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    At 7:00 pm on Tuesday night, at the Southern Orange Human Services center at 2501 Homestead Rd in Chapel Hill, the Orange County Comissioners will discuss the Orange County Public Library Draft Strategic Plan for 2013 - 2016.  The draft plan can be found in the Work Session agenda (PDF) on the county website.  
The last time the library was discussed at the BOCC, the county staff suggested that the plan, which is being written up by Dr. Anthony Chow, an assistant professor in the Department of Library Science at UNC-Greensboro, would be critical to informing the site selection of the Southern Branch of the Orange County Library.  The plan begins on page 29 of the PDF after Dr. Chow's Curriculum Vitae.
Appendix A provides a link to a Library Needs Assessment with a completion date of January 2, 2013, which seems to be much more substantive, containing significant amounts of qualitative and quantitative data. 
http://orangecountync.gov/library/documents/ocpl_community_needs_analysis_2013.pdf 
 
      
  
   
      
  
      
  
  
    A free and public event exploring civic engagement and social justice 
issues is scheduled for 3 p.m. Sunday, May 20, at the Chapel Hill Public
 Library's Program Space in University Mall across from Alfredo's Pizza.
 Please share the EVENT FLIER. 
    
    "Voices of Action: Translating Words into a Movement" is organized 
by the Chapel Hill Public Library and the Town of Chapel Hill Justice in
 Action Committee. The public is invited to attend and participate in an
 interactive workshop and discussion to consider questions such as "What
 makes you want to act?" "How do you engage?" and "How can your voice be
 powerful?" The purpose of this event is to encourage creative 
expression of opinion and support participants as they recognize the 
power of words and find their individual voices. 
    
    The event will be facilitated by the Sacrificial Poets (http://sacrificialpoets.com),
 North Carolina's premier youth poetry organization. You don't have to 
be a poet or even write poetry to attend. If you appreciate spoken word,
 want to learn more, or you just have something to say about social 
justice, LGBT rights, Occupy, racism, fracking, environmentalism, 
immigration reform, or a host of other issues, this program is for you. 
    
    "We are excited to be involved because librarians are advocates of 
intellectual freedom," said Maggie Hite, head of circulation services. 
"And our library is a trusted, safe space for civic engagement."
 
    
    Many residents are more comfortable expressing divergent ideas at 
libraries because they are neutral places that advance knowledge through
 freedom of expression and critical inquiry, Hite said. The Chapel Hill 
Public Library supports the idea that civic reflection builds community 
connections. 
    
    Formed by the Town Council, the role of the Justice in Action 
Committee is to give voice to issues and concerns regarding race and 
power in Chapel Hill and the surrounding community; and to educate the 
Chapel Hill community through workshops and seminars on issues of 
racism, diversity and inclusiveness. The committee meets at 6 p.m. on 
the first Thursday of most months at Chapel Hill Town Hall. For more 
information, contact samathryn@gmail.com. For more information about Sunday's program, see www.chapelhillpubliclibrary.org or contact mhite@townofchapelhill.org.
Date: 
Sunday, May 20, 2012 - 3:00pm to 5:00pm
Location: 
Chapel Hill Public Library's Program Space, University Mall 
 
      
  
   
      
  
      
  
  
    Below is the body of an email sent by me this morning to members of the Chapel Hill - Carrboro City School  (CHCCS) Board, the CHCCS Public Foundation, and the Carrboro Board of Aldermen.
 
      
  
   
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