Readers will still be able to use the facility for a further 12 months while work continues to find it “a permanent new home”
Cambuslang residents have welcomed news of a further chapter in the story of the town’s library, which is now set to remain open for another year.
Readers and staff had been concerned that two years of additional funding announced after the library was originally announced for closure in 2024 was due to expire next month – but now South Lanarkshire Council has announced that it will continue to be retained for the next 12 months.
The additional funding will be used to maintain the service “while efforts continue to find a new home in a community hub”, with the area’s community council currently working to scope out local options.
Located at Cambuslang Gate, the town’s library was one of seven included in a list of 35 community facilities to be closed by South Lanarkshire Leisure and Culture following a £750,000 budget cut two years ago.
A £150,000 future libraries fund was then established by the council to “provide time for plans to be developed for alternative models of provision”, with some of the under-threat facilities since moving into new spaces, including Halfway and Blantyre respectively now being run from as part of LEAP Project’s community hub and in the area’s leisure centre.
Now council leader Joe Fagan has announced a further year’s funding for Cambuslang, with the authority this week confirming that the library “is to remain open for a further year as efforts continue to find it a permanent new home”.
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Cambuslang Community Council chair John Bachtler told the Rutherglen Reformer that residents are “very pleased and relieved” by the reprieve keeping the library open past March – as the group leads the efforts to secure its long-term location.
The group is currently looking at two locations on Main Street to establish a community hub, and remains in discussion with the local authority about future funding and staffing.
John said: “The library is such a vital resource for so many people in Cambuslang – now the third-largest town in South Lanarkshire – and it absolutely needs to be retained.
“We’re grateful for the efforts of our elected members, especially our Cambuslang West councillors, to make the case for the library during difficult budget negotiations within the council.
“For the past 15 months, the community council has been looking at the feasibility of a new community hub on Main Street which could accommodate the library and other activities in a way that is financially self-sustaining; we are in discussion with the landlords of two buildings that would have space.
“The council has been supportive in providing funding for professional surveys and valuations, but there are crucial questions of how the library, and importantly the staffing, would be funded in a future hub. We have a meeting with council officials later this month to discuss these questions further.”
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Constituency MSP Clare Haughey said the confirmation of extended funding had come after a period of concern among library users and staff in which they had feared as recently as last week that no funding was allocated to keep the library’s doors open after the end of the current financial year.
The Rutherglen representative said on Facebook: “I welcome the council finally committing funding to Cambuslang Library post-March after public and political pressure.
“I’m really grateful for the efforts of Cambuslang Community Council who are seeking to find an alternative when South Lanarkshire Council shamefully stops funding any library provision in Cambuslang in the near future – residents deserve so much better than the services they are receiving.”
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South Lanarkshire Council leader Joe Fagan said: “We have already taken steps to keep Cambuslang Library open, and I can confirm that temporary funding will continue while a permanent solution is found.
“This will be a relief to local library users and provide them with certainty and a good degree of comfort. The council will continue to work with the community to secure a permanent solution for local services buffeted by the twin terrors of rising costs and government under-funding.”
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