St. Charles City-County Library

The St. Charles City-County Library is made up of eleven library branches located throughout St. Charles County in northeastern Missouri (United States of America). These libraries serve the residents of St. Charles County, and branches host nearly two million visitors per year.[1]

The Library was established on August 1, 1973 when the Kathryn Linnemann Library of St. Charles merged with the St. Charles County Library District. It is governed by a board of trustees, and funded primarily through property taxes.[2]

St. Charles City-County Library does not have a headquarters, but provides resources to each of its branches based on the populations they serve and the resources needed in the area. The twelve branches are divided into four branch types: three regional branches, four general purpose branches, two express branches, and two community branches. Regional branches offer the largest collections in the St. Charles City-County Library. Each regional branch also houses a specialized collection of materials. General purpose branches provide traditional library services and materials. Express branches were established to offer quick and convenient check-in and check-out of library materials in primarily residential areas. Community branches serve rural or remote populations. All branches offer a variety of classes and events, access to technology, and an extensive collection of print and electronic resources.

Branches

Branch Name Branch Type Branch Location
Kathryn Linnemann (KL) regional 2323 Elm Street, St. Charles 63301
Middendorf-Kredell (MK) regional 2750 Highway K, O'Fallon 63368
Spencer Road (SP) regional 427 Spencer Road, St. Peters 63376
Corporate Parkway (CP) general purpose 1200 Corporate Parkway, Wentzville 63385
Deer Run (DR) general purpose 1300 North Main, O’Fallon 63366
Kisker Road (KR) general purpose 1000 Kisker Road, St. Charles 63304
McClay Branch (MY) general purpose 2760 McClay Road, St. Charles 63303
Library Express at Discovery Village (DE) express 378 Shadow Pines Drive, Wentzville 63385
Library Express at WingHaven (WH) express 7435 Village Center Drive, O’Fallon 63368
Augusta Branch (AG) community 198 Jackson Street, Augusta 63332
Boone's Trail Branch (BT) community 10 Fiddlecreek Plaza, New Melle 63365

Collections

The St. Charles City-County Library circulates over 5.5 million items per year. Its branches loan books, music, magazines, movies, audiobooks, video games, and alternative materials. Some of the library’s more unusual items for check-out include cake pans, fitness kits, kitchen equipment, talking books for children, book discussion kits, and telescopes. The library also offers electronic books, magazines, music, audiobooks and a wide variety of research resources that can be downloaded or streamed from an internet-connected device in a customer’s home.[3]

Services

In addition to library materials, the St. Charles City-County Library provides events and classes for the community. Customers can attend book discussion groups, children’s story times, teen events, crafting classes, author visits, technology training, themed events, game nights, concerts, and participate in a summer reading program for all ages. The combined twelve branches offer over 6,000 different events each year.[4]

The St. Charles City-County Library also provides outreach services to those in the community that may not be able to access its branches. Library staff provide programming and library materials to nursing homes, retirement communities, schools, day care centers, the homebound, and the incarcerated.

The library also provides gathering places for community groups, business meetings, recreational groups, and informal gatherings. Most branches offer rooms for reserve and all branches have public computers and study spaces.[5]

gollark: What?
gollark: I mean, I think people can get used to a lot of things with sufficient time.
gollark: The amount of often-conflicting ones is not really a point in their favour.
gollark: Again, popular ≠ good.
gollark: > That's like saying: Rules are bad and should be disregarded. Ethics are an important thing.You have not actually justified this, so it's basically circular.> We use ethics the entire time, disregarding ethics would mean disregarding schools of thoughtPopular/widely used things are not necessarily good.

References

  1. "St.Charles City-County Library". mylibrary. Retrieved 13 August 2019.
  2. "St. Charles City-County Library". youranswerplace. Retrieved 18 July 2018.
  3. "Web Catalog". youranswerplace. Retrieved 18 July 2018.
  4. "2017 Annual Report" (PDF). Retrieved 18 July 2018.
  5. "Reserve a Meeting Room". youranswerplace. Retrieved 18 July 2018.

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