The entire staff of the Institute of Museum and Library Services (IMLS) was placed on paid administrative leave for up to 90 days on Monday, halting most grant processing and plunging the future of federal support for libraries and museums into uncertainty.

The news came after IMLS leadership met with Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) staff. Librarians across The Overlook Region warn that losing IMLS could disrupt some services and critical operations.

โ€œAll of these little town libraries exist in a much bigger statewide ecosystem,โ€ said Ivy Gocker, director of the Woodstock Library. โ€œAnd so we’re not unaffected by the federal cuts.โ€

Gockerโ€™s library, which anticipates opening its new facility in July or August, expects $230,000 in state construction reimbursement aid this year, administered through the Division of Library Development, whose staff salaries are funded almost entirely by IMLS. Without timely reimbursement, which appears possibleโ€”and perhaps likelyโ€”given the sweeping layoffs at IMLS, Woodstock Library faces a financial squeeze amid ongoing renovation expenses. โ€œIt doesnโ€™t affect our move date because construction is well underway,” Gocker explained. “What is up in the air is when weโ€™ll get the reimbursement, putting us in a bit of a financial crunch.

โ€œNew York State doesnโ€™t have a plan to fund that department at the moment,โ€œ she added. Itโ€™s possible it gets sorted out, but it makes us nervous about when weโ€™ll receive money that is already there.โ€ 

A System Under Strain

The Mid-Hudson Library System, linking 66 libraries across five counties, relies on state funding for 80 percent of its budget. Without IMLS, that funding pipeline could stall.

โ€œThere’s a staff that sits in an office in Albany called the Division of Library Developmentโ€ฆ their salaries are all paid by federal dollars,โ€ said Mid-Hudson Executive Director Rebekkah Smith Aldrich. โ€œSo if those federal dollars arenโ€™t thereโ€ฆ thereโ€™s no way for the state money to actually get to libraries.โ€ Aldrich further explained, โ€œCongress has mandated whatโ€™s called the โ€˜Grants to Statesโ€™ programโ€ฆ whether it will be reauthorized in the fall is what weโ€™re keeping an eye on.โ€

Aldrich highlighted the critical nature of the funding, adding, โ€œI donโ€™t see 80 percent of my operating aid for the foreseeable future [if this isn’t addressed]. That would shut down my organization. If one part of that chain gets disrupted, it pushes costs down the line.โ€

Rural Libraries at Real Risk

In Pine Hill, Gisi Vella single-handedly manages the Morton Memorial Library on $60,225 budget, sourced from town funding, a school grant, and local donations.

Gisi Vella. Michael Sofronski/The Overlook.

โ€œItโ€™s really very scary and concerning,โ€ she said. โ€œLibraries are so much more than booksโ€ฆ we run a food pantry out of the library. Weโ€™ve received a grant to purchase ukuleles. We also have snowshoes to check out, a sewing machine, fishing rods. We couldnโ€™t operate our library without Mid-Hudson.โ€

Phoenicia Library Director Liz Potter echoed these concerns. โ€œOur doors will literally always stay openโ€ฆ but thereโ€™s going to be a ripple effect,โ€ she said. โ€œThe state funds 85 percent of our library systemโ€™s operations. Thatโ€™s training, delivery, interlibrary loansโ€ฆ itโ€™s huge.โ€

Potter, who oversaw her libraryโ€™s reconstruction after a devastating fire in 2011, said state grants are challenging to administer even under normal circumstances. โ€œWithout administrative staff at the state level, those wonโ€™t get processed.โ€

A Common Thread

In Saugerties, Director Jennifer Serrano summarized the crisis clearly: โ€œPublic libraries are funded through local dollarsโ€ฆ the real threat is to the system that links us all together. We pay [Mid-Hudson] about $20,000 a year for delivery, the catalog, and the database. A smaller library like Rosendale would pay much lessโ€”but we all depend on it equally.โ€

โ€œIf the system couldnโ€™t deliver booksโ€ฆ we wonโ€™t have nearly the same service as we do now,โ€ she said. โ€œPeople are showing up in my office wanting to help. Theyโ€™re scared.โ€

Statewide Alarm

The New York Library Association has initiated an advocacy campaign and is actively engaging state lawmakers.

โ€œThis is kind of a moment where [advocacy] is right up our alley,โ€ said Executive Director AnnaLee Dragon. โ€œWeโ€™re trying to help tell the stories of whatโ€™s at risk.

New York State Librarian Lauren Moore in a statement to The Overlook said the situation is evolving, but her office remains committed to maintaining library services.

โ€œLibraries are a critical part of the stateโ€™s education system, providing access to books, information, and community services like educational programs and free Wi-Fi,โ€ Moore said. โ€œWeโ€™re closely monitoring the potential impact of federal spending cuts and are in communication with key decision-makers.โ€

Dragon added, โ€œIf the State Library takes this hitโ€ฆ thatโ€™s a big concern. Theyโ€™re kind of the central cog. Theyโ€™re ecosystems. And when you pull one thread, the whole thing can unravel.โ€

Noah Eckstein is the editor-in-chief of The Overlook. Send correspondence to noah@theoverlooknews.com.


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