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Library Grant Applications are Invited

Over the last 12 years, the Kansas Book Festival has accepted grant applications from needy Kansas public and school libraries, either for books or reading-related technology, and we are open again for applications, with a deadline of April 24, 2024. The Festival typically awards at least two grants of no more than $2000 for book acquisition. The Festival also awards at least one grant of no more than $2500 for the purchase of technology that is reading-related.

In 2024, our grant application period is from March 14 to April 24, and the necessary forms are available at the website for the Kansas Book Festival: https://www.kansasbookfestival.com/outr…/library-grants-1/ A digital copy of the application should be sent by email no later than the April 24 deadline, to our grant coordinator Beth Dobler (bethdobler9@gmail.com). This file can be in the form of a Word Document or PDF, but no faxed or mailed applications will be accepted.

NOTE: Special consideration is given to those with greater financial need, and a library cannot win a KBF grant in consecutive years. Requests may be funded only in part. Also, a progress report, including an accounting of funds, is expected by December 31 of the grant year.

Kansas Book Festival Grant Winners

Every year for the last decade, the Kansas Book Festival has granted funding to Kansas libraries seeking to improve their book holdings or technology, distributing $10,000 in total. This year’s grants, just released, will assist five selected libraries, including Quinter High School Library in western Kansas, Circle Oil Hill Elementary School Library in southern Kansas, and Lebanon Community Library in north Kansas.

Needs vary. At Circle Oil Hill Elementary School, in El Dorado, the student population has become more diverse, and an $800 grant will help to provide books that appeal to kids from multiple cultures. Jonna Garbee, the library media specialist at Circle Oil Hill, says, “It is important for our students to learn about history and the many injustices suffered by people of color, but I am realizing that many of the books in our library focus only on suffering and not on everyday living. I want to provide books that show children of all races and cultures solving mysteries, having adventure, and laughing with friends.”

At Lebanon Kansas, where 28% of the patrons are over 60, there is a need for large-print books. An $800 grant will help Lebanon Community Library to provide 30 new large-print novels.

Some of the annual grants from the Kansas Book Festival go to technology instead of books. Quinter High School is committed to creating an innovative learning lab, where students can collaborate and create using 21st century tech tools. According to Valerie Brown-Kuchera, the K-12 Library Director at Quinter, this lab will include a podcast booth, a recording studio, 3D printing pens, a poster printer, and other devices that will inspire students to imagine and invent in contemporary ways. A $1000 grant from the Festival will help to purchase some of the required technology.

This year, two other libraries have been selected to receive funding from the Kansas Book Festival. Lincoln Junior Senior High School Library will receive $800 for the purchase of graphic novels and updated nonfiction, and Twin Valley Schools will receive $1600 for replacement of failing computers.

The Library Grant Program of the Kansas Book Festival, begun by former First Lady Mary Brownback when she brought the Festival to Topeka in 2011, is dependent on the generosity of donating individuals and agencies.

Kansas Book Festival Helps Area Libraries Improve Services

TOPEKA, March 22, 2021–Every March, the Kansas Book Festival grants $10,000 to Kansas libraries seeking to improve their book holdings or technology.  This year’s grants, just released, will assist 11 public or school libraries across the state, from Midland Trail Elementary Library near the heart of downtown Kansas City all the way to the Greeley County Library in far western Kansas (see photo of staff above).   

The needs vary.  In Peabody, 45 miles north of Wichita, a $750 grant will go toward books that help children from impoverished or dysfunctional homes to deal with related trauma.   Rodger Charles, the Director of the Peabody Township Library, is collaborating with local school counselors and teachers so that they have timely access to resources that can help children who are at risk.

By contrast, Michelle Davis, the Librarian at Oak Grove Elementary Library in Kansas City, deals with a student population that is 29% bilingual, but she says, “Currently, our library has 19 bilingual books out of a total of 13,399 books, meaning 0.14% of our books are bilingual.”  To improve the situation, Davis will use the $750 grant from Kansas Book Festival to purchase books that combine English with languages such as Burmese, Serbian, and Spanish.  She is enthused to help struggling minority students grasp concepts and language skills more quickly. 

Some of the annual Festival grants go to technology instead of books.  As Darci Hildebrand, Director of the Wamego Public Library, explains, “The effects of the pandemic have pushed many into isolation in a way that once seemed unfathomable.  It has become evident that technology is no longer just a luxury but a necessity.”  Because of this growing need, Hildebrand plans to use the $800 grant from the Kansas Book Festival for purchasing stands, microphones, lighting equipment, and a portable Green Screen that can be used with a tablet or iPad to Zoom and livestream events for library patrons at home. 

The Kansas Book Festival grant program, which was begun by former First Lady Mary Brownback when she brought the Festival to Topeka, has been maintained for a decade.  To date, $95,000 have been given to Kansas libraries, which will be celebrated at the 10th Anniversary of the Festival on September 18, when it takes place on the grounds of Washburn University in Topeka. 

The full alphabetical list of 2021 library grantees is as follows: Elemendaro Township Library ($1000), Greeley County Library ($1200), Kiowa County Library ($750), La Crosse Middle and High School Library ($600), La Cygne Public Library ($1800), Midland Trail Elementary Library ($750), Oak Grove Elementary Library ($750), Peabody Township Library ($750), S.E. of Saline Elementary and Secondary Libraries ($950), Wamego Public Library ($800), and Wilson Schools Library ($650). 

2016 Library Grants Announced

The Kansas Book Festival began in 2011 with the start of our one-day festival in September. Shortly following the festival, we opened up our first grant cycle and received a great response from libraries across the state that needed financial help. Our first grants were awarded in 2012 and since then, we’ve been able to give more than $58,000 to 42 school and 34 public libraries across the state. We want libraries to know that we are committed to helping them reach their goals and in turn fulfilling our mission of promoting literacy and a life-long love of learning to the people of Kansas.

Many of the libraries who applied for grants have materials budgets in the hundreds of dollars, not the thousands or tens of thousands of dollars. We’ve received applications that detail how a particular library doesn’t have a single computer for patrons to use, libraries that have average copyright dates that go back to the 1960’s and libraries that are trying desperately to engage their reluctant readers and are even struggling to keep their doors open. That’s why it’s so important for foundations like the Kansas Book Festival and our corporate sponsors to help support these libraries in their efforts.

The libraries receiving grants for 2016 are as follows:

Technology
Blue Rapids Public Library
Liberal Memorial LIbrary
Moundridge Public Library
Peabody Township Library
Seaman High School Library
Weir Public Library

Books

Dixon Township Library
Eisenhower High School Library
Goodland Jr/Sr High School LIbrary
Lincoln Elementary Library (El Dorado)
Lincoln Elementary Library
Medicine Lodge Grade School Library
Morton County Library
Olpe High School Library
Paul B. Cooper Elementary (Wichita)
Washington Public Library
Wichita County Library