Showing posts with label Los Angeles. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Los Angeles. Show all posts

Sunday, June 22, 2025

Librarians Across Los Angeles Say They No Longer Feel Safe at Work

I recently came across an article titled, 'Librarians Across Los Angeles Say They No Longer Feel Safe' by Jamie Paige and Rachael Gaudiosi. In the article, I read the following:
The region’s libraries have an array of patrons. That includes many people experiencing homelessness, who often use the public buildings to escape heat during the summer, cold and rain during the winter, or simply as a way to temporarily escape the streets. The vast majority are peaceful and law-abiding.

But some individuals have caused disruptions that raise serious concerns. A Westside Current review of 911 call data from 25 of the 72 Los Angeles City library branches found that LAPD officers were dispatched to libraries more than 900 times last year. Many of the calls involved unhoused individuals and stemmed from reports of violence, drug use, and trespassing.

The trouble is particularly acute at certain branches.

At the West Los Angeles Branch at 11360 Santa Monica Boulevard, where Rachel was parked, the LAPD responded to 98 emergency calls in the last two years. The incidents included violent disturbances, overdoses, narcotics-related activity, robbery, and reports of sexual assault and child endangerment. In several cases, dispatch logs show officers encountering individuals suffering from apparent mental illness or intoxication. Other incidents involved criminal threats and emergency medical transports.

Who knew working as a librarian at a public library could be so dangerous? 

Click on the above link to read the full article. 

Wednesday, October 24, 2018

A New Book is Out About The LA Central Library... And the Book Sounds Amazing!

Wow, I came across a really good article on NPR's website titled, Mystery Of A Massive Library Fire Remains Unsolved After More Than 30 Years by Scott Simon. In the article, Scott Simon wrote the follow:
Susan Orlean's new book is like exploring the stacks of a library, where something unexpected and interesting can be discovered on every page. The Library Book tells the story of the 1986 fire that damaged or destroyed more than one million books in Los Angeles' Central Library.
"The fire burned for seven hours," Orlean says. "It reached temperatures of 2,500 degrees. ... A lot of firefighters who I interviewed said it was by far the most challenging, frightening fire that they've ever confronted in their careers."
Orlean uses the loss and lore of that fire to tell the living, everyday story of a great civic institution that is becoming, in a digital age, perhaps even more vital. She says the fire reminded her of the proverb that when a person dies, it's as if a library has burned to the ground.
"A host of memories and stories and anecdotes that we store in our minds disappears when someone dies," she says. "It struck me as being a wonderful way of seeing why libraries feel like these big, collective brains — because they have the memories and stories of a whole culture inside them."

In addition to destroying and damaging books, the fire also claimed irreplaceable artifacts. The library was home to manuals for every make and model of car starting with the Ford Model T, Orlean says, and to puppets from a long-gone puppet theater. People see libraries as repositories for "the flotsam and jetsam of thinking and storytelling," she says.
I never knew that there was a fire at the Central Library in Los Angeles until I discovered and read this article... To think the fire has remained unsolved for more than 30 years is amazing! I so want to read The Library Book by Susan Orlean now. This book is going on my reading wishlist.

Click on the very top link to listen to the audio interview of Susan Orlean discussing her new book on NPR.