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Fight to keep library open continues for Fogo Islanders

It took a day of travelling for a group from Fogo Island to make it to a public consultation on Thursday so they could defend their public library.

'If it goes, it will be gone. We won't get it back,' says Vicky Anstey

Paula Gale sits with her daughter during the public libraries consultation in Twillingate on Thursday. (Chris Ensing/CBC)

People on Fogo Island will have to travel 11 hours — including a ferry trip — to borrow a book if their library closes.  

The Fogo Island library was one of 54 libraries slated to be closed when the province announced back in April it would be closing more than half of Newfoundland and Labrador's public libraries.

But the government suspended the proposed closures after fierce backlash across the province — including in Fogo Island.

M'Liz Paul says removing libraries from communities could lead to class issues among towns in Newfoundland. (Chris Ensing/CBC)

"Let me just paint a picture of what it would take to get a library book for my child," Fogo Island resident Rhonda Rowe said at meeting Thursday in Twillingate.

In order for Rowe to make it to that public consultation at what will be her nearest library if Fogo Island's closes, she had to drop her children off at their grandparents' home at 6 a.m.

She then spent an hour waiting in line for the ferry, took the hour trip to Farewell harbour, and then drove an hour to Twillingate.

Rowe said she would have to do all of that again to get home, arriving around 7:30 p.m. — about 13 hours after after her day started.

Fogo to Twillingate: A long journey from library to library

8 years ago
Duration 0:53
Readers in Fogo fear they'll have to make this trip from Fogo Island to Twillingate each time they want to borrow a book from the public library.

"That's what it would take to borrow the book, and the same process to return it," said Rowe.

'This is dangerous territory'

Rowe, along with as six other women from Fogo Island, made the trek to Twillingate for Thursday's public consultation. The roundtable discussions are being held across the province and are led by consulting firm EY.

If it goes, it will be gone. We won't get it back.- Vicky Anstey

M'Liz Paul, who also lives on Fogo Island, believes closing a library in a rural community creates a divide within the province.

"Once the government decided to close our library, what they have done is set up a class system," said Paul.

Vicky Anstey says if the library is closed in Summerford, students completing CNA courses will have no place to study in town. (Chris Ensing/CBC)

"Once you set up a class system that changes a right — the right to access to knowledge, the right to access to books — once you've taken away from a group of people, you have created a class."

If the province does decide to close more than half its public libraries, Paul said the communities that keep their library will "receive a privilege" not afforded to others.

"This is very important because this is dangerous terrirtory."

Support in numbers

During their presentation, the group from Fogo heard loud applause from Summerford and Twillingate residents who were also at the consultation.

The library in Summerford is also on the list of libraries that were told to prepare to close, before the province suspended its decision pending consultations.

I was physically ill at the thought that maybe we could be one of the ones that could close.- Norma Hamlyn

"We have students who are doing their exams through College of the North Atlantic through our library that won't be available anymore," said Vicky Anstey, of Summerford.

According to Anstey, the library also hosts volunteer-based courses for residents to learn photography and scrap-booking.

Ashley Whitt says library use would increase if more staff were hired to help create programming for library users. (Chris Ensing/CBC)

"If it goes, it will be gone. We won't get it back," said Anstey.

"If our library closes we'll have to travel an hour there and back."

'I was physically ill'

Norma Hamlyn, chair of the Public Library Board in Twillingate, says the Twillingate library is 72 years old.

"Our library was born of struggle during the Second World War when donations were collected door-to-door," said Hamlyn. She's thankful the library in town was saved, but she's speaking out in support of communities, like Fogo Island and Summerford, that were told theirs might be shuttered.

"I was physically ill at the thought that maybe we could be one of the ones that could close."

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Chris Ensing

CBC News

Chris Ensing has worked as a producer, reporter and host in Windsor since 2017. He's also reported in British Columbia, Prince Edward Island and Newfoundland and Labrador. His e-mail is christopher.ensing@cbc.ca.