X

In a world of Google and Amazon, libraries rethink their role

More information is available online than ever. Libraries are stepping in to make sure everyone can access it.

Abrar Al-Heeti Technology Reporter
Abrar Al-Heeti is a technology reporter for CNET, with an interest in phones, streaming, internet trends, entertainment, pop culture and digital accessibility. She's also worked for CNET's video, culture and news teams. She graduated with bachelor's and master's degrees in journalism from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Though Illinois is home, she now loves San Francisco -- steep inclines and all.
Expertise Abrar has spent her career at CNET analyzing tech trends while also writing news, reviews and commentaries across mobile, streaming and online culture. Credentials
  • Named a Tech Media Trailblazer by the Consumer Technology Association in 2019, a winner of SPJ NorCal's Excellence in Journalism Awards in 2022 and has three times been a finalist in the LA Press Club's National Arts & Entertainment Journalism Awards.
Abrar Al-Heeti
7 min read
Close-Up Of Books By Laptop On Table

Not everyone has access to tech resources many take for granted, including laptops and an internet connection. That's where libraries can help.

Chnit Siri Kan Ti N Cheiynghim / Getty Images

One night a few years ago, Tony Marx was closing up a Bronx library when he noticed a kid sitting on the steps. The boy was pecking away on the oldest laptop Marx had ever seen. Puzzled, Marx asked him what he was doing.

The boy told Marx he was doing his math homework. The assignment was online and the boy's family couldn't afford broadband at home. So the youngster camped out on the library stoop to pick up its leaked signal.

"Holy moly," Marx, the president and CEO of the New York Public Library, remembers thinking. "'In the information capital of the world, this kid can't do the math homework we want him to do to succeed.'"

digital-libraries-8777-5

The Next Chapter is a multipart series that examines the changing role of libraries in a connected world. 

James Martin/CNET

Since then, the NYPL has rolled out a host of services aimed at closing the digital divide, which is exactly what it sounds like: the gap between those who can easily get online and those who can't. The famous library -- who hasn't seen Patience and Fortitude, the marble lions who guard its main entrance, in the movies? -- provides computers and laptops at its locations, and lends out mobile hotspots for months at a time. And like at Starbucks, the Wi-Fi is free.

The NYPL is far from the only library rethinking its role in the digital age. Around the globe, libraries are repositioning themselves to meet the needs of a world where almost everything on the shelves can be found online. Many see themselves as centers of digital culture offering classes in the latest tech, such as 3D printing and digital video editing. Key to that mission is helping patrons who can't afford internet service, like Marx's young friend, find a way to get online.

As of Sunday, libraries across the US began celebrating their evolving mission as part of National Library Week. Melinda Gates serves as the honorary chairwoman of the annual event, which American Library Association started in 1958. Gates is a good choice. She and husband Bill began funding computers, internet access and software for libraries in low-income communities through a foundation they established in 1997. The foundation wound down in 2018, but gave away more than $1 billion worldwide during its run.

Providing internet connections is increasingly important for libraries as more aspects of our lives move online. Forty-seven percent of US households earning less than $30,000 don't have broadband, according to Pew, and 44 percent don't have a desktop or laptop. At the NYPL, three quarters of the people who check out the hotspots live in households earning less than $25,000 a year, Marx says.

A digital shift

If you want an example of how bad the digital divide is, look no further than San Francisco, the world's tech hub. More than 10 percent of the city's nearly 900,000 residents don't have internet at home, according to the San Francisco Public Library. City Librarian Michael Lambert says the library is the largest free provider of high-speed internet to the community, having facilitated over a million internet sessions a year. The SFPL also lends around 200 mobile hotspot devices that patrons can keep for three weeks at a time.

The main library, walking distance from city hall, offers programs on everything from computer basics to coding. In early May, it holds Connect With Tech Week, an initiative to promote internet access and build tech skills. An annual Senior Tech Expo is designed to help older patrons with basics, such as downloading e-books and browsing the internet.

project-read

Libraries today offer much more than just books and information. They've become hubs where patrons can access resources like laptops, e-books and hotspot devices.

San Francisco Public Library

Thirty-two-year-old Victor Franco has been accessing Treehouse, an online platform that teaches coding, using his SFPL account. He finished the Python basics course and is now in a machine learning track.

"I was looking into enrolling in coding boot camps, so I decided to take a look at the e-learning courses offered through the library," Franco said.  

Lambert says the percentage of physical checkouts at the SFPL has plateaued, and more people are taking advantage of the library's digital collections through applications like Libby, Hoopla and RB Digital. Those digital checkouts make up about a quarter of the library's circulation activity, which was more than 11 million in 2018, Lambert says.  

That digital shift has freed up library staff to plan more events and programs, he adds, because they don't have to spend as much time putting books on shelves. They're also available to answer people's questions via online chat services.

"We were the original search engines," Lambert said of the role libraries historically played. "And we still fulfill a very important function for helping people find information."

Teen spaces

It isn't just long-established libraries that are adapting to the environment. Three years ago, a nonprofit called Heritage Services teamed up with community leaders in Omaha, Nebraska, to create Do Space, a "technology library" that aims to provide access to software, computing and emerging tech like 3D printers . Sessions such as Cyber Seniors teach older patrons how to use their phones , while Tech Help Tuesdays offers drop-in advice for people with questions about their phone, tablet or computer.

the-mix-teen-digital-center

The Mix at the San Francisco Public library is a teen space with tech including virtual reality, laptops and a makerspace.

San Francisco Public Library

Do Space also has a range of equipment, such as a 3D scanner, that visitors can use. The scanner has come in handy for 26-year-old William Verrillo, a dental student at Creighton University who uses the tech to create digital orthodontics for class.

"I was really surprised they had a 3D scanner," Verrillo said, adding that it's a technology that's hard to come by. "It's an awesome resource."

Another youth-oriented space, TeenHQ at the San Jose Public Library in California, features a gamer lounge and drop-in makerspace training for patrons who want to learn how to use a 3D printer . It also offers time on a sewing machine.  

"The library's always been a leader on youth education and youth empowerment," said Elizabeth Nolan, a San Jose librarian. "This was just sort of an extension of that idea."

Community engagement

Libraries aren't simply waiting for patrons to come to them. The Parkman Branch of the Detroit Public Library takes the internet to its patrons.

Two years ago, the Parkman Branch partnered with Libraries Without Borders to create pop-up libraries in laundromats around Detroit. Dubbed the Wash and Learn Initiative, librarians hit three locations to set up laptops and Wi-Fi hotspots. They also had some books on hand for kids and teenagers.

Creating the connected spaces in laundromats made perfect sense to Qumisha Goss, a librarian at the Parkman Branch who was involved in the project. Poorer families -- the ones that can't afford internet access at home -- spend a lot of time in laundromats because they don't have washers or dryers . Since customers often have to wait around for hours for their clothes to be done, the computers gave them a way to be productive during that time. They'll go to pay their bills, check email or write a resume, Goss says.

Though the library also offers Wi-Fi and computers, the laundromat has the additional benefit of being open 24/7. When the library's closed, Goss says, people head to the laundromat for computer and internet access, even if they aren't doing laundry.

Wash and Learn program

The Detroit Public Library and Libraries Without Borders teamed up to create the Wash and Learn Initiative, setting up laptops and Wi-Fi in laundromats around the city. 

Detroit Public Library-Parkman Branch

When the program first started, Goss wasn't sure how popular it was. But she quickly found out when she removed the computers to clean them and perform other maintenance. During their absence, members of the community streamed into the library to ask where they'd gone. "That was the first indication that people had really started to use them regularly," she said.

It's no surprise the initiative has been so popular. In an internal survey conducted two years ago, patrons cited access to Wi-Fi and computers as the top two reasons they go to the library.

"Wash and Learn has really been successful because it's been able to meet people where they are without adding further inconvenience," Goss said. "It's hard to get a parent to come to a session at the library every Wednesday at a certain time if they have a weird schedule. Whereas if you develop this space in a laundromat, they have to wash their clothes at some point, so they can come whenever they want to."

Looking forward

The digital shift taking place at libraries across the country has understandably led to some uncertainty and concern about their futures. In a since-deleted Forbes op-ed published last year, one writer suggested that Amazon should just replace libraries to save taxpayers money.

It's no surprise that suggestion didn't sit well with librarians.

Computer station at the San Francisco Public Library

The San Francisco Public Library offers classes on everything from computer basics to coding to downloading e-books.

San Francisco Public Library

"It was so shortsighted because libraries are so much more than a warehouse of books," SFPL's Lambert said. "We're a community space that's free and open to everyone without needing to buy anything."

As technology continues to develop, libraries will likely do everything they can to keep up or stay ahead of the curve. But in a world where so many interactions happen online, perhaps one of the best assets they can provide is being a physical space for people to convene.

Marx, the president and CEO of the NYPL, says he lost track of the young patron who was camped on the library's steps doing his math homework. Still, the library executive says the experience inspired him to put more emphasis on getting people into his institution and online.

"People will still be coming in for books and special collections, but my guess is over the longer haul, libraries will end up being the civic spaces, particularly in poorer neighborhoods where people have no place else to go that's quiet," Marx said. "Placeswhere they can sit, where they can have a computer and be treated with respect and not asked for their credentials."

Watch this: This library puts tech in the hands of its patrons