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New Jersey Library Association

New Jersey Library Association
Abbreviation NJLA
Formation 1890
Type Library association
Location
Region served
New Jersey
Executive Director
Pat Tumulty
Main organ
Executive Board
Affiliations American Library Association
Website http://www.njla.org

The New Jersey Library Association (NJLA) is a library organization located in Trenton, New Jersey. It was established in 1890, and is the oldest library organization in the State of New Jersey. The NJLA began in 1890 with 39 members, and currently has over 1,700. The organization states on its website that it "advocates for the advancement of library services for the residents of New Jersey, provides continuing education & networking opportunities for librarians", and "supports the principles of intellectual freedom & promotes access to library materials for all".

On December 29, 1890, 39 charter member libraries formed the New Jersey Library Association and elected their first president, William Prall. Prall, a New Jersey State Assembly member from Passaic County, served as president from 1890–1891. He had previously introduced the state library law in 1884. The original purpose of the organization was "to instill in the minds of assistants a love of work in which they are engaged". The organization helped to promote state legislation benefiting libraries, and successfully pushed forward passage of the state Traveling Library Law for rural librarians in 1899. It helped promote the law which established the New Jersey Public Library Commission in 1900.

In 1905, the organization helped to set up a summer school for librarians, and in 1922, assisted in the establishment of a "graded summer school for library service". The organization's publication New Jersey Libraries has appeared continuously in various formats since 1911. In 1927, the NJLA assisted the Public Library Commission in forming a library school at the Douglass College, then known as New Jersey College for Women.

The NJLA was officially incorporated on April 19, 1951, and structured with an Executive Board to oversee operations. The NJLA has published several studies on the services offered by public and county libraries, including the reports Library Service for the People of New Jersey in 1953,Libraries for the People of New Jersey, or Knowledge for All in 1963, and Interim Goals for a New Jersey Library Development Program in 1977. The Grievance Committee was established by the organization in 1962 to investigate grievances of librarians and maintain professional standards. The Intellectual Freedom Committee was established in the same year, and acts against censorship. The Intellectual Freedom Committee has presented testimony before New Jersey state committees, in opposition to legislation regulating obscenity and pornography. In October 1976, the association passed a resolution that all "future publications and official documents of NJLA avoid terminology which perpetuates sex stereotyping, and that existent publications and official documents, as they are revised, be changed to avoid such terminology". In 1991, the organization sponsored Books for Kids, a statewide program which encourages children to read by themselves.


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