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The CARM Repository – the first 10 years

Gary Hardy, Robert Stafford, Eva Fisch, Karen Kealy. The CARM Repository – the first 10 years. The CARM Model. Cooperative initiative of member libraries Capital contribution and annual maintenance Items ceded by members to the store Discovery via CARM Catalogue

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The CARM Repository – the first 10 years

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  1. Gary Hardy, Robert Stafford, Eva Fisch, Karen Kealy The CARMRepository – the first 10 years

  2. The CARM Model • Cooperative initiative of member libraries • Capital contribution and annual maintenance • Items ceded by members to the store • Discovery via CARM Catalogue • Best practice environmental storage • Items available to all libraries via Inter Library Loan.

  3. So far • 15,800 linear m. available • Allocations range from 198 to 3894 linear m. • 50% of available allocation utilized • Utilization by individual member libraries between 15% and 95% • 534,000 volumes

  4. The CARM ”Collection” • Most 1950’s – 1980’s (80%) • Around 300,000 volumes serials • 18,000 serial titles • 18% of serial titles published in Australia

  5. The good … • Pick list …discard of duplicates • Confidence in long term preservation • Much more economical than individual storage • Professional expertise in conservation • Book heaven

  6. …and the not so good .. • Issues with ceding materials • Auditors • Material needed again • Lack of incentives to store materials • Discovery no longer integrated • User resistance • Different contribution rates • Usage levels

  7. “An evolving absence of need”J.P.McCarthy • 85 loans per month • 63 copies per month • 70% of loan requests for monographs • 66% of requests from member libraries

  8. If CARM was a database, would we cancel it?

  9. Is the value of CARM symbolic and psychological rather than practical?

  10. Next ten years • Most of the librarians and academics who built our collections will leave • Mass digitization projects will resolve • Ongoing shift in the way our users access information will continue • Pressures on library space will intensify and with it the need for storage

  11. We don't have a storage problem ... we have a co-ordination problem.(misquoting Brad Wheeler...)

  12. Need to rethink our approach to storage • Do we know what we should save at regional, national and international level? • Do we have any clear idea what we are saving? • What are the overlaps with National and State Libraries? • What is the extent of duplication in Higher Ed storage efforts? • To what extent should we save material which has been digitized?

  13. A National Distributed Repository (Meta-repository?) • Mechanism for individual institutions to designate titles which they are preserving • Policy, standards, trust framework • Discovery mechanism • Incentive to preserve

  14. Thankyou Questions, comments?

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