Date: Fri 24-Oct-1997
Date: Fri 24-Oct-1997
Publication: Bee
Author: DOTTIE
Quick Words:
Booth-Library-project
Full Text:
Book It! Library Grand Opening Is Sunday, November 23
BY DOROTHY EVANS
Originally, June 1997 was the hoped-for opening month.
Then it was August.
But last Friday, October 17, Cyrenius H. Booth Library Director Janet Woycik
said she was very happy, even "ecstatic," about finally being granted a
temporary certificate of occupancy by the town and the borough.
That meant she and her staff could set the library's Grand Opening Day for the
Sunday before Thanksgiving.
It also meant that Newtown residents could mark their calendars with indelible
ink pens, writing the following words: The Booth Library Open House will
definitely happen. It will be Sunday, November 23, from 1-5pm.
A ribbon cutting ceremony by First Selectman Bob Cascella will occur at 1 pm
and refreshments will be served. Tours through the library will be led by
board members upon request.
In case anyone is wondering, residents will be able to check out books while
the open house is going on.
"One way or another, we'll manage it," said Mrs Woycik, adding that a number
of volunteers have signed up to assist staff on that day, as well as to help
move books and furniture into the new spaces ahead of time, beginning as soon
as one more task is completed.
"They are changing the heads on the automatic sprinklers, which means the
entire system has to be drained and tested. When that's done and not before,
we'll move books and furniture in. We're ready to go," Mrs Woycik said.
A Long Haul
It has, indeed, been an extremely long haul for everyone concerned, not the
least of whom are Newtown residents who have been for nearly 16 months without
their beloved Booth Library.
Although they were able to use the Shelton House temporary library at
Fairfield Hills from January 1997 through August, and though Newtown residents
were always welcome to use the libraries of neighboring towns, it was "never
the same" as having access to their own familiar Cyrenius H. Booth Library at
25 Main Street as they had virtually non-stop since 1932, the year it was
built.
As the myriad final details on the punch list were signed off over the past
two months, the library's Board of Directors and town officials waited on a
weekly basis to obtain the certificate of occupancy.
It had to be signed by both the town and the borough's building officials
before staff, furniture or books could be moved in.
As September and October went by, volunteers and library staff used those
unplanned extra days to good advantage, however. They completed the cleaning
and repacking of all the books in the collection that had been stored for more
than a year at Fairfield Hills.
