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Ron Leir

Fulop Silent As Community Pays Tribute to Departing Library Director

March 12, 2021/in Education, header, Latest News, News /by Ron Leir

He was here for just 15 months, but the impact Jeffrey Trzeciak had as director of the Jersey City Public Library will likely be felt much longer.

That was the theme of an outpouring of plaudits from colleagues and patrons alike voiced at Tuesday night’s meeting of the Jersey City Public Library Board of Trustees marked by the director’s last official appearance.

Trzeciak, who took over for Priscilla Gardner as the city’s library head on Nov. 18, 2019, will return to his hometown of Dayton, Ohio, to run the Dayton Metro Library.

At the JCPL board session, residents Moriah Kinberg, Bev Brown, Eleana Little, Arlene Stein, and Eiko La Boria praised the outgoing director for advancing library programs that focused on the city’s diversity even as the pandemic forced closure of branches.

“Congratulations on excelling during a crisis,” said Brown. “I am a very appreciative patron.”

The speakers urged the library trustees to conduct a transparent search nationwide for a replacement with expertise comparable to the departing director’s.

JCPL bookmobile driver Eddie Perez, president of AFSCME Council 52, Local 2265, representing library employees, credited Trzeciak with having “inspired us all throughout a very difficult time, and we shined.” Under the director’s leadership, Perez said, staffing “has grown dramatically.” Trzeciak “has accomplished in 15 months what no other director has in my 43 years of service at the JCPL,” Perez said.

Rachel Paulus, the JCPL’s reference/LGBTQ community outreach librarian, who previously worked with her boss at the Newark Public Library, said Trzeciak helped the library develop “the second-largest LGBTQ library in the state. I’m excited to see where we go next.”

And JCPL board president Al Anton said, “News of your leaving stunned us” and added he was grateful “for all the good staff you put into place.”

Trzeciak was hired in November 2019 to considerable fanfare. Prior to arriving, he headed up the Newark Public Library where he increased grant funding by almost $2.5 million. He received the Director Recognition Award from the New Jersey Association of Library Assistants in 2018.

Jeffrey Trzeciak

Trzeciak also served as University Librarian at Washington University in St. Louis where he founded “Documenting Ferguson,” a digital repository chronicling protests and other events that cropped up throughout the country in response to the shooting of Michael Brown. For that work he received the Innovation Award from the National Digital Stewardship Alliance in 2015.

While at Washington University he raised he raised $30 million for critical renovations, $10 million more than his goal.

Mayor Steven Fulop, who attended Tuesday’s meeting in his capacity as an ex-officio JCPL trustee, offered no public tribute and left early after participating in an hour-long private caucus with JCPL trustees on a personnel issue.  Library spokesman Shane Smith said that relations between the pair have been amicable.

Asked why the mayor failed to thank the director for his service—a traditional political ritual—Smith said, “You’d have to ask the mayor about that.”

The mayor’s office has not responded to Jersey City Times’s request for comment.

In his final director’s report, Trzeciak said it was “an absolute joy and honor” to have worked with all JCPL board members. He said he took pride in having kept his pledge to keep JCPL staff safe and employed during the pandemic and to maintain the library’s connection to the community at large.

He lauded workers for keeping branches “clean, functioning, safe, and secure” during the health crisis; praised IT staff for distributing digital hotspots to patrons in need and providing laptops to staff to help serve patrons; hailed communications aides for updating residents on services; hailed branch staff and the bookmobile operator for helping the library become the “first in New Jersey to go curbside” with book pickups and drop-offs; and thanked the grant writer for finding outside revenue sources.

During his tenure, Trzeciak said the library acquired its “millionth book,” thereby achieving the largest collection of books and also of Spanish-language books in the state; gained “significant” new donors; forged partnerships with various community groups; initiated a $10 million renovation of the main branch; added new staff including many locals and “forty percent people of color”; and became the first in the state to eliminate fines for overdue items.

But Trzeciak said he felt his biggest achievement was “the thousands of hours” of virtual programming assembled by staff resulting in more attendees at the library’s online events. Higher costs for COVID-related expenses such as protective shielding at branches will be reimbursed with federal aid.

Trzeciak’s last day on the job will be March 24. The trustees have yet to name a temporary replacement. Whether a search will be undertaken for a permanent director or even whether the trustees want a new permanent leader is still unknown.

In the meantime, trustees authorized the employment of Alison Blumenfeld as head of information services for the reference department and programming for adults and outreach at $75,000 a year; Jessica Campbell as social worker at $54,953 a year; and Ridika Butler as security guard at $28,702 a year.

Photo by Element5 Digital from Pexels

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Alison Mirenda

Jeffrey Trzeciak Appointed as Jersey City Library Director

November 27, 2019/in header, In Our Midst, Latest News, News /by Alison Mirenda

After many months of interviewing and meeting highly qualified applicants, the Jersey City Free Public Library has selected Jeffrey Trzeciak as its new director.

Trzeciak will be replacing the library’s previous director, Priscilla Gardner, who held the position since 2002 before retiring in September 2019. Mayor Steven M. Fulop decided to honor Gardner by rededicating the downtown main library building as the Priscilla Gardner Main Library.

“I am extremely excited to join the Jersey City Free Public Library at this point in its history,” said Trzeciak.

As director, Trzeciak will be responsible for six regional branches of the library system located all around Jersey City: Five Corners (678 Newark Ave.), Glenn D. Cunningham (275 Martin Luther King Dr.), Miller (489 Bergen Ave.), Earl Morgan (1841 JFK Blvd.), Heights(14 Zabriskie St.), and the Pavonia (326 Eighth St.). He will also oversee neighborhood branches in Lafayette (307 Pacific Ave.), West Bergen (546 West Side Ave.), and Marion (1017 West Side Ave.), a bookmobile, and a large digital collection.

Library suggestion board at the Community Open House. Photo by Jersey City Times.

Trzceiak hopes to develop a strategic plan with the assistance of a consultant and input from staff and community leaders. He would like for all interested residents to feel part of the process as well and will be establishing methods in which their feedback can be taken into account.

“A critical piece of any strategic planning process is listening to all stakeholders,” Trzceiak said. “I am excited to get started in Jersey City by engaging residents, community leaders, and especially library patrons and staff.”

Trzceiak’s goal is to have this new strategic plan in motion by fall 2020.

Trzeciak brings with him 30 years of experience in library administration and a track record of successful fundraising. From 2017 until his appointment in Jersey City, he served as director of the Newark Public Library, establishing and overseeing a strong, multi-racial senior leadership team. Grants Trzeciak wrote increased that Newark Public Library’s revenue by almost $2.5 million in 2018. In honor of these accomplishments, Trzeciak received the Director Recognition Award from the New Jersey Association of Library Assistants in 2018.

Trzeciak also left his mark in academia. From 2012 to 2016 he served as University Librarian at Washington University in St. Louis.  While there in 2014 he founded “Documenting Ferguson,” a digital repository chronicling protests and other events that cropped up throughout the country in response to the shooting of Michael Brown. So groundbreaking was the collection, Trzeciak received the Innovation Award from the National Digital Stewardship Alliance in 2015.

Trzeciak raised significant sums for Washington University’s library as well. The capital campaign he ran there raised $30 million for critical renovations. This was $10 million more than his goal.

“This marks an exciting new chapter for the Jersey City Free Public Library,” said Curt Harris, the library’s board president. “The case for Jeffrey’s candidacy [is] quite compelling because he is truly invested in social equity and diversity and inclusion issues in all areas rather than paying mere lip service.”

New Jersey State Librarian Mary Chute has also expressed her support for Trzeciak. “This is an excellent selection, and we congratulate both Mr. Trzeciak and the Jersey City Free Public Library Board of Trustees,” she said. “We look forward to witnessing what they will accomplish together on behalf of the city.”

Following is a Q&A with our new director:

Jersey City Times: What are you most looking forward to as Jersey City’s new library director?

Jeffrey Trzeciak: My husband (Michael Sieveking) and I are looking forward to becoming part of the Jersey City community. We look forward to moving there soon and learning more about Jersey City, its residents, their needs, and how the library might help to address those needs.

JCT: Do you plan on extending hours or services?

JT: My first task will be to work with the community in a strategic planning process. I want to learn more about the expectations of the community. Residents will be seeing a lot of me in the coming months!

JCT: You were the library director in Newark, NJ, for two years. Why did you not serve longer?

JT: My husband works at the New York Philharmonic. He and I decided to move to the area to advance both of our careers. I am proud of the work that I did at Newark Public Library, particularly our programs aimed at reducing homelessness and joblessness, helping Newarkers [sic] to attain their educational goals, highlighting the contributions of Newark’s diverse communities, and elevating the profile of the library. But we are not moving far from Newark, and I will look for ways in which the JCFPL and NPL can collaborate.

JCT:  What instilled in you your appreciation for libraries?

JT: I come from working-class roots, and I was fortunate enough to find an evening job at the Dayton (Ohio) Metro Library that allowed me to work full time evenings while also going to school full time during the day. It was that experience of working in an urban public library that instilled in me the value that libraries bring to the communities we serve.

JCT:  What do you plan on doing differently than former Library Director Priscilla Gardner?

JT: Director Gardner leaves a great legacy behind, and I wish her well in her retirement. I look forward to building on her legacy by working with the staff, the board, and the community to enhance services, collections and facilities. My focus will be based on community need.

Restored historic Tiffany glass window at the Jersey City Free Public Library. Photo by Jersey City Times.

Header photo:  Angelo Estrada with Jeffrey Trzeciak (right) at the Community Open House.  Photo by Jersey City Times.

News Briefs

According to a report in the Jersey Journal, a  Jersey City police and fire dispatcher died on Wednesday after being admitted to the hospital with Covid-19. His death, apparently, follows a Covid-19 outbreak at the Jersey City Public Safety Communications Center. A city spokeswoman has confirmed the death but said that it “hasn’t been determined” that it was coronavirus-related.

 

The 2021 tree planting applications are available. Fill out the form and our city arborists will handle it. Apply early! bit.ly/adoptatreespri… @innovatejc @JCmakeitgreen

Mayor Steven Fulop and the Jersey City Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) announced the opening of the City’s sixth vaccination site located near the Marin Boulevard Light Rail Station to vaccinate frontline workers, including all food and restaurant workers, grocery store workers, porters, hospitality workers, warehouse workers, those in the medical supply chain, and more.

Two of the City-run vaccination sites will dedicate 1,000 J&J vaccines for those interested, prioritizing workers who have limited time off: 100 Marin Boulevard and 28 Paterson Street (Connors Center).   Those interested should call (201) 373-2316.

Vaccine-eligible individuals can make an appointment online by visiting hudsoncovidvax.org.

Keep abreast of Jersey City Covid-19 statistics here.

Governor Murphy has launched a “Covid Transparency Website” where New Jerseyans can track state expenditures related to Covid.  Go here.

For info on vaccinations, call Vaccination Call Center. Operators will assist you with scheduling one: 855-568-0545

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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