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-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of
Kathleen Walls
Sent: Wednesday, July 13, 2005 11:20 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [syscon-tx] FW: Dr. Robert S. Martin Completes Term as Director ofthe Institute of Museum and Library Services

 

The following is a text-only press release from the federal Institute of

Museum and Library Services (IMLS).  To read an HTML version of this

release with image(s), please visit the IMLS Web site at:

http://www.imls.gov/whatsnew/current/071305.htm

 

 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

July 13, 2005

 

Press Contacts

202-653-4632

Eileen Maxwell, [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Mamie Bittner, [EMAIL PROTECTED]

 

Dr. Robert S. Martin Completes Term as Director of the Institute of

Museum and Library Services

 

Washington, DC-Dr. Robert S. Martin completed his four-year term as

Director of the Institute of Museum and Library Services (IMLS)

yesterday. Dr. Martin was nominated by the President of the United

States to be Director of IMLS in June 2001; the U.S. Senate subsequently

confirmed his nomination by unanimous consent. During his tenure, IMLS

has awarded 4,704 grants to America's museums and libraries totaling

more than $899 million.

 

A librarian, archivist, educator, and administrator, Dr. Martin was

Professor and Interim Director of the School of Library and Information

Studies at Texas Women's University (TWU) prior to his appointment at

IMLS. From 1995 to 1999, he was Director and Librarian of the Texas

State Library and Archives Commission. Dr. Martin will return to work at

the Denton campus of TWU on September 1, 2006 where he has been named

the Lillian Bradshaw Endowed Chair in Library Science.

 

Since Dr. Martin assumed the directorship of IMLS, the agency's budget

has increased from $232,321,000 to $280,564,000. In addition, in

September 2003, President George W. Bush signed the Museum and Library

Services Act of 2003 reauthorizing the agency through 2009. The

legislation received bi-partisan support from Congress and enthusiastic

backing from the library and museum communities.

 

"I have been extremely fortunate to have had the opportunity to serve

IMLS during a period of extraordinary support for libraries and museums

from both the Administration and Congress," said Dr. Martin.

"Fundamental in the success of our efforts at IMLS, of course, has been

the outstanding work that so many libraries and museum professionals do

in simply serving their communities. Every day they demonstrate the

undeniable value of libraries and museums through the resources and

services they provide to the American people. My heartfelt gratitude

goes to the Administration, particularly our First Lady and First

Librarian Laura Bush, the Congress, and the library and museum

communities."

 

Under Dr. Martin's leadership, IMLS launched a new multi-million dollar

grant program (over $22 million in FY 2005) to recruit and educate the

next generation of librarians. Since First Lady Laura Bush announced the

President would support the recruitment initiative in 2002 to offset a

looming national shortage of library professionals due to retirement,

IMLS has funded 1,537 master's degree students, 119 doctoral students,

660 pre-professional students, and 378 continuing education students.

Dr. Martin also co-hosted with Mrs. Bush two seminal White House

conferences, one on school libraries and the other on libraries,

museums, and lifelong learning.

 

In 2004, Dr. Martin made the inaugural grants for "Museums for America,"

the agency's largest grant program for museums. These grants sustain

heritage, support lifelong learning, and provide centers for community

engagement at the nation's museums. And, this fall the first research

grants for museums as well as the first recipients of the new 21st

Century Museum Professionals grant program, will be announced.

 

IMLS has continued and strengthened its commitment to research during

Dr. Martin's tenure. True Needs, True Partners, a 2001 study of museums'

work with schools, found that America's museums spend more than $1

billion annually and provide more than 18 million instructional hours

every year on K-12 education. In 2002, IMLS published the first-ever

report on the Status of Technology and Digitization in the Nation's

Museums and Libraries. And, published this June, the Museum Data

Collection Report and Analysis, provides the most up-to-date research of

data collection practices in the nation's museums. Dr. Martin's emphasis

on accounting for results and measuring impact has led IMLS to promote

outcomes-based evaluation among its grantees and develop a series of

user-friendly tools and aids to prospective grantees, including an

online project planning tutorial.

 

Strategic partnerships figured prominently in Dr. Martin's vision for

IMLS, and he involved the agency in several interagency collaborations

including a recent partnership with the Corporation for Public

Broadcasting. Under Dr. Martin's leadership, IMLS took on a principal

role in representing the United States in international discussions of

libraries and museums. He assisted in drafting the ministerial statement

for the first-ever U.N. World Summit on the Information Society in

Geneva, Switzerland in 2003. In 2004, Dr. Martin headed the U.S.

delegation to the organization of American States Intergovernmental

Meeting of Ministers of Culture in Mexico City. Later that year, he

served as co-head of the U.S. delegation to the UNESCO Intergovernmental

Meeting on Cultural Diversity in Paris.

 

IMLS has taken a leadership role under Dr. Martin's leadership in

identifying best practices for the creation, management, and

preservation of digital resources, and in disseminating these practices

throughout the library, archives, and museum communities. Since 2000,

IMLS has sponsored an annual Web-Wise conference to share the latest

research and newest inventions in digital technology.

 

Until the President nominates and the Senate confirms a new director,

IMLS Deputy Director Mary Chute <<http://www.imls.gov/about/mchute.htm>>

will administer the day-to-day operations of the agency as Acting

Director. The Museum and Library Services Act (P.L. 104-208) provides

that the presidentially-appointed Senate-confirmed Director of the

Institute of Museum and Library Services shall rotate between an

individual with library and information service expertise and an

individual with museum service expertise. The next presidential

appointee to be Director of the Institute of Museum and Library Services

will have expertise in museum services and will be appointed for a four

year term.

 

Eileen Maxwell

Public Affairs Officer

Institute of Museum and Library Services

1800 M Street, NW

9th Floor

Washington, DC  20036-5802

202-653-4632

202-653-4600(fax)

[EMAIL PROTECTED]

 

Subscribe to Primary Source, the IMLS monthly e-mail newsletter, for

important museum and library news:

http://www.imls.gov/utility/subscribe.htm.

 

 

 

 

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