Title: OCLC Members Council
1OCLC Members Council Resource Sharing Interest
Group February 6, 2007 Lamar Veatch, State
Librarian Georgia Public Library Service
2 Georgias Public Libraries
382 facilities 159 Counties 58 Systems
Per Capita Funding 8th in State Funding 44th in
Local Funding
3What is PINES?
- A consortium of 46 (out of 58) Georgia public
library systems - 265 facilities and bookmobiles
- A common ILS - on a central server
- A union database of 8.8 million items
- A shared patron file - over 1.6 million PINES
cardholders from all 159 Georgia counties - Over 17 million circulations in 2006
4PINES Participating Libraries
5PINES Governance
- Executive Committee nine representatives from
member libraries - Elected by PINES member library systems
staggered terms. - Meet quarterly or as needed.
- Module-specific subcommittees make policy
recommendations.
6What Makes PINES Special?
- The PINES library card is free to any resident of
Georgia, and may be obtained from any PINES
library. - The PINES card can be used at any PINES facility,
as if at the home library. - Materials may be returned to any PINES library.
- Centralized support provided by state library
agency (GPLS).
7What Makes PINES Special?
- Users may request materials delivered from any
PINES library to local library, at no charge. - New books are protected from intra-PINES loans
for 6 months. - FY06 - 452,000 intra-PINES loans (6,000 loans
in FY00). - A statewide courier service began in October 2004
with service to all PINES headquarters libraries.
8Focus on the Patron Experience
- Agree to a common set of policies and
procedures--patrons have a consistent experience
at any PINES library. - PINES libraries agree to common fine structures.
- Overdue notices processed centrally for all
member libraries.
9Focus on the Patron Experience
- Fines and fees may be paid at any PINES library.
- Charges for lost materials are returned to owning
library other fines are kept at collecting
library. - Up to 50 items may be checked out on a library
card at any one time. - No limit on the number of holds that may be
placed by a patron.
10What are the benefits?
- Dramatically increased access to statewide
combined library collections - Convenience of using all 265 member libraries
throughout the state - Interlibrary cooperation
- One statewide library card
- Economy of scale leverage library funding.
11Financial Benefits
- Estimate to replace automation
- systems in all PINES libraries 15 million
- Estimated annual maintenance for
- individual automation systems 5 million
- PINES annual operations 1.6 million
12Services from PINES Central
- Training for 1,200 PINES staff in libraries
across the state. Training is conducted
regionally to reduce travel demands on libraries. - Printing and mailing of overdue notices for all
PINES libraries - Helpdesk via phone, email or web, available 24
hours/day.
13WHAT DO PATRONS LIKE BEST ABOUT PINES? Comments
from the PINES User Survey
- It SIGNIFICANTLY expands the choices of books
and other materials available to me. I appreciate
this so much because I live in a rural part of
the state with a very small local library. - Allowing books to be check out from other
libraries is WONDERFUL. This way, the Pines
System is like one gigantic library making
available a tremendous selection of books
regardless of where the books are physically
housed.
14Crossroads for PINES
- Initial 5-year software contract for PINES ended
in June 2005. - 2003-2004 PINES staff conducted a comprehensive
survey of the library automation marketplace. - Is the software driving the policy/procedure, or
is the policy/procedure driving the software?
15What Do PINES Libraries Need?
- We asked hundreds of librarians in focus
- groups around the state
- Ease of use for customers
- Enterprise-class relational database
- Scalability (ability to grow with PINES)
- Flexibility
- Data security
- Reports designed to correspond to annual
reporting requirements
16The Evergreen Project
- Evergreen ILS was developed using Open Source
software. - Software development began in June 2004.
- All 252 PINES libraries migrated to Evergreen
software on September 5, 2006 over the Labor
Day Weekend. - Transactions, customer records, and online
catalog records were migrated from the former
system.
17Evergreen Features
- Search capabilities similar to popular commercial
websites. - Google-like spell-checking and search
suggestions. - Added content, including book cover images,
reviews, and excerpts. - Scalability for growth.
- Enhanced security features to keep customer
information confidential. - Customer empowerment to manage own accounts.
18Evergreen Core Technologies
- Database Postgresql
- Logic/glue languages C and Perl
- Web server Apache mod_perl
- Server operating system Linux
- Server hardware x86-64
- Messaging core Jabber
- Client side software XUL
19Evergreen Design
- Cost-effective server software is designed to
run on inexpensive commodity hardware with an
open source operating system. - Reliable the software is designed to run in a
clustered environment, giving it enterprise-level
high availability and failover. - Flexible Evergreen's staff client is
cross-platform (Windows, Mac, Linux).
20http//open-ils.org/blog/?p56
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22Next Steps
- Migration of the six library systems waiting to
become PINES members over 600,000 more
Georgians served - Develop Acquisitions module Collaboration with
University of Windsor - Work with partners on protocols to share
information with other automation systems - Develop a children's web-based catalog
23Evergreen Enhancements
- More self-service options, including online bill
pay for customers - Enhanced links with GALILEO Georgias Virtual
Library - Online library catalog that can be used on mobile
devices - Cooperative enhancements with like-minded
institutions and organizations
24- PINES online catalog
- www.gapines.org
- Evergreen software development
- www.open-ils.org
25lveatch_at_georgialibraries.org 404-235-7120