What has this world come to when adults are wasting library time texting
friends or children while at work?  A text here or there to respond to your
child who may be at home alone is fine, but continual texting to friends is
not.  This is why schools prohibit cell phone use while kids are in class.
They would be doing it continually if they were allowed.  

Texting, to me, borders on rudeness when it is done at the expense of the
person who is sitting in front of you. (just another little point I wanted
to make!)

Carolyn T. Manning

Library Director

Wimberley Village Library

512 847-2188, ext. 6

[email protected]

 

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]]
On Behalf Of Laurie Mahaffey
Sent: Monday, June 21, 2010 8:23 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [ctls-l] Texting on the job

 

The topic of employees (or summer volunteers) texting on the job has been on
PUBLIB lately. Here's a thoughtful post that could be used as the basis of a
policy.

Laurie

 

Message: 6

Date: Sat, 19 Jun 2010 10:07:55 -0400

From: Dale McNeill <[email protected]>

Subject: Re: [Publib] Texting on the job

Cc: [email protected]

 

At a library (part of a city government) where I used to work, I really
liked the city-wide policy about personal communication.

 

I don't remember the exact wording, but there were 4 principles, something
like this:

 

To determine if it's appropriate to engage in personal communication,
consider these four principles:

 

1) Does it cost the City money directly?  If so, it's not appropriate

(example: long distance phone call).

2) Could it be embarrassing to the City is someone else heard you? If so,
it's not appropriate.

3) Does the personal communication use resources that your colleagues are
waiting to use for work purposes?  If so, it's inappropriate.

4) Does the personal communication interfere with your own work or the work
of your colleagues?  If so, it's inappropriate.

 

We found that these simple principles were easy for staff at all levels to
understand.  Obviously, many brief kinds of personal communication where
allowed.  And the policy didn't mention the medium of communication: it
applied equally to chatting in person with friends, emailing, texting,
phoning, etc.

 

Cheers,

 

Dale

 

Laurie Mahaffey, Deputy Director

Central Texas Library System, Inc.

1005 West 41st Street

Austin, Texas 78756

www.ctls.net

[email protected]

512-583-0704 x18

800-262-4431 x18

 

 

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