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Check out your videos for one week and don't limit the number of videos a
person can borrow at any one time and you will have more space for housing
them.  There will be a few weeks/months where some grumbling will occur
about not having any videos left!  But the grumblers will go away in time.  

You can always change your rules if it gets really bad and you really don't
have enough videos to go around.

I certainly don't feel libraries are in competition with video stores.  If
anything, we help them by providing titles that folks watch and then go out
and buy for themselves.  And certainly we probably have instructional
videos, performing arts and documentaries that some video stores don't
stock.  They make their money on the latest movies!  You would probably want
to build a classic film collection of Academy Award winners--you couldn't go
wrong there.  There is a list of 100 important feature films that would give
a library a good place to start.

I really recommend that you let folks check out as many videos as they want
to--for at least one week.  Your circulation will go up and empty shelves
are a sign of success in the library business.  Just be sure the empty
shelves are not dusty, of course.

Clara B. Mounce
Community Librarian
Bryan+College Station Public Library System
979-209-5611


-----Original Message-----
From: Deanna Frazee [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] 
Sent: Thursday, August 15, 2002 4:12 PM
To: '[EMAIL PROTECTED]'
Subject: RE: Video storage


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Not that anyone asked me to, but I'd like to comment on what Judith said
about not circulating videos because there was a business in her community
that rents them.  We have used similar reasoning in Killeen to explain why
we don't carry the most current popular videos.  Instead, we concentrate on
nonfiction videos or older movies that are not easily obtained in our video
rental outlets.  We're beginning to move away from that kind of thinking,
although current popular movies are not likely to become a priority with us.

So, basically, we don't carry current popular movies because they are easily
obtained for purchase or rental at many local vendors.  But we don't use
that reasoning for books.  We have Grisham and LaHaye and all the others out
just as quick as the book stores.  And we never think twice about businesses
in our community that make their living by selling books.

I'm just wondering how many of librarians have allowed this reasoning to
direct the way they develop their collections.  And in a smaller town, it's
probably a more valid reason than it is in bigger communities.  I'd like to
know what others think about this.


Deanna Frazee
Director of Library Services
205 E. Church Ave.
Killeen, TX  76541
(254) 501-8995
[EMAIL PROTECTED]


-----Original Message-----
From: Nellie Pederson City Library [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Thursday, August 15, 2002 2:47 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: Video storage


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We do not own or circulate videos feeling that since a bussiness in the
community makes its living renting them out we won't infringe on their turf
and this way we don't have to mess with the problems associated with
circulating a video collection. We do circulate Audios and purchased cases
from Recorded Books for many of those that have battered cardboard
containers and hope to replace more in the future as then all will be
uniform in height and shape. Judith Anne Merritt Nellie Pederson Civic
Library Clifton, TX

>>> [EMAIL PROTECTED] 08/15/02 10:16 AM >>>
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How do you display and store videos? Does anyone keep their video tapes in
the original packaging? We are out of storage area for the tapes and are
wondering what to do. 
 
Sue Lilley
Lampasas Public Library



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