Hi Mary,

We currently use both at our library. We initially only used the donut strips. 
However, after a wave of thefts (someone probably discovered that discs inside 
certain laptops do not alert the security system) we outfitted most of the 
collection with locking cases in addition to the security strips. This does get 
expensive and I have wondered if we are spending just as much in the cases as 
we would have to replace items (of course all high-priced/out of print 
materials are in locked cabinets and not out on the shelves). What I have been 
doing recently is putting only “high risk” items in the locked cases. If you 
can profile what sorts of items tend to get stolen, then you could selectively 
re-case those items. In our library it’s the action films and anything with 
“sex” in the title.

I hope this helps,
Juliet




________________________________
From: Mary Hanlin <[email protected]>
Reply-To: "[email protected]" <[email protected]>
Date: Fri, 3 Dec 2010 13:57:39 -0800
To: "[email protected]" <[email protected]>
Subject: [Videolib] Open stacks and security cases

Hi Videolibbers,

I’m interested in knowing how many libraries with open stacks use security 
cases (something like Alpha or Kwik cases) as opposed to something like the 
donut strips/overlays.  Currently, we use security cases at one of our campuses 
(we have four).  We use the donuts overlays at the others.  Our loss/missing 
rate for the campuses using the donuts is higher, but it’s not absolutely 
terrible.  I am essentially trying to determine the cost/benefit ratio: is it 
better to acquire pricey security cases and have a lower loss rate, or is it 
better to stick with our donut stripped DVDs.  Any input, including advice from 
public libraries (we’re building a joint-use library with  the city of Virginia 
Beach) would be appreciated.

Mary Hanlin
Media Collection Development Librarian
Tidewater Community College
P: 757-822-2133
F: 757-822-2149
[email protected]





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