City library adds books; lawsuit still lingering
Heidi Desch / Whitefish Pilot | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 12 years, 11 months AGO
The Whitefish Community Library
transitioned into a city-run facility roughly five months ago and
has seen a number of changes.
When the library opened in July the
shelves were a bit sparse and was in-need of more computer
terminals. Today, roughly 30,000 books are on the shelf and new
computers have been installed.
“Our offering list keeps getting
bigger,” said Mike Collins, chair of the Whitefish Library board.
“Hardly a day goes by that people aren’t donating books.”
The library has added computers that,
Collins said, are faster and as a result the number of “time outs”
when a user hits the one-hour time limit and must logout have been
reduced.
“We have maximum availability on any
given day,” he said. “We’re getting great use.”
While materials are filling the
facility, a court dispute between the Whitefish Library Association
and the Flathead County Library System regarding nearly 15,000
books has yet to be resolved. WLA is the nonprofit organization
that raises money to support the Whitefish library.
The status of those books, which are
currently on the shelves of the city library, remains in limbo as a
result of a lawsuit filed by WLA in Flathead District Court against
the county in June. WLA is asking for materials purchased for the
Whitefish branch over the years to be returned or remain at the
library. WLA claims the county wrongfully removed items from the
library during the transition from a county to a city-run
facility.
District Judge Stewart Stadler told
both parties to enter into mediation over the dispute.
Collins said WLA has put a $15,000
“deposit” on the remaining books until the issue is resolved.
“We’d like to be done with it and
finish the loose ends,” Collins said. “We’d like to get resolution
for those books and we’d like to get closure.”
The problem, according to Collins, is
that a mediator has yet to be selected.
“We proposed a mediator and the county
library board didn’t agree,” Collins said. “We proposed another,
but we haven’t heard back yet.”
Collins said the WLA wants an end to
the lawsuit and to focus on operating the library. “We’d like to
see it get resolved,” Collins said. “But here we sit — it’s
discouraging.”
Flathead County deputy attorney Tara
Fugina said progress on the suit is “on hold” and “nothing is going
on.”
Fugina said the parties involved are
trying to set up a mediator.
Collins said several people in the
community are assisting WLA with the legal fees associated with the
lawsuit, but resolving the suit and moving forward is the ultimate
goal.
“They (the county) don’t seem to be in
any hurry,” he said.
The Whitefish City Council decided last
fall to terminate the city’s agreement with Flathead County and
open a city library.
Flathead library officials then began
removing books from Whitefish shelves, but promised that any books
specifically donated to the Whitefish branch would remain after the
county stopped running the branch. Stadler ruled that a request by
the WLA to inventory the books alongside the county be granted.
In September the library was accepted
into the Montana Shared Catalog Partners Resource Sharing Group,
which allows Whitefish library cardholders to check out items from
any of the libraries in the network. The library recently announced
new hours beginning Dec. 1. The change is based on results of a
survey about library use, operating hours, programs and other
services.
Earlier this month, the Whitefish
Community Foundation gave the Great Fish Award to the library. The
award recognizes service to the community by a nonprofit group.
“We were thrilled with that,” Collins
said. “We’re chugging along.”