Ocean County Library, Toms
River, New Jersey
http://oceancounty.lib.nj.us
Press Contact: Glynis Wray; 732-349-6200, ext. 5121; gwray@oceancounty.lib.nj.us
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Exterior view
of the Toms River Branch of the Ocean
County Library.
Click image for a larger view. |
With 21 branches serving more than 540,000
residents in Ocean County, the Ocean County Library is
dedicated to fulfilling its mission of “Connecting
People, Building Community.”
Open since 1924, the Ocean County system serves residents
spread among 33 municipalities, from manufacturing areas
to suburban bedroom-communities to rural farms that keep
the Garden State green. The approach taken by library
leaders has been anything but cookie-cutter. Programming
recognizes and celebrates the richness of the area’s
African American, Latino, Jewish, and Muslim cultures,
and adroitly addresses the needs of seniors and handicapped
patrons.
By partnering with the municipalities the library has
provided an environment that all residents can proudly
call the center of their community.
With an eye toward engaging and recruiting a new generation
of readers and volunteers, the library has focused heavily
on youth and families, through teen advisory boards, focus
groups, and award-winning community service projects with
local partners. The GangWise Project teaches teens and
parents about the dangers of gangs and resisting involvement.
In schools, youth librarians receive training in providing
story programs and materials to special education students.
U.S. citizenship workshops and informal English conversation
groups assist immigrants in the naturalization process,
while outreach services deliver books and audio books
to homebound customers. Within the business community,
the library provides ongoing networking and educational
opportunities for business people, through monthly business
breakfasts and advisory programs.
Ocean County Library’s obligation to outreach doesn’t
end at its borders. In 2006, the library earned the American
Library Association’s John Cotton Dana award for
outstanding public relations for its “Hurricane
Katrina – Partners in Caring” project, which
raised more than $120,000 through concerts and special
programs to help restore services in Mississippi’s
Hancock County Library System, and in turn, built a lifelong
bond between the two systems.
In their local libraries, Ocean County residents have
more than a place to check out books. They have a place
they can champion and proudly call the focal point of
their community.
“Throughout our history, the library has served
as a testament to the thirst of knowledge we all share
as human beings. Libraries have also been a critical component
of our democracy as a center of shared knowledge and education.
It is my honor to salute the staff, volunteers, and patrons
of the Ocean County Library, who work so diligently to
share the power of books with all New Jerseyans. I commend
you for the critical role you play in keeping our communities
unified and informed,” said U.S. Senator Robert
Menendez (D-NJ).
“Ocean County Library is one of our state’s
largest and most impressive public libraries,” said
U.S. Senator Frank Lautenberg (D-NJ). “I congratulate
the Ocean County Library for such a prestigious award
and I will continue my work in the U.S. Senate to promote
its goals of increasing education and literacy.”
“The Ocean County Library serves the public extraordinarily
well,” said U.S. Representative Jim Saxton (R-NJ),
a former public school teacher. “I was proud to
have written to the Institute of Museums and Library Services
in support of its nomination for the award. The people
who work at the library cater to the literary needs of
over a half-million people at more than 30 sites across
the county. Their dedication is not confined to our own
community, however. They have raised more than $120,000
to help rebuild libraries in Mississippi that were destroyed
by Hurricane Katrina.”
“I am pleased the Ocean County Library system received
special recognition for helping the libraries in Hancock
County recover from the extensive damage suffered from
Hurricane Katrina,” said U.S. Senator Thad Cochran
(R-MS). “Their Partners in Caring program helped
boost morale and raise funds needed for the restoration
of library services in Hancock County.”
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