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Dianne's library is a library district. Those of you who are library
districts, and independent non-profit libraries, have more freedom to set
your own policies regarding 

delinquent patrons. 

 

Libraries attached to city, school district, or county government will have
to work out policies with those entities.

 

Jennifer's advice is right on target.

 

Laurie

 

  _____  

From: Jennifer Patterson [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Tuesday, March 20, 2007 6:18 PM
To: 'Dianne'; 'CTLS-L'
Subject: RE: [ctls-l] library bad debt

 

 
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Well, what I learned in my "PLA Library Boot Camp" last November is that
your policies should be compatible with your goals and objectives (i.e. with
your long range plan). So if one of your objectives is to increase the
percentage of citizens who are active cardholders, you may not want to turn
the delinquent ones over to a collection agency (because this makes them
very mad). And certainly you will get some positive PR out of having an
armistice day, or waiving overdue fines that are over 5 years old, or
forgiving patrons who incurred fines while they were minors (and they're now
adults).

 

On the other hand, if one of your goals is to increase program income
(revenue), you might very well want to turn over your delinquent accounts to
a collection agency and let them send out the threatening letters. Austin
Public Library uses a collection agency and they have certainly increased
their collection rate! However, they didn't go all the way back to
prehistoric fines, I don't think. You might want to talk to Tom Moran (512)
974-7452 about their experience and the name of the company they use, which
specializes in library collections.

Hope this helps,

Jennifer Patterson

 

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From: Dianne [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Tuesday, March 20, 2007 2:50 PM
To: CTLS-L
Subject: [ctls-l] library bad debt

 

 
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Just curious as how other libraries handle fines, overdue amounts that are
essentially uncollectable. Are you writing it off? Are you just forgiving
the amount? Do you report them to the credit bureau? Do you send their
account to collections? Do you differeciate between those who return the
items late and those who keep the items? 
 
THanks,
Dianne Koehler 
Wells Branch Community Library


Dianne Koehler

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