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CHAPTER <br />Executive Summary <br />The past five years have been a tune of intense and exciting change for the Louisville Public Library. <br />As the Library's 2003 Strategic Plan recommended, the need for a larger space for the library <br />collections and services was of paramount importance. Due to the collaborative efforts and <br />dedication of City Council members, Library Trustees, City administration, Library staff, Library <br />patrons, and Louisville voters, the new Library was funded, designed, and constructed. With much <br />anticipation and community excitement, the new Library opened to the public on August 7, 2006. <br />The goals set forth in the `Service Responses' from the Library's 2003 Strategic Plan have been <br />fulfilled. The Library's staff accomplished the objectives linked to each goal as outlined in the set <br />of four service responses: Enrichment for Youth, General Information, Current Topics and Titles, <br />and Community Commons. The Library upgraded its online public access catalog, added advanced <br />keyword searching, and provided patrons with access to and the convenience of placing "holds" <br />online for library books and audiovisual materials from "Prospector," a statewide consortium that <br />includes 23 public and academic libraries in Colorado and Wyoming. The Library also continued its <br />efforts to make services more efficient and convenient for patrons. New shelving, displays, and <br />gallery space have increased the visibility Hof library materials and artwork. Four self-checkout <br />workstations are now used heavily by patrons, and by mid-2007, the percentage of self-checkout <br />transactions exceeded 60%. An emphasis was placed on increasing community awareness of the <br />Library's collections, programs, and services. As a result, Library marketing materials improved in <br />quality of informational content and in artistic appearance. <br />The planning committee analyzed the gap between current Library services and community needs. <br />It then identified three service responses ghat are intended to address current and anticipated <br />needs in the library community {see Chapter 7 for detailed descriptions of these service responses}: <br />1. Know How to Find, Evaluate, and Use Information: Information Fluency <br />2. Satisfy Curiosity: Lifelong Learning <br />3. Stimulate Imagination: Reading, Viewing, and Listening for Pleasure <br />While the Library will continue to offer resources in other areas of interest as well, the service <br />responses will be the primary focus for the Library staff in serving the community. <br />Most of the Library's current funding comes from the City's general fund. A major component of <br />general fund revenues is obtained fr-orri sales taxes, and those taxes have declined in recent years. <br />While the Library's budget has increased somewhat in the past year, it has not ina'eased <br />proportionally to its expanded size and serrvice requirements. In order to maintain and preserve the <br />2 <br />