The Board of Trustees of the Boston Public Library voted at a public meeting on October 3rd to eliminate all fines for library users under 18, systemwide. A longstanding project of Michael Colford, director of library services at the BPL, who requested the 11-member governing board of the BPL approve the amnesty, said the $135,000 in fines currently on the books for young adults are hard to collect, present an obstacle to youth education, don’t encourage the return of books, and are barrier to library use.
In making the BPL a fine-free institution for young adults, it joins 55 member cities of the Urban Libraries Council, a non-profit think tank, including Chicago, San Francisco, Philadelphia and Baltimore, and a total of some 200 municipalities nationwide. The goal is to make the BPL fine-free for everyone, eliminating the outstanding debt of $1.4 million for all BPL cardholders.
The amnesty means unreturned books will stay on the user’s record until they are brought back but the accumulated fines have been forgiven. The cardholder can use the library and take out other books, as before. “The punitive approach is embarrassing,” added BPL President David Leonard. “The fines should not be a financial burden. We’d be on the wrong side of history.”