St. Paul public libraries will operate next year with fewer staff and shorter hours than before the pandemic, due to a nearly 7% cut from the 13-branch system.
Under Mayor Melvin Carter's proposed 2021 budget, nearly every city department will have to reduce spending and eliminate vacant positions to help fill a nearly $20 million deficit. For the libraries, a proposed $1.3 million cut would affect library hours because it pays for fewer staff.
"When you look for a reduction of over a million dollars from this budget for a system of our size, it's pretty difficult to find anything to give," library director Catherine Penkert told council members during a budget presentation Wednesday.
The library system "has been down for a while, even before this," said Kim Horton, senior communications director for the Friends of the St. Paul Public Library.
Over the past five years, library staffing has stayed about the same, but services that staff provides have increased, Penkert said. Over that time, the annual library budget has risen about 18% — less than the safety and inspections, fire, police and parks and recreation departments.
Heading into 2020, the library department cut spending on building maintenance, organizational memberships and software and supplies; eliminated a mobile printing service and sold a car that delivered mobile tech programming.
Next year, under Carter's proposal, the library workforce would drop from the equivalent of 177 full-time employees to 162, Penkert said.
"People will notice the reduction in service from the libraries next year," Horton said. "It's going to be tough."