Mike,
I've appreciated and will miss your posts.
Thanks for this one, especially the last paragraph!
Good luck,

Shirley Thomas
[email protected]
Metadata Technician, Cataloger
Chemeketa Community College Library
Salem, OR

-----Original Message-----
From: Resource Description and Access / Resource Description and Access
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Mike Tribby
Sent: Friday, November 30, 2012 8:35 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [RDA-L] I'm taillights

Today is my last day in the QBI Cataloging Bunker. As perceptive readers
may have inferred from my postings here and on Autocat, I'm not exactly
the most enthusiastic backer of RDA, but before drawing the conclusion
that I'm quitting to avoid having to implement RDA, please consider that
QBI has already begun to implement it with no real problems so far. In
fact, Bryan and the rest of the cataloging staff here will be updating
QBI's name authority capabilities and authorization to RDA standards in
the near future, and converting the PCIP program to RDA is under
consideration. I'm facing imminent knee replacement surgery and at my
advance age and crappy physical condition the extensive re-hab I'll be
undertaking is not a good fit with my 170-mile per day round trip
commute. Besides, I have a 7-month-old puppy who desperately needs to
have one of his owners at home everyday so that he doesn't spend most of
his puppyhood in his kennel.

We still haven't heard from any customers one way or another about
preferring RDA records, and I only recently discovered that QBI is
hardly the last vendor in OCLC to accommodate RDA, which surprises me a
little, but probably shouldn't. I think that for a lot of libraries RDA
is a matter of overkill, introducing complications into the process of
cataloging titles that may never have more than one manifestation,
expression, etc. That being said, and to address James Weinheimer's
frequently asked question about a business case for RDA, I don't think
there is a business case for it for smaller libraries other than the
perceived need to be in step with the national libraries. But for LC
(and likely the British Library, LAC, the Australian National Library,
etc.), it seems to me the business case is that it will allow them to
focus more on important endeavors like classification and subject access
rather than the housekeeping aspects of descriptive cataloging. For
instance, being allowed to accept inputs like ONIX "as is" means their
professional staffs need not concern themselves with converting ALL CAPS
fields and similar matters. The national libraries have as much right as
any other institutions to set their own policies, and I don't see how
they can go forward in a time of diminishing funding and staffing
without making major changes. If cataloging is truly a cooperative
effort, records with nonsensical machine-generated contents notes and
all caps title fields can be upgraded by other members of the
bibliographic utilities that house records.

If I were working in an end-user situation (like the persistent dream
job of a small liberal arts college library located in a picturesque
setting), I would likely make use of Mac and Michael Gorman's creation
and resist RDA implementation until faced with a situation where RDA's
purported benefits would come to the fore. If the MARC replacement and
infrastructure that will magically make RDA fully realizable come to
fruition, that might change my outlook, but frankly I don't have much
faith in the certainty of that happening anytime soon. How long did it
take cataloging software vendors to start utilizing non-filing
characters rather than using stopwords, and when will they introduce
autofil into most cataloging software packages? Probably about the time
the paperless society we've been preparing for since the 1970s arrives.

My last helpful suggestion to the list (which I realize might constitute
my first helpful suggestion to many list members) is this:
your discussions might be more fruitful if you managed to keep in mind
that just because other list members disagree with you it doesn't mean
they are drooling incompetents or arbitrary obstructionists. They might
simply disagree with you.

Mike Tribby
Senior Cataloger
Quality Books Inc.
The Best of America's Independent Presses

mailto:[email protected]

Wearing the sensible shoes for one more day, then it's back to Spanish
boots, Roman sandals, and brogans (thanks to Jeff Beck, Merle Haggard,
and Bo Diddley)

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