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HARVARD GAZETTE ARCHIVES
Library Collections Emergency Team Launches Proactive Program
To ensure that an unexpected disaster, such as the broken
water main that devastated the Boston Public Library last summer,
doesn't catch Harvard by surprise, a Library Collections
Emergency Team has been assembled. Members of the team are on
call around the clock. A hot line, to be used exclusively to report
emergencies involving damage to Harvard's library materials,
has been established. The number is 240-2500.
The Library Collections Emergency Team, created and
directed by Jan Merrill-Oldham, MalloyRabinowitz Preservation
Librarian in the Harvard University Library and Harvard College
Library, is composed of senior conservators and preservation
librarians from the Harvard University Library Preservation Center
and the Harvard College Library Preservation Services Department.
In a joint statement announcing the deployment of the
Library Collections Emergency Team, Nancy M. Cline, Roy E. Larsen
Librarian of Harvard College, and Sidney Verba, Carl H. Pforzheimer
University professor and director of the University Library, said,
"Stewardship of the Harvard collections is one of our primary
responsibilities. This team will ensure rapid and effective response to
emergencies involving library materials, which is essential to
protecting and preserving one of the University's greatest
assets."
According to Merrill-Oldham, the goal of the team is to push
beyond the bounds of the traditional library disaster plan --
typically a paper document listing disaster recovery services and
resources -- to create an infrastructure that significantly improves
Harvard's ability to prevent and respond to collections
emergencies. To that end, team members have committed
themselves to a proactive program with three major components.
The first component is ongoing team training involving
study and discussion of readings and recent incidents, and
specialized training led by expert conservators, including Debra Hess
Norris, director of the Winterthur/University of Delaware Program in
Art Conservation, who will conduct a workshop in February on
salvaging water-damaged photographs. This training will be
extended to all library staff later in the year. Salvage of film,
magnetic tape, disks of various sorts, and other nonpaper media will
also be addressed in conferences and workshops.
The second component of the program is ongoing training of
Harvard library staff. The Library Collections Emergency Team and
other preservation specialists have already begun to teach a series of
small group sessions involving hands-on experience in emergency
techniques such as handling wet books and papers. To date, Fine
Arts, Tozzer, and Countway libraries have participated, as well as the
Widener Stacks Division. Emergency recovery supplies are being
stocked in various locations to ensure that the libraries are able to
respond quickly to problems. "Wet materials salvaged
promptly can usually be saved, if not restored to pristine condition.
Delays in treatment of damaged materials result in mold growth and
severe defacement or loss," Merrill-Oldham said.
The third part of the program is user outreach. A series of
collateral pieces, including plastic book bags for inclement weather,
bookmarks, posters, and a booklet, all printed with messages
regarding proper care and handling of library materials, will be
distributed beginning this week.
Harvard library preservation efforts are supported jointly
by the Harvard College Library (HCL) and the Harvard University
Library (HUL). There are two major library preservation centers on
campus. The HCL Preservation Services Department, located in
Widener Library, manages general research collection conservation,
preservation processing, and imaging services (photography,
microfilming, and soon, scanning) for the 11 libraries in the HCL
system; and also provides imaging services on a cost-recovery basis
to other Harvard libraries. The HUL Preservation Center, located in
Holyoke Center, conserves special collections held by libraries
throughout the university, manages University-wide preservation
projects, and provides a variety of preservation-related consulting
services for the libraries.
Copyright
1998 President and Fellows of Harvard College
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