Against the Grain v34#3 June, 2022 Full Issue

Page 16

How Spartanburg County Libraries Improved Census Participation By Andy Flynt (Director of Information Services, Spartanburg County Public Libraries) implemented in a rapidly changing environment. Even as our libraries remained closed through the early months of the pandemic, library staff helped our partners promote Census participation through emergency food boxes and online communication. As the country shut down, we prepared and distributed lawn signs that were placed in all of our communities at intersections and in heavily trafficked areas. We attempted phone banks (unsuccessful) and communications via geofencing (highly successful!) and texting.

D

uring conversations in early 2019, Spartanburg County Librarian Todd Stephens offered to have the Spartanburg County Public Libraries lead the efforts for the county’s government to encourage residents to participate in the 2020 Census. The goal was to surpass the county’s 2010 Census selfresponse rate of 66.1 percent. Here is how we did it. In the late summer and into the fall of 2019, we made great strides by involving local elected officials in efforts to educate residents on the importance of the Census. Our first efforts centered around the “You Count” campaign, where we created literature in English, Spanish and Russian to be distributed at local festivals, hitting on various demographics in the county. The results of our efforts lead to targets being surpassed by almost all local municipalities, which brought our Census campaign to the attention of an ensuing advertising partner Neue South, who had been working separately with the Census Bureau to encourage participation throughout the state of South Carolina. Going into the winter of 2020, we had lined up deliberate and well-conceived plans to reach our goal, including our next wave of print and electronic communications and in-person events with more than 50 community partners. We were set to have encouraged Census participation starting at the end of March 2020 via our communications and events, through the end of the collection in June 2020.

Then COVID hit. We moved from well-planned and well-prepared plans to on-the-fly events and communications methods that were

16 Against the Grain / June 2022

Even with the pandemic, some of our plans remained unchanged. We ran a billboard campaign on four of the busiest transportation lines in our county along with an electronic billboard near the area hospital. A grant from the American Library Association also enabled us to place “As we emerged moving billboards on city buses from the strictest encouraging Census participation lockdowns, through the spring and summer. As we emerged from the strictest lockdowns, libraries encouraged Census participation through some of our community’s first socially distanced in-person events. We also began going to the local community college to encourage participation. Census completion deadlines were extended by the federal government, so we worked with the hospital to promote Census participation at their local COVID testing sites. We continued to develop online marketing tools for our partners and provide them with pre-written emails to share with their clients to promote participation.

libraries encouraged Census participation through some of our community’s first socially distanced inperson events. We also began going to the local community college to encourage participation.”

As soon as schools opened in the fall, we piggybacked on other groups’ efforts to provide school supplies in our communities, with a push towards Census completion. Mixing traditional and new methods of communicating with our communities, we were able to reach a lot of different parts of Spartanburg. For libraries who want to apply for the John Cotton Dana Award, there were four main components that drove our success. First, we have an awesome community, and we reached out early to our local government, non-profit and for-profit communities. Second, we involved these partners in the process every step of the way. Third, we were unafraid to take chances and learn new skills and techniques. And last, we followed through. Even when we were discouraged by the pandemic of a lifetime and the race to complete the Census moved from a two-month sprint to a six-month marathon, we continued to work with our partners and encouraged and lifted each other up. Early outreach, continued on page 20

<https://www.charleston-hub.com/media/atg/>


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook

Articles inside

Library Marketing- What Academic Libraries Can Learn from Winners of the John Cotton Dana Awards and Librarians Focused on Public Relations

8min
pages 12-13

Back Talk — Bridges Over Troubled Waters

4min
pages 58-60

Profiles Encouraged

5min
pages 56-57

ATG Interviews Joanna Ball – Managing Director, Directory of Open Access Journals

13min
pages 53-55

ATG Interviews Alicia Wise – Executive Director of CLOCKSS

6min
pages 51-52

Biz of Digital — An IR Workflow and its Ethics: Extending Services beyond the Privileged who can Afford to Pay APCs

5min
page 47

ATG Interviews Kerry Ward – Executive Director, Core: Leadership, Infrastructure, Futures

6min
pages 50-51

Supporting Mental Health on Campus

7min
pages 48-49

and Opportunities

13min
pages 44-46

through a Tennessee Board of Regents Grant

9min
pages 42-43

And They Were There — Reports of Meetings

11min
pages 36-39

and Writing Experience

4min
page 41

Phoenix Rising: The Council of Science Edtior’s 2022 Annual Meeting

2min
page 40

eBook Terms for Libraries

8min
pages 32-33

Questions and Answers — Copyright Column

9min
pages 34-35

Booklover — Pondering Poetry

5min
pages 30-31

Tips to Run a Successful John Cotton Dana Award Campaign from Anchorage Public Library

7min
pages 24-25

Rumors

5min
pages 1-5

How Spartanburg County Libraries Improved Census Participation

4min
pages 16-17, 20

John Cotton Dana Award Winner’s “Amplify 817” Campaign: Music to Fort Worth’s Ears

5min
pages 18-21

Reader’s Roundup: Monographic Musings & Reference Reviews

19min
pages 26-29

How Edmonton Public Library’s Revitalization Led to a John Cotton Dana Award

6min
pages 22-23

Q&A with 2018 John Cotton Dana Award Winner, DC Public Library

7min
pages 14-15, 20

Bet You Missed It

3min
pages 10-11
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.