact with offenders in a very unique and potentially dangerous situation. I learned that staff can be security minded and still provide great customer service, even when communicating through a tray slot. I was also impressed by her positive interaction with security staff, something very necessary in any corrections environment.

I also learned that, as programs staff, we are as important in maintaining a safe work environment as officers are. [The librarian] explained how her interaction with the offenders could affect their behavior the rest of the day. A harsh approach to an offender with an overdue book in the morning could lead to a confrontation with an officer that afternoon. [Her] approach to the CSP offenders reminded me how staff behavior and attitudes are reflected back from the offenders we work with. It reinforced how [library services] are a part of the whole corrections environment, not just a way for offenders to “kill time.”