York Libraries publish visitor and book issue numbers

York Libraries – now run by a a mutual benefit society with charitable status – have updated their performance stats page. They deserve some credit for doing so on a regular basis – in contrast to some other local taxpayer subsidised QUANGOs who are very reluctant to release  similar information.

Generally visitor numbers have been stable over the last year or so.

The central Explore Library is – not surprisingly – the most used with 530,020 visitors over the last 15 months. It is followed by Acomb (128,277) and Rowntree Park (100,808)

York libraries user numbers

York libraries user numbers

The number of books borrowed is also fairly stable.

York libraries book issues

York libraries book issues

Once again the central library dominates (296,595) against 123,397 at Acomb and 79,938 at Tang Hall.

Rowntree Park had a relatively modest 11,572 issues suggesting that the library there is popular for other reasons (possibly the cafe).

The Library recently had a £100,000 application to the Arts Council granted. It also recently opened a pop-up Reading Cafe in the historic Homestead Park. 

What’s on in York: Baby and Toddler Bookstart Week at York Explore

York Explore Library : Mon 6 Jun – Sun 12 Jun : Various : Free

June 6_BookstartweekWe’ll be going under the sea for this year’s National Bookstart week, join us for a whale of a time!  Lots of fun for babies, toddlers and their carers.

National Bookstart Week is BookTrust’s annual event celebrating the joys and benefits of sharing books & stories every day. We’ll be giving away the special Bookstart story booklets, at every story and rhymetime. This year the chosen book is The Hole in the Bottom of the Sea.

Daily from Monday 6 June to  Sunday 12 June

Under the Sea Trail, Storytimes, Rhymetimes, Colouring & Crafts

FREE, drop in

Mon 6 Jun : Taster sessions of

Baby Massage 10.00am
Baby Reflexology 10.45am
Baby Yoga 2.00pm

FREE but booking is required due to limited places.

Tue 7 Jun : Taster sessions of

Kindermusik 10.00am and 11.00am
Toddler Sense 1.00pm
Baby Sensory 2.00pm

FREE but booking is required due to limited places.

Wed 8 Jun: Save a Baby’s Life Workshop 10.30am

FREE but booking is required due to limited places.

Thu 9 Jun : Browse the Toy Library  10.30am-12.30pm

FREE drop-in

Fri 10 Jun  : Help illustrator Ros Beardshaw create and decorate a giant train in our family workshop 1.30pm

FREE but booking is required due to limited places.

Contact York Explore for more details: (01904) 552828 or york@exploreyork.org.uk

What’s on in York: Volunteer Roadshow Week

Various : Mon 6 Jun – Fri 10 Jun : Various : Free

June 6_VolunteerDo you have a little spare time and are you looking for something new to get involved in?

Come along to find out about local opportunities.

We are running Volunteer Fairs throughout the week in a library near you.

Acomb Explore Library : Tue 7 Jun : 10.00am – 3.00pm : Free

Come and find out about our fantastic Volunteer opportunities we have at Explore Acomb Library.  We have new Volunteer roles to launch for all ages and an exciting new Reading Hack Volunteer Programme for 13 to 24 year olds!  We will also have representatives from Dementia Forward to chat about their volunteer opportunities.  Our Explore cafe will be open for refreshments.

For more information contact Explore Acomb Library on 01904 552651 or acomb@exploreyork.org.uk.
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Benefit advice sessions move to Acomb Explore Library

The York Council has announced that residents will be able to receive benefits advice and support at Acomb Explore Library Learning Centre from Monday 6 June.
Cllr Sue Hunter, Cllr Sheena Jackson and Cllr Andrew Waller outside the Acomb Explore Library

Cllr Sue Hunter, Cllr Sheena Jackson and Cllr Andrew Waller outside the Acomb Explore Library

The benefits advice service is moving from the Gateway Centre to Acomb Explore Library Learning Centre on Monday 6 June as part of work to make it easier for residents to access benefits advice.

The Council in 2010 announced plans to make the library a local information and advice hub but the idea was shelved by the Labour controlled Council when it closed the Acomb Housing Office in 2012.

Still it goes to show that good ideas will always rise to the surface.

Residents will be able to drop-in at the weekly sessions between 9am and 3pm (closed between 12.30pm and 1pm) where a trained adviser will be on hand to support residents.

In addition to the weekly sessions, all Explore Library Learning Centre staff will be trained to help residents access welfare benefits information in the coming months. This change means residents will be able to access support and signposting to the best available services from trained staff whilst also continuing to access the internet for free in Explores across the city.

In a media release the Council also says that “the changes come ahead of the upcoming launch of a new online Customer Relationship Management system and personal council accounts for residents ‘My Account’, a smart and responsive online service which will enable residents to access council services anytime anywhere. The system will also provide webchat meaning residents across the city will have access to more advice and support online on a range of areas, including benefits”.

The much promised electronic “My Account” system has been “launched” on 4 separate occasions over the last two years. We think that the Council would be wise to finish refining and testing the new system before becoming too bullish about it in public statements.
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What’s on in York: The York Mystery Plays: Then and Now

York Explore Library : Tue 24 May : 6.15pm – 7.45pm :

£6 each (or £5 with a Yorkcard)

May _24 YMP

This talk explores the modern tradition of York’s Mystery Plays with reference to their medieval counterparts. These devotional plays were suppressed in the late sixteenth century, revived in 1951 for the Festival of Britain, and are still a drawcard in 2016.

Do they remain ‘devotional’ plays? What place do they have in our ‘secular’ world? Margaret Rogerson will discuss the ‘then’ and ‘now’ of this form of theatre, drawing on primary sources, both medieval and modern, to answer these and other questions and explain the allure of the Mysteries for audiences past and present.

The earliest record of York’s Mystery Plays is dated 1377. Their last ‘medieval’ production was in 1569. In 1951, almost four hundred years later, was there another public showing­ – and since then the ‘show’ has gone on.

This lecture explores the modern tradition with reference to the medieval prototype. Many questions can be asked as we consider differences and similarities between ‘then’ and ‘now’ and ponder the value of these originally devotional plays in our ‘secular’ world.

Any play fits into and responds to its performance space.  Medieval performance was on moveable wagons in the narrow streets of York, and it worked effectively. Modern directors have shaped their shows to fit different spaces: the Museum Gardens, the Theatre Royal and the Minster as well as the modern wagon stages, which still use the streets but in ways that do not replicate their medieval counterparts.

Who first wrote the plays? How did medieval actors prepare? How did original audiences react? These questions can be answered from the surviving documents from York in the period of the plays’ first flowering and from recent academic research.

Aspects of the modern history of the York Mysteries have their own fascination, for example, the roll call of famous and up-and-coming directors and professional actors, including York lass Judi Dench, who played the Virgin Mary in 1957 and Robson Green, who was a not-so-popular Jesus in 1992. But this is a theatre that belongs to the York community and we must not overlook the dedication of local people, who have raised the necessary money, performed in the plays, directed them, made the costumes and props, and done so many other things to keep the tradition alive.

Bring your own questions to this event in the lead up to the Minster production that opens on 26 May.

There are 100 places available.  For booking information www.yortime.org.uk.