All Library locations and book drops will be closed on July 4.  

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Long-time issue of reparations for African Americans persists

June 13, 2024

This blog was written by Lawrence Turner, adult services librarian at South County Regional Library

 

When people think about reparations, they immediately think about people who've been dead for 100 years, said bestselling writer Ta-Nehisi Coates. He writes that attitude should change. Clearly understanding reparations is the way to start.

 

Reparations is defined as making amends for a past wrongdoing by apology, money, or otherwise. The challenge to enact the concept is to take a long view to understand and to take appropriate actions. As such, the United States would have to make major concessions for its generations-long practice of slavery. 

 

Attempts to rectify the enslavement of African Americans with their descendants were  enacted with government policies during Reconstruction, after slavery’s official end. The endeavor was short-lived and was replaced with decades of Jim Crow laws. Returning to Coates’ position, he wrote in his book, We Were Eight Years in Power: An American Tragedy, reparations would lead the nation to a spiritual renewal. Undertaking a “full acceptance of our collective biography and its consequences—is the price to see ourselves squarely.” 

 

To the question if the act would cause division, he answered the country is already split by a wealth gap acquired without comment. The result is “that American prosperity was ill gotten and selective in its distribution. What is needed is an airing of family secrets, a settling with old ghosts…a healing of the American psyche and the banishment of white guilt.” 

 

Of course, reparations could not take place without strong public support. It is not there. That the issue of reparations has lingered for many years can be attributable to racial differences. 

 

The Pew Research Center in a 2021 poll found 77 percent of Black Americans favored some form of reparation for descendants of enslaved people while white support was at 18 percent. 

 

A Public Radio article in 2023 echoed the Pew Research Center polls. Yale social psychologist Michael Kraus said, "A majority of our sample (research published in an academic journal) tends to think that we've made steady progress towards greater equality in wealth between families, so between black and white families…That is totally inconsistent with reality." In contrast, some communities concede inequality is a concern with examples in the state of California and a dozen cities nationwide. They are hosting initiatives to promote federal reparations.

 

The Library has several titles covering this issue with historical and political accounts but one new book approaches it as a fiction story. Acts of Forgiveness is a new novel released this year about a new federal reparation program and the impact it has on one family. In an essay about the book, writer Maura Cheeks wrote, “The idea that the United States could ever collectively support a national reparations policy for Black people seemed, well, the stuff of fiction.”

 

She decided  to write about reparations after researching the racial wealth gap with its startling statistics. Cheeks essay included, “the Federal Reserve’s 2022 Survey Consumer Finances (found) the typical white family has about six times as much wealth as the typical Black family, despite the fact that between 2019 and 2022 the typical Black family’s wealth rose at about twice the rate of the typical white family’s during that same period.”

 

Debates and arguments in print about this complex topic may be found in this booklist.

Get access to healthcare resources with the Library and Novant Health

October 16, 2023

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It is important to have the right information and support to keep yourself, or someone you love, well. Charlotte Mecklenburg Library and Novant Health are pleased to partner on the Novant Health Wellness Hubs at Charlotte Mecklenburg Library locations. This initiative helps create a sustainable impact by addressing community member’s health and social needs, so every person can achieve their highest level of health.

Speak with a Novant Health team member at no cost at the locations and dates listed below:

June 27 - Hickory Grove Library (9:30am - 2:30pm)

July 11 - Hickory Grove Library (9:30am - 2:30pm)

July 18 - West Boulevard Library (9:30am - 2:30pm)

July 25 - Hickory Grove Library (9:30am - 2:30pm)

August 1 - West Boulevard Library (9:30am - 2:30pm)

August 8 - Hickory Grove Library (9:30am - 2:30pm)

The Novant Health Wellness Hub at Charlotte Mecklenburg Library is not open on holidays or during library closures.

The Novant Health team member can help you better understand your needs and connect you to the right health, wellness, and social services.

This will include appointment scheduling for doctors and medical services, as well as referrals for:

· Access to affordable care

· Medication assistance

· Counseling access

· Housing information

· Food resources and more

Call 1-844-644-3578 or visit a Novant Health Wellness Hub at Charlotte Mecklenburg Library to learn more.

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Stay connected while staying home with virtual programming from the Library.

Children's Lucky Day Collection at ImaginOn and Sugar Creek!

June 27, 2024

Customers can now visit ImaginOn and Sugar Creek Library to check out books from the Library's Children's Lucky Day Collection! 

The Children's Lucky Day Collection is a collection of highly popular books that are available for immediate check-out. It is made up of popular graphic novels and chapter books that are often checked out. 

These collections will always goes back to ImaginOn and Sugar Creek and will not be discoverable in BiblioCommons. The goal is for customers to walk in and discover it. 

One important change we are making to both Lucky Day Collections is increasing the number of checkouts from three to up to six items per account. The check out period will be the same as other materials (3 weeks), but renewals will not be allowed. We want as many readers as possible to enjoy the collection. Good luck!

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2024 Early Voting Sites at the Library

January 25, 2024

Charlotte Mecklenburg Library is hosting early voting once again at several of its sites. See below for dates, times and locations.

Public Early Voting Hours 

Weekdays: 10/17 – 11/1, 8 a.m. – 7:30 p.m.

Saturdays: 10/19, 10/26, & 11/2; 8 a.m. – 3 p.m.

Sundays: 10/20 & 10/27,  1p.m. – 5 p.m.

12 CML Early Voting Locations: 

-Allegra Westbrooks Regional 

-Hickory Grove Branch 

-Independence Regional 

-Matthews Branch 

-Mint Hill Branch

-Mountain Island Branch

-North County Regional

-Pineville Branch 

-South Boulevard Branch

-South County Regional 

-South Park Regional 

-West Boulevard Regional