The Press

Hot demand for library jobs

- Tina Law tina.law@stuff.co.nz

Demand for jobs at Christchur­ch’s new $92 million central library has surpassed expectatio­ns after 1000 people applied for 45 positions.

Tu¯ ranga, the Christchur­ch Central Library, will employ 108 people or 85 full-time equivalent­s.

Seventy-four of the positions would be new and 34 staff would transfer from the temporary Peterborou­gh and Manchester streets libraries.

Central library establishm­ent manager Erica Rankin said the council was employing 45 library assistants, who would help customers throughout the library, and it had more than 1000 applicatio­ns for those jobs.

‘‘We were expecting a high level of interest in the roles advertised for Tu¯ ranga, but the number of applicatio­ns for all roles surpassed our expectatio­ns, including interest from outside of the region.’’

The five-storey building, on the corner of Colombo and Gloucester streets, will be the largest library in the South Island and a third larger than the city’s former central library, which was demolished after the February 2011 earthquake.

One of the new roles was a ‘‘marginalis­ed community liaison’’, whose role would be to ‘‘support those for whom life events have made it more challengin­g to access resources’’. The library would also employ media studio specialist­s and exhibition­s curator, a programmin­g specialist and youth liaison.

The council had initially expected to spend $60m on the library, but this later increased to $75m and then to $85m and now the budget was $92.7m. The Crown had paid $12.7m to buy the land and demolish buildings on it.

A report presented to the council’s Social, Community Developmen­t and Housing Committee on Wednesday said the library was expected to open on August 27,

‘‘This is not a library you go ‘shh, someone is reading’.’’

City councillor city councillor Aaron Keown

but Rankin later said she hoped to confirm an opening date in the near future, once detailed completion planning work was complete.

Tu¯ ranga has been described as much more than a library with books. It will feature up to 100 computers, an innovation zone for trialling new technology, 3-D and laser printers, music, film and video editing studios, a 200-seat community arena, two roof terraces and accessible balconies, and a cafe. The building will also have the country’s biggest digital ‘‘touch wall’’, a sevenmetre-wide interactiv­e wall that would give people access to the library’s digital content. The council has yet to release the cost of the wall, despite Ombudsman Leo Donnelly telling the council it should do so.

Rankin said yesterday the council had yet to discuss the Ombudsman’s recommenda­tion with the commercial provider of the wall, who asked for the informatio­n to remain confidenti­al. ‘‘We need to speak to them prior to responding to the recommenda­tion and thereby considerin­g the release of this informatio­n.’’

The council has 20 working days to respond but Rankin said it would do so ‘‘as soon as we possibly can’’.

At the committee meeting on Wednesday, city councillor Aaron Keown said the library would become somewhere people come together, not just to read books. ‘‘This is not a library you go ‘shh, someone is reading’.’’

He had previously been critical of the amount of money being spent, but was this week full of praise for the facility.

‘‘I never thought I would say this, but when the library opens, you will see where every cent has been spent.’’

 ?? STACY SQUIRES/STUFF ?? Christchur­ch’s new central library is nearing completion.
STACY SQUIRES/STUFF Christchur­ch’s new central library is nearing completion.
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