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Fundraising

Library’s Campaign Eases Proposed Cuts in City Funds

July 2, 2009 | Read Time: 2 minutes

The New York Public Library successfully used an online fund-raising and advocacy campaign to fight the city’s plan to slash its municipal support by $28-million this year — and now it has won back $23-million in subsidies.

Key to the library’s success was an urgent alert message that replaced what viewers typically see when they visit the institution’s main Web site.

Starting on May 6, the library encouraged online visitors to make a donation of $5 or more and to contact their city representatives to protest the cuts.

“Keep your library open,” the message read. “We need your help! Record numbers of New Yorkers are relying on the New York Public Library in these difficult economic times.”

The city cuts, it said, would shut city libraries for an extra one or two days a week and restrict residents’ access to job-search tools.


The campaign included a celebrity-studded YouTube video, featuring the actress Bette Midler, the writer Amy Tan, the actor Jeff Daniels, the director Mike Nichols, and several others. All donated their time to urge viewers to participate in the campaign.

The library also used messages on Facebook and other social-networking sites, inviting its donors to use Twitter and other tools to tell people about the campaign and the library’s budget woes.

The campaign brought in $50,000 from 1,100 donors, with an average gift of $47. Eighty percent of those who gave were first-time donors.

“We are really excited about this,” says Catherine Carver Dunn, the New York Public Library’s senior vice president of external affairs.

Equally critical, says Ms. Dunn, was the campaign’s ability to galvanize more than 30,000 area residents who contacted their city representatives to protest the government cutbacks.


Says Ms. Dunn: “We created an opportunity for library users to be heard.”

For more information: Go to http://www.nypl.org.

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