Recently Asked Questions
Displaying 6 - 9 of 9
| Question | Submission Date |
|---|---|
|
Emergency contact information for children attending library programs
My question is: do public libraries have any legal obligation to collect emergency contact information for children (age 17 and under) attending library programs without a parent or caregiver present/on the premises? Our library is located on the campus of a school district, and we have access to the school district's library automation system, in addition to our own, so we could easily and quickly locate contact information for the parents/caregivers of children who attend our programs in the event of a medical or other type of emergency situation. We already have an unattended minor policy as well. Our Library Board wants to make sure that we are in compliance with both Federal and New York State law on this issue. Thank you. |
|
|
Patron Confidentiality in School Libraries
Is a parent or guardian allowed to access the titles of books that that their child(ren) have checked out from the school library? Are school administrators allowed to access the titles of materials a student checked out? Are school safety officers and Student Resource Officers (“SRO’s”) allowed to access the titles of materials a student checked out? |
|
|
FERPA and NYS Privacy Laws
We have a question that relates to the intersection of New York state level library privacy laws (https://www.nysenate.gov/legislation/laws/CVP/4509) and FERPA. Our campus has a newish system that is attempting to correlate student actions and activities with academic success and retention. As such, it could be helpful to include things like visits to the writing center, appointments with academic advisors, and also library activities, such as whether a class came in for a library information literacy session or whether a student made an appointment for a library one-on-one consultation. FERPA lets institutions share academically related information within certain bounds. We are wondering what the privacy balance is here given that the information would stay in-institution, but not in-library. Here's what we are considering doing: 1) Noting in the system which classes had a library session(s). Within the system, that would identify individual students within those classes. |
|
|
NY Statute CPLR 4509. Library records
Can a library report a crime based on use of library resources while honoring CPLR 4509 (assuring the confidentiality of circulation records)? |