Board of Trustees Resolution for eContent

WHEREAS, Ohio’s public libraries currently serve more than 8.4 million individuals; and the Public Library of Cincinnati and Hamilton County has over 500,000 cardholders, and

WHEREAS, Ohio’s public libraries have the highest use per capita in the nation; and the Public Library of Cincinnati and Hamilton County is the third busiest public library system in the nation, with over 2.5 million checkouts in 2018 for eBooks and eAudiobooks, which is a 110 percent increase from 2014 checkouts, and

WHEREAS, 514,800 (19.8 percent) young Ohioans live below the poverty line in families where eBooks are an unaffordable luxury, and rely on libraries to provide them with eContent to support acquisition of literacy skills, complete school assignments, and pursue interests, and

WHEREAS, the “Community Reading Event Impact Report,” released by the Panorama Project has shown that access to eBooks through libraries led to increased eBook sales, and

WHEREAS, the U.S. publishing industry earned $25.83 billion in revenue in 2018, with downloaded audio seeing 28.7 percent growth over 2017, and

WHEREAS, the major publishers have recently announced new policies for eBooks and eAudiobooks that severely limits public libraries’ ability to purchase, or delays the purchase, of digital copies of materials and information, and

WHEREAS, these restrictive policies directly impact the ability of Ohio’s public libraries to serve the 11.6 million people of Ohio and adequately provide access to materials and information, and

WHEREAS, the new eBook and eAudiobook policies represent a significant financial burden impacting taxpayer supported public libraries’ overall operations and services, with the Public Library of Cincinnati and Hamilton County spending over $2.7 million in 2018 on eBooks and eAudiobooks, a 170 percent spending increase compared to 2014, therefore

BE IT RESOLVED on this day of August 13, 2019, that we, the Board of Trustees of the Public Library of Cincinnati and Hamilton County call upon Blackstone Audio, Hachette, Macmillan, and Simon & Schuster to 1) reconsider these recently announced restrictive and onerous policies; and 2) engage in a meaningful and direct dialogue and exchange of information with libraries, library consortia, library associations, authors, executives from Overdrive, and other relevant stakeholders for the purpose of devising new policies that ensure equitable access to Ohio’s 8.4 million library users.