NYC Libraries Will End Late Fees In Push For Equity

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FILE - In this June 1, 2021, file photo, Zoe Slavin and her mother, Julie, browse for books in the children's section of the Stavros Niarchos Foundation Library in New York. New York City's public libraries will no longer charge late fees and will waive existing fines for overdue books and other materials, city officials announced Tuesday, Oct. 5, 2021. (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan, File)

NEW YORK (AP) — New York City’s public libraries will no longer charge late fees and will waive existing fines for overdue books and other materials, city officials announced Tuesday.

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Late fees had already been suspended since March 2020 because of the coronavirus pandemic and will now be permanently eliminated, elected officials and leaders of the city’s three library systems said in a news release.

“This announcement is another major step towards making our public libraries, the heart of so many communities, accessible to all,” Mayor Bill de Blasio said. “Eliminating fines will let us serve even more New Yorkers, allowing them to enjoy all of the resources and programs that public libraries offer to grow and succeed.”

In 2019, the city’s libraries collected about $3.2 million in late fees. No late fees were collected in 2020 because of the pandemic and libraries made up the lost revenue in other fines.

New Yorkers will still need to pay replacement fees if they lose books or other materials, the library officials said. A book is considered lost after it is overdue for a month, though if it is returned, there would be no fee.

The new policy covers the New York Public Library, with branches in Manhattan, the Bronx and Staten Island, as well as the Brooklyn Public Library and the Queens Public Library.

The three library systems join libraries in cities such as San Francisco, Chicago and Philadelphia that no longer charge overdue fines.

More than half of the 400,000 New Yorkers whose library cards had been blocked because they owed at least $15 in fines live in high-needs communities, the officials said. Those patrons will now be able to check books out.

“Public libraries strive to be the most democratic institutions in our society, providing all people access to the resources they need to enrich their minds and improve their lives,” Brooklyn Public Library CEO Linda E. Johnson said. “Eliminating late fines means providing truly equitable access to everything the library has to offer.”


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Sara
Sara
2 years ago

How will they serve their communities if nobody returns their books? I’m a book borrower
The only thing that makes me go through the house collecting scattered books is my unwillingness to be fined.
Furthermore the monies raised go towards yet more library services
So this isn’t about equity it’s about more stupidity

Aguttenshabbos
Aguttenshabbos
2 years ago

Aww! Isn’t that so nice of the Democrats. How’s about doing the same, in the name of “equity”, and allow law abiding citizens to purchase and conceal carry a firearm, just as the criminals are able to do so. (Not a chance, of course. Can’t let that happen)

triumphinwhitehouse
triumphinwhitehouse
2 years ago

so prisoners get let out, cops dont bother with the law, subway turnstile jumping is the norm and now this. who doesnt love bill aguda de blasio.

huh
huh
2 years ago

Why is the LAW racist and lawlessness Equal?

Our Leaders are Clowns
Our Leaders are Clowns
2 years ago

Returning library books is unfair to the poor and people of color. Clown City, and de Blasio is chief clown

Pearl Shifer
Pearl Shifer
2 years ago

Read the fine print. They start charging for unreturned books after 4 weeks and you won’t be able to check out more books.