Great idea Paul,

  I'm John Clark, currently the entire staff of the Hartland Public Library in 
Hartland, Maine. We were the first library in Maine to use open source (we 
contracted with Liblime 2 1/2 years ago to set us up on Koha), and 
subsequently, several of the librarians in our Tri-County Librarian Group 
(Penobscot, Piscataquis and Somerset) were envious of what my system could do 
v.s. what theirs could. as a result, three of us worked together in June 2008 
and wrote a grant which Stephen and Tabitha king funded to create an open 
source consortium with an eventual goal of opening it up to other libraries in 
the area. After looking at Koha and not getting very much interest from a 
company which shall not be named, we started looking at Evergreen and 
eventually opened negotiations with the folks at NELINET to set us up and host 
the server. We are in process of doing so to create a consortium of 7 rural 
public libraries and two schools. I'm software agnostic as far as one or the 
other of the OS systems are concerned, but feel that going forward, Evergreen 
has far more potential to do for Maine libraries what it has for Georgia.

   As for background and experience, I spent 27 years working at the larger of 
our two psychiatric hospitals, starting at the bottom after graduation from 
college and moving up to my level of incompetence before realizing that I had 
absolutely no business supervising people. At that point, I became head of the 
adult education program there and earned a masters in the field. A few years 
later, the librarian retired and I offered to modernize the patient and health 
science libraries (having no clue how to do so), Anyhow, I got the job and in 
1994 went back to school, earning an MLIS from the U. of South Carolina's 
distance program. Since graduating in 1997, I've been head librarian in 
Boothbay Harbor where I brought the library into Minerva, a public/academic 
library consortium running Innovative's Millennium. After 5 years, I moved to 
the Maine State Library as their library systems specialist and spent 4 years 
setting up new libraries as well as trouble-shooting and training staff in the 
Minerva consortium. In the course of doing that, I created a fair amount of 
simplified documentation for cataloging, simple fixes, list creation and 
circulation because the iii manual was such a bear.
   When two of us had gone from handling 46 libraries to just under 100, I was 
toast and decided to simplify things by taking my present job which is 2 blocks 
from home and 34 hours (well that's what I get paid for anyhow) a week. I still 
handle a fair amount of trouble-shooting for iii libraries in Minerva and 
another consortium-Solar, so I don't lose my skills.  I also write 
professionally both in the library world as well as YA Fantasy, short fiction 
and magazine articles, so like Paul, I enjoy writing.

Regards,
John Clark

John R. Clark IV, M.ED, MLIS-Librarian/Wizard, Hartland, Maine
Specializing in whale herding and Klaxon tuning at competitive rates.
http://sennebec.livejournal.com/ 
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