Free to read all you want in-house, but if you want to take some home, you gotta pony up for that card.

Fortunately the card was usually cheap.

  • The Snark Urge
    link
    fedilink
    English
    10311 months ago

    I’ve never paid for a library card in my life.

    There’s no way card fees or late fees could ever fund a library. I’m pretty sure those are just policies enacted by people who either don’t understand or don’t care.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      4411 months ago

      The late fees are usually miniscule and they act as a deterrent to keep people from holding onto the same book for an extended period with zero repercussions.

      • Carighan Maconar
        link
        fedilink
        911 months ago

        The library card itself is mostly meant to make sure the people borrowing books are known for purposes of late fees etc. It’s nothing else than an account registration, the only reason it sometimes costs money is because the library is meant to attract only a small specific area of a city (the others have their own libraries) but due to a lot of communter traffic they’re worried about X-times the amount of estimated people getting books from this particular place.

        So they make the cards cost a tiny amount (I think I paid €5 before) so that you won’t just want to get a card from every single library in your city.

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          211 months ago

          Some US libraries have a reprint fee if you lose it. But I have never seen a library that charges for the initial card.

    • Beemo Dinosaurierfuß
      link
      fedilink
      1111 months ago

      I am not sure what you are saying here.

      And I don’t know how stuff works in America, but where I live with most public offers like libraries, public pools, graveyards and stuff like that the amount that the user has to pay is almost never enough to completely fund that thing.

      It is still good to demand a certain price, since that increases the appreciation of this public good, decreases wasteful or careless usage and obviously helps to lessen the necessary subsidies from taxpayer money.

      I am pretty sure the people enacting those policies understand that perfectly well.

      If you would demand so much money from library users to fund the whole library, then noone would use it and a valuable public good would be lost.