Boston Library Consortium

The Boston Library Consortium (BLC) is a library consortium based in the Boston area with 26 member institutions across New England.

Boston Library Consortium, Inc.
AbbreviationBLC
Formation1970; 54 years ago (1970)
Type501(c)(3), charitable organization
04-2605198
Location
Region
New England
Membership
26
President
Mary Piorun
Executive Director
Charlie Barlow
Revenue
US$815,818 (2022)
ExpensesUS$762,730 (2022)
Staff
5
Websiteblc.org

Membership and governance edit

The Boston Library Consortium is a consortium of twenty-six institutions: sixteen in Massachusetts, five in Connecticut, one in New Hampshire, one in Rhode Island, and two in Vermont. The Internet Archive is an affiliate member.[1] Member institutions represent a mixture of liberal arts colleges, research universities, public and private higher education institutions, special libraries, and public libraries. New members may join the BLC if they are based in the northeastern United States and if their application is approved by a two-thirds vote of the board of directors. The BLC is funded through membership dues.[2]

The BLC is administered by an Executive Director and governed by a board of directors. Each member institution of the BLC is represented on the Board by the chief librarian of its principal library. According to its bylaws, the consortium's purpose is "to share human and information resources so that the collective strengths support and advance the research and learning of the members’ constituents."[3]

Members edit

Current members include the following institutions:[4]

History edit

The BLC was founded in 1970 and officially incorporated in 1977, consisting originally of five institutions. It had grown to twelve institutions by 1993, seventeen by 2014, and nineteen by 2019. Former members include Brown University and Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT).[6] The BLC partnered with the Faxon Company to launch development of a union list of serials in 1982.[7] BLC executive directors have included Hannah Stevens as of 2000,[8] Barbara Preece as of 2002,[9] Melissa Trevvett as of 2010,[10] Susan Stearns from 2014 to 2020,[11] and Charlie Barlow since 2020.[12]

Activities edit

Major BLC areas of activity include resource sharing and professional development. The BLC runs a "BLC Leads" program to foster leadership development among member library staff,[13] a reciprocal borrowing agreement through which faculty and other patrons affiliated with any member library can borrow materials for free from other member libraries,[14] a shared virtual catalog and rapid delivery of materials between libraries to fulfill patron requests,[15] cooperative purchasing of scholarly resources,[16] and hosting of communities of interest to foster discussion and collaboration among member libraries.[17] Past activities included cooperative collecting and sharing of materials in select subject areas, such as women's studies.[18]

In 2007, the BLC partnered with the Open Content Alliance (OCA) to digitize BLC member libraries' out-of-copyright print collections and make them freely available online through the Internet Archive.[19] To fund this initiative, the BLC and its members pledged more than $845,000 over two years.[20] This partnership made the BLC the first large-scale consortium to embark on a self-funded digitization project with the OCA.[21]

In 2014, the BLC, along with the Orbis Cascade Alliance and other groups, advocated against a publisher price increase on e-books, which they feared would negatively impact academic library budgets.[22]

From 2014 to 2023, the BLC administered the Eastern Academic Scholars' Trust (EAST), a collective collection initiative across more than one hundred academic libraries throughout the eastern United States.[23][24] EAST member libraries have committed to retaining over six million volumes.[25] EAST's purpose is "preserving the print scholarly record and ensuring its availability for scholars, students and faculty." Under BLC auspices, the EAST initiative received startup grants totaling $1.5 million from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation and the Davis Educational Foundation in 2014–2015. The BLC provided EAST with staffing and administrative support, technical infrastructure, financial services, and general oversight. By 2018, EAST had become self-supporting through institutional membership fees.[26] In June 2023, EAST became an independent nonprofit organization.[24]

Since 2021, the BLC has pursued a program for controlled digital lending.[27] In 2022, the Davis Educational Foundation awarded the BLC a grant of $215,000 to "accelerate the implementation of controlled digital lending as a mechanism for interlibrary loan."[28] In 2023, the Institute of Museum and Library Services (IMLS), a U.S. federal government agency, awarded the BLC a National Leadership Grant for Libraries totaling $249,221 to "support and scale a reusable and sustainable solution enabling controlled digital lending as a component of libraries’ interlibrary loan services."[29]

In October 2023, the BLC became the new fiscal sponsor of Project ReShare, a community of libraries, consortia, information organizations, and developers that has been developing and implementing open-source software for library resource sharing since 2018.[30]

References edit

  1. ^ Freeland, Chris (2021-04-20). "Internet Archive Joins Boston Library Consortium". Internet Archive Blogs. Archived from the original on 2021-04-20. Retrieved 2022-01-19.
  2. ^ "Prospective Members". Boston Library Consortium. Archived from the original on 2021-01-17.
  3. ^ "Bylaws". Boston Library Consortium. March 14, 2014. Retrieved December 11, 2019.
  4. ^ "About Boston Library Consortium". Boston Library Consortium. Retrieved 2024-01-07.
  5. ^ "Boston Library Consortium Welcomes Middlebury, Trinity, and Connecticut Colleges". Boston Library Consortium. Retrieved May 30, 2023.
  6. ^ Walsh, Jim (1993). "Effective Library Networking: Local Depository Networks". Administrative Notes: Newsletter of the Federal Depository Library Program. 14 (18): 12–13 – via GPO.
  7. ^ Schaffner, Ann C. (1985-02-28). "Implementation of the Faxon Union List System by the Boston Library Consortium". The Serials Librarian. 9 (3): 45–62. doi:10.1300/J123v09n03_06. ISSN 0361-526X.
  8. ^ Leiding, Reba (June 2000). "Understanding the licensing landscape: Highlights of the ACRL preconference". Library Collections, Acquisitions, & Technical Services. 24 (2): 285–287. doi:10.1080/14649055.2000.10765660. ISSN 1464-9055.
  9. ^ Gula, Lori (2002-10-18). "UNH Admitted to Elite Library Consortium" (PDF). University of New Hampshire. Retrieved 2024-01-08.
  10. ^ "Trevvett Joins Boston Library Consortium". Center for Research Libraries. July 9, 2010. Retrieved 2024-01-09.
  11. ^ "BLC's Executive Director Selected". Boston Library Consortium. 2013-10-28. Archived from the original on 2013-10-28. Retrieved 2024-01-09.
  12. ^ Galloway, Ann-Christie (November 2020). "People in the News". Colleges and Research Libraries News. 81 (10): 518.
  13. ^ "BLC Leads". Boston Library Consortium. Retrieved December 11, 2019.
  14. ^ "Consortium Card". Retrieved December 11, 2019.
  15. ^ "The Boston Library Consortium and RapidR: Partnering to Develop an Unmediated Book Sharing Module". Library Science and Administration: Concepts, Methodologies, Tools, and Applications. Hershey, PA: IGI Global. 2018. p. 716. ISBN 9781522539148.
  16. ^ "E-Resource Licensing". Boston Library Consortium. Retrieved December 11, 2019.
  17. ^ "Communities". Boston Library Consortium. Retrieved December 11, 2019.
  18. ^ Soete, George J. (August 1998). "Collaborative Collections Management Programs in ARL Libraries". ARL SPEC Kits. 235: 33. hdl:2027/mdp.39015042760267.
  19. ^ Free, David (November 2007). "Boston Library Consortium and Open Content Alliance to provide digitized books". College & Research Libraries News. 63 (10): 624–25. doi:10.5860/crln.68.10.7886.
  20. ^ Hafner, Katie (October 22, 2007). "Libraries Shun Deals to Place Books on Web". New York Times: A1, A18. ProQuest 433697758.
  21. ^ Albanese, Andrew (October 15, 2007). "BLC, OCA Join in Digitization Effort". Library Journal. 132 (17): 15–16. ProQuest 196830139.
  22. ^ Wolfman-Arent, Avi (June 16, 2014). "College Libraries Push Back as Publishers Raise Some E-Book Prices". The Chronicle of Higher Education. Retrieved December 11, 2019.
  23. ^ Kraft, Bob (November 2016). "Curating Collective Collections--Protecting the Scholarly Record: Shared Print at Scale". Against the Grain. 28 (5): 88–91.
  24. ^ a b "BLC and EAST Announce Successful Transition of EAST into Independent Organization - EAST Libraries". 2023-06-12. Retrieved 2024-01-07.
  25. ^ "A library without books? Universities purging dusty volumes". The Seattle Times. 2018-02-09. Retrieved 2019-12-11.
  26. ^ "Purpose & History". Eastern Academic Scholars' Trust. Retrieved December 11, 2019.
  27. ^ Barlow, Nathan Mealey, Michael Rodriguez, Charlie (2021-10-25). "Guest Post - The Library Technology Market's Failure to Support Controlled Digital Lending". The Scholarly Kitchen. Retrieved 2024-01-07.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  28. ^ "CDL Accelerates at the Boston Library Consortium: Will Expand Interlibrary Loan". National Information Standards Organization. January 13, 2022. Retrieved 2024-01-06.
  29. ^ "LG-254935-OLS-23 - Boston Library Consortium, Inc". IMLS. 2023. Retrieved 2024-01-07.
  30. ^ "Project ReShare Selects Boston Library Consortium as its Fiscal Sponsor". Project ReShare. 2023-10-12. Retrieved 2024-01-07.

External links edit