Showing posts with label Colton. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Colton. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 7, 2020

Colton Library ◯ Brings Forth Edutainment During Quarantine


Colton Public Library Brings Forth Edutainment During Quarantine
IECN: 3.31.2020 by Manny B. Sandoval

Amidst COVID-19 stay-at-home orders, Colton Public Library brings forth creative activities for the entire family in an innovative way to connect to the community.

Since the middle of March, the library staff and its Literacy Program Assistant Thomas Robles (Library Tom) have generated Facebook and YouTube videos, inclusive of story time, a sing-a-long music segment and even cooking demonstrations.

“We began this online Library Tom Storytime series about three weeks ago. The Community Services Department is unable to engage with the community at this time, so we found a way to bring stories, music and activities to children and families in Colton and beyond,” said Robles.  READ MORE ➤➤

Sunday, August 25, 2019

Colton Library :: Introduces Adult GED Study Groups


Colton Public Library Introduces Adult GED Study Groups
City News Group: 8.22.2019 by Suzanne Busch, Literacy Program Assistant

The Colton Public Library is calling all adults who want to expand their knowledge and increase their abilities in different areas of study. If you've been wanting to go back to school or just improve your skill sets, don't miss out on the library's program.

Colton Public Library’s Advance to Literacy Program will begin a new series of study group meetings for people ages 18 and older in September 2019.

The first subject for study will be Math and Science. A volunteer tutor will lead the study groups.

This program is FREE. Registration is required. Please call Colton Public Library’s Advance to Literacy Office at (909) 370-5170 to register.

Wednesday, April 3, 2019

Colton Library :: Advance to Literacy and Homework Assistance Center Grand Reopening

Colton Public Library’s Advance to Literacy and Homework Assistance Center Grand Reopening
Colton City News: 3.21.2019 by Suzanne Busch, Colton Library

On Thursday, March 7 at 3:00 p.m., the Colton Public Library’s Advance to Literacy and Homework Assistance Center celebrated its re-location with a Grand Reopening.  Among those in attendance were members of the Colton Public Library Board of Trustees, City Manager Bill Smith and parents and students of the Homework Assistance Center.

Colton Public Library would like to give special thanks to Home Depot, who provided the improvement supplies and whose employees and volunteers assisted in the remodel.

The Advance to Literacy Center is located in the Luque Branch Library at 294 East O Street, Monday through Thursdays from 12:00 and 5:00 p.m.

Please call (909) 370-5170 for more information.

Wednesday, December 2, 2009

Colton Library - Colton Libraries Reopen with Six-Day Schedule

Colton Libraries Reopen with Six-Day Schedule
SB Sun: December 1, 2009 by Michael J Sorba

Library service is back in Colton.


The Main Library, 656 N. Ninth St., reopened Tuesday. Starting today, it will operate from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. on Mondays, Wednesdays, Fridays and Saturdays.

Service has also been restored at the Luque Branch Library, 294 E O St. It will reopen Thursday and then operate on Tuesdays and Thursdays from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. The new schedules at both libraries will remain until June 30.

Pete Carrasco, chairman of the Colton Public Library Board of Trustees, said he's glad the city responded to the public's request to restore the libraries.

The libraries and homework assistance center that was housed at the Carnegie building were closed in November as cost-cutting measures to offset a projected $5 million deficit for the fiscal year.

At the ensuing City Council meeting about two-dozen people spoke against the decision and asked that some level of library service be restored.

The homework assistance center and an adult literacy program that was offered haven't been restored, but the city is working to get those programs back online, said Interim Deputy City Manager Bill Smith.

Schedules are effective immediately and will remain until June 30. READ MORE !

Wednesday, November 18, 2009

Colton Library - Colton City Council Bombarded with Complaints over Library Closures

Colton City Council Bombarded with Complaints over Library Closures
SB Sun: November 17, 2009 by Michael J Sorba

Nearly 100 people crammed into the City Council Chambers Tuesday night to hear complaints about the recent closure of the city's three libraries.

Several who spoke said they were flabbergasted by the decision and questioned why other options weren't considered before such a brash move was made.

"There are things that can be done when you ask the community for help," said Linda Tripp, vice president of Friends of the Colton Public Library. "You need to reach out to the community before you do something this drastic."

Last week, Interim City Manager Bob Miller announced the libraries would remain shuttered until the June 30 close of the current fiscal year and almost 60 employees would be laid off to combat a projected $5 million general fund deficit.

These moves will only save about $3.5 million, and it's likely more layoffs and organizational changes will be needed to make up the difference, Mayor Kelly Chastain said. READ MORE !

Thursday, November 12, 2009

Colton Library - Colton Sends Out Layoff Notices; Libraries To Close

Colton Sends Out Layoff Notices; Libraries To Close
SB Sun: November 12, 2009 by Melissa Pinion-Whitt


Nearly 60 Colton city employees have been given layoff notices and the city's three libraries will be closed as a result of Colton's $5 million budget shortfall, Interim City Manager Bob Miller announced today.

Thirty full time and nearly 30 part-time employees have been given notices.

Miller said the cuts will save the city $4 million. He urged labor group representatives to determine whether they can offer the city some salary or benefit savings.

"Perhaps we can all work together to head-off additional layoffs, or even reverse some of this action and return some fine people to their jobs," Miller said in a prepared statement.

Miller said the situation may grow worse if voters don't support the extension of the city's utility user tax, which is set to expire in 2011. The tax provides about $5 million to the city's general fund.

Saturday, September 5, 2009

Adult Literacy Awareness Month - Carlsbad - Colton

Adult Literacy Awareness Month
September Spotlight
on SCLLN literacy programs

Carlsbad City Library
25th Anniversary of Literacy Services
Learning Connection Newsletter: July/August 2009


Literacy Services for adults is a program of the Carlsbad City Library that serves English-speaking adults who want to improve their basic reading and writing skills. Literacy Services has helped hundreds of adults to become more confident and independent.

We provide a friendly, supportive atmosphere. We value every learner's needs and goals. Each learner studies one-to-one with a trained volunteer tutor. All services are confidential and provided without charge.

Partnership with Carlsbad High School
In September 1998, Carlsbad Library's Literacy Services began a cooperative literacy effort with Carlsbad High School. Special education students come daily during regular school hours to the Learning Center. Ninth through twelfth graders are tutored one-to-one in basic reading and writing skills by their special education teacher and aide and by the staff and volunteers of the Literacy Services. Enrollment is done through the high school and students receive high school credit.

Colton Public Library – Advance To Literacy

The Colton Public Library is recruiting community volunteers to assist in the library or to tutor adult students in its literacy program. Volunteer literacy tutors spend three hours a week teaching adults how to read. Tutors complete a day-long workshop before being matched up to an adult learner. For more information, call Advance to Literacy at (909) 370-5170. The community of Colton takes great pride in its beautiful and important public library. Dedicate yourself to helping the library maintain all its special services in future years.

Friday, February 1, 2002

Colton Library - Literacy tutors wanted: A program graduates say changed their lives has a waiting list of adult students.

Literacy tutors wanted:A program graduates say changed their lives has a waiting list of adult students.
Press-Enterprise: January 10, 2002 by Maria T. Garcia

Seven years ago, Antonia Diaz found the courage to admit that she was illiterate.

The Colton homemaker and mother of four school-age children was fortunate, however. She turned to the city's Adult and Families for Literacy Program and found a reading tutor who was eager to work with her.

The literacy program that Diaz, 40, credits with changing her outlook on life has helped hundreds of other adults since its start in 1988.

Now the program itself needs help.

More than 30 people are waiting for a tutor, said Ruth Martinez, who coordinates the literacy program through the city-run Colton Public Library. But there are not enough volunteers.

The shortage of tutors means that people who want to learn to read and write have to wait until a volunteer becomes available, which can take months.

In Riverside County, finding reading volunteers is also an ongoing challenge, said Tracie Janis, coordinator of the county Library Adult Literacy Program.

"We always have a shortage of tutors," Janis said. "But we never have a shortage of students. That's never the problem."

Old-fashioned recruiting and the Internet, however, are alleviating the need for tutors in Riverside County.

The library system, with more than 20 branches and nearly 200 volunteers, has been successful in recruiting tutors at senior centers and on the Internet, Janis said. The Internet allows potential volunteers to sign up online and find out about training workshops. Computer-savvy reading volunteers can even submit their monthly reports online.

Janis said every effort must be made to find students a tutor. Otherwise, they may be discouraged from returning to the literacy program by the time a tutor becomes available.

"We may lose the student altogether," she said.

That's too bad, Diaz said, because people who ask for help have already taken the most difficult step: acknowledging that they can't read or that they need help to improve their skills. As Diaz knows, admitting that one is an illiterate adult is not easy.

"I thought I didn't need help," said Diaz, an immigrant from Mexico whose parents pulled her out of school so she could work to supplement the family's income. "But I couldn't help my children with their homework."

Diaz sought help from the Colton Public Library's adult literacy program, where she met volunteer tutor Lillian Alves, a retired elementary school teacher.

They have worked together for two years, sometimes meeting as often as three times a week. Alves has seen Diaz change from a shy person who struggled to read a newspaper into an inquisitive, college-bound woman.

Besides giving her the gift of reading and helping her earn her GED, Alves inspired Diaz to become a teacher.

Diaz plans to enroll at a community college this year before transferring to a university.

"Once you know how to read, you can open doors," Diaz said. "Reading is powerful."

For Alves, a Rialto resident who volunteers at the Colton library three days a week, helping someone -- young or old -- to read is a rewarding experience.

"It's the most amazing feeling because you feel like you've accomplished something," Alves said.