 Good morning and welcome to this week's edition of Encompass Live. I am your host, Krista Porter here at the Nebraska Library Commission. Encompass Live is the Library Commission's weekly webinar series. We do these shows every Wednesday morning at 10 a.m. Central Time, every week of the year, minus one, where we cover a variety of library activities and topics. We have... If you are unable to join us on Wednesday mornings, that's okay. We do record the show every week and it is posted to our Encompass Live website and I'll show you at the end of today's show where you can see, get those archives and watch any of our today's show and any previous shows. Both the live show and the archives are both free and open to anyone to watch. So please do share with your friends, family, neighbors, colleagues, anybody who you think might be interested in any of the topics that we have coming up. We have on the show either the ones coming up on our upcoming schedule or any of our archives. This is actually the 10th year of Encompass Live, which sounds a little crazy to me, but this is the beginning of our 10th year this year. We started in January 2009. So there are a lot of archives that we have. There are plenty of topics there that you can go and see through and I'll show them to those two as I said at the end of today's show. We do a mixture of things here on the show, interviews, book reviews, demos of software and products. Basically the only criteria we have for the show is that it is something library related, something libraries are doing currently, something we think they could be doing, software, products, services, things we might want to share for them to participate and use. We do have some sessions that Nebraska Library Commission staff are our presenters and that they speak about things we're doing here locally in Nebraska, but we do bring in guest speakers sometimes, both from Nebraska libraries and from across the country, and that is what we have this morning. On the line with us is Susan McClellan. Good morning, Susan. Good morning, everyone. Good morning. And she is the Executive Director of the Millvale Community Library in Millvale, Pennsylvania. And so she's on the East Coast for us here. And she's going to talk about a really, their library is a pretty unique library from what I've heard from chatting with her about some of the great things they're doing. She's going to talk about some of the things that they've been doing there to reach out and be part of their community. So I will just hand it over to you, Susan, to go ahead and start your presentation. Thank you very much. I'm pleased to be with everyone this morning over the phone and I'm going to tell you a little bit about myself first. I graduated from the University of Pittsburgh in 1996. So I've been a librarian for quite some time now. And at my last job, well, first of all, I have a history of working in small libraries. And at my last job, I was Director of the Coriopolis Memorial Library, which is about 20 miles from where I currently work. And it was another small library and I did a lot of programs there. And I decided to leave there after seven years because the opportunity presented itself here in Millvale. And it's a small community and I was driving 30 minutes each way to work every day. And the library I work at now is less than five minutes from my house. That plus the community here is wonderful and I'm very familiar with the neighborhood. So I decided to start working here three months ago and I absolutely love it here. I feel like I have found a home and just a wonderful fit in my career after many years of being in maybe four or five different small libraries and a larger library as well. The neighborhood is wonderful. Everyone is so supportive. I just feel like incredibly blessed to be here every day. I'll tell you a little bit about the history of the library first. As you can see on my first slide, this is the outside of our building. Our mission statement is more than a library, an agent of positive change. So the outside of the building has three apartments above it. The building used to be an electronics shop. So I'm going to give you a little bit of history about the library. The project started in 2007 when residents Brian Wolovich and Trisha George discussed the idea of a community library during a stop of Millville. A survey of the residents of Millville, and we serve about 3,700 residents here, and the survey showed that there was a great interest in having a library in the community. So the property is from 209 to 213 Grant Street, which is one of the main streets in our small community of Millville. They purchased the property for $59,000, and they had an initial architect who did some of the work for free. And then they got some grants to start developing and renovating the building. So the building that was here, it was gutted for the library, and the adjacent space was used to store some equipment. So one upstairs apartment had been rented, and the second one was installed to provide some income for maintenance of the library. So right now we have three apartments above the library. So on our next slide is the founder of the library, Brian Wolovich. Brian is well known throughout Millville and Pittsburgh area. He won an award in Pittsburgh for being an outstanding volunteer six years ago now. He currently is a sixth grade teacher. He has a wealth of other skills. And after five years of hard work, planning, and fundraising, the library opened in 2013. He spent hundreds and hundreds of hours opening the library. So five years ago he had hoped that the library would evolve into a community hub for meetings, tutoring, classes, and organizing. And so today it's a very thriving hub for the community. So the library came to life in 2008 with a summer children's program and a small collection of materials. A lot of the children's books that we have in our collection were actually donated at the time. So New Sun Rising is a local nonprofit and they led the library effort. And in August 2013 the library moved into the building where we're at. Prior to this time the library books were in a different building in town. So hundreds of volunteers spent thousands of hours transforming the space where we're at. Since the 2013 opening, programming and resources have expanded even further. So youth and adults from a United Church of Christ in Millbell built a deck out back several years ago. This 2014 plan included installing solar panels on the library rooftop. We now generate more solar electricity than the library can actually use. Other goals a few years ago were educating the public about the benefits, about the solar power and completion of the construction on the remaining office space. So since our opening we have expanded even further inside. Our collection now includes more than 8,000 items. This includes audio books and DVDs. Right now we average probably 65 or 70 visitors a day. So this is a picture which shows our solar roof. The solar roof has allowed the library to remain open longer and we now offer more community programming. So starting in April 2015 we were able to generate 100% of our electricity through the solar roof. The funding for the solar roof and the panels came out of a grant from a foundation in Pittsburgh called the Hillman Foundation. The library was also able to lead efforts to fully solarize the imagine building located next door and partially solarize the Millbell Community Center. The Millbell Community Center is about three blocks from the library. Thinking of the library as the epicenter of the community, we hope that one day all of our south facing rooftops will have solar arrays powering the community with clean and renewable energy. So Susan, I have a question about that before you move on to the next part of your presentation. Sure. That whole solar thing is so amazing. The roof is just completely covered, it looks like, right? Yes, it is completely covered. All the space you can possibly use. Yeah, and we have a solar meter which I read every month on the side of the library building. And so we do get a few dollars back every month from the surplus of solar energy. I was going to ask about that. You said you produce more than you need. And that's what's been my question is what happens with that extra? So you just get a refund or something? It's a small refund check, yes. Okay. So connected to the library, in fact, right beside it now is a honey, tuplo honey tea shop. And it is run by Millbell, Danielle, who grew up in Millbell. And her name is Danielle Spinoia. And people call her the resident tea lady. And so she opened this tea shop and followed 2016. And she has vegan and vegetarian food in her tea shop. And it's fantastic. Every morning I come in to work and have this incredible smell in the library from the tea shop next door. And we do a lot of programs in conjunction with Danielle. And so what is great about that is she brings a lot of foot traffic because our door is actually connected to the tea shop. And so she has this great love of tea and great love of the library and we have a great love of tea and food as well. So it's worked out fantastic for both of us. So tuplo honey teas, they have a monthly book club. And so they actually meet sometimes in the library, sometimes in the tea shop. And so we actually did what's called a Who Good New Year event with Danielle in January. And this event brought over 200 people into the library for the day because Danielle has probably 10 to 15 chairs in her shop. And so she set up vendors in the library throughout the day. We had someone making candles and we had crafts. We had someone doing massages, aromatherapy, all different types of different workshops during the day. And this was all her idea. And so we had hundreds of people in the library throughout the day. She also does a knitting night. She has theater groups to come in the library. And people can take the food from the tea shop and eat in the library. So that's very unique to us. Some libraries, they discourage eating, but we welcome food in the library all the time. So the room I'm at right now, because we have construction going on in the library, we have new signing being put on right now, and that's again through a grant. So I'm sitting in the library makerspace right now. And our makerspace was the first library makerspace among the Allegheny County libraries. It's very small. It's essentially probably the size of someone's kitchen if it were pretty small. So the majority of programming in our makerspace, it's just a cozy small space. It has like two small tables in it. And we have like a rotating, not a cabinet, but just a rotating storage space. And we do have a few shelving units in the room. We have yarn places for kids to sew in here and a small closet. So in the summertime, we have what's called maker camps. These are free, and they last for eight weeks, and these have been going on for a few years now, and people are now calling me, asking me about the maker camps. And so this will be my first year experiencing the maker camps. And so the maker camps would consist of an art camp, a nature camp, a fashion camp, whatever the maker educator decides to do for those eight weeks. And it would be two hours in the morning for the younger kids and two hours in the afternoon for the older kids. So we had a former maker educator, Nora, and she launched a program to integrate literacy and she developed these maker activity cards based on children's books. So for example, if there was a children's book where a young girl sewed something, then Nora made up a card relating to, like, a sewing project. And so she just got accepted to present at the South by Southwest Conference in March, and she's going to talk about our maker space at that conference. So that's a wonderful, exciting opportunity to represent Milwell and we're very excited for Nora. So Milwell Community Library was named a Maker Core host site in 2014, and at that time it was only one of 35 maker education sites nationally. Since 2014, the maker space has created many local and regional partnerships. We currently have partnerships with Carnegie Mellon University, the University of Pittsburgh. We have partnerships with a local pottery artist, some local artists here in Milwell. So our current maker educator, his name is Roman Benty and he's created many new programs and partnerships. He recently did a mural project with Tom Pottery, who is a pottery maker who has his own pottery shop about three blocks from the library. So you can follow the Milwell Makers. We're on Instagram at justinstagram.com at Milwell Makers. And the library also has a site. It's just Milwell Community Library on Instagram. So next I'm going to talk about some of our programs. And so we pretty much have one or two programs every day in the library. We are closed on Mondays. On Mondays we're closed. On Tuesdays after school we have a volunteer, her name is Diane and she comes in and does homework help. And this is basically for school-age children. On Wednesdays our maker educator, Roman, does different activities which have included paper crafts. He's done stop animation with the iPad. He's done painting, mural making, jewelry making, making with felt, all different types of projects. On Thursdays we have an open maker time for teens. And we have guitar lessons for children ages eight and up. Now this is something new that we just started. So I thought it would be really cool to have a guitar maker space here because Roman actually plays in a band. And I noticed when I first started working here that we have a lot of children that come in and they have a strong interest in music. And these are mostly children that are 10 to 15 years old that are coming in after school. We have three or four boys in particular that are coming in with their guitars and they're just very into music. So back in November I requested a donation of guitars from local music stores. And Brighton Music Center, which is about three miles from the library, they donated three guitars to us in December. And it was like a wonderful donation. It happened right before Christmas, so it was like we celebrated Christmas early at the library. It was fantastic. And we just had another guitar donated from an area resident. So I'm in the process, Roman and I are in the process of writing this grant to get more music equipment for the maker space. Now since the room is really small, we're going to have to soundproof it somehow because the noise obviously is going to carry over into the tuple of tea shop. So basically we had the idea that we want to give kids something that they can learn and they can develop a musical skill set and they're going to have fun while they're in the library as well. So the students that come to their music class, they don't have to be from Millwell. This is free and they can come from anywhere. So Millwell Library rocks. And I've never played a music instrument and I think like now is my chance to learn. So Susan, you just said the Millwell Library rocks. So are you working on this to having something to do with the summer reading program theme for this year? Which happens to be Library Rock? Yes, actually I think it would be very cool to have a library band. I don't know that I have musical talent because I haven't tried yet. We do have, I have another, I have a VISTA volunteer on staff and she plays the ukulele. So I think it would be cool if we did have like a little rock band. Absolutely. So on the left on my slide is Jackson and Jackson is a volunteer who's also in a band and he comes in and helps on Thursdays. And we do get anywhere from 5 to 10 you to come in and they're very engaged with our guitars. And so we had the young lady in the picture who I think might be 12 or 13 and she asked if she could check out one of our guitars. So we cataloged it and we now have one guitar that Millwell residents can come in and it gets checked out on the library card. So we just started doing that so people can come in and so that is something that's also very unique. So on Fridays we have a program which won an honorable mention this past year. It was recognized by the Pennsylvania Library Association for a Best Practice Awards for Outstanding Efforts in Children's Programming. And since I was not here working here at the time I don't know who came up with the name for it but it's called Small Fry Fridays. Small Fry Fridays is... I'm guessing they came up with the name because it's small fry like small children. And so we have someone that comes down from the Shaler North Tillers Library which is a larger library in our county. Miss Jan comes down and does storytime for us and the children are generally anywhere from maybe two to three years old that come. And then Jan does storytime. Roman does like a mini maker craft with them and then we have a free play with our early literacy toys after. And so it's just like a very relaxing day and we get a lot of children for it and they blow bubbles and it's just a fun time. Every Saturday we have free yoga from 10 to 11 a.m. for adults in the library and then once a month Roman does an adult maker Saturday and this is free or we have a suggested donation. So last month I did hard work, jewelry making. Saturday we have someone coming to do fabric gommie which is similar to a quilting square and I heard in the past they did like making of your own lip balm. We've had special guest speakers on this Saturday. So Saturday is more for special programs. I love that you have so many of the things in your maker space that are more like crafting and making things and it's not just, I worry that so many libraries think of maker space as technology and equipment and things like that and computers but you've got so many different things you're doing. This is like the best of everything in maker space as I think my personal opinion. Well we do have a 3D printer in this maker space. We have the guitars in here right now. We have an assortment of everything. We do have iPads in here as well. We have to put some things in boxes and rotate some things out because the room is very small. So last year for the maker camps there were two sessions, one in the morning and one in the afternoon. So last year was also the first year that the library was a summer food site and that's the Pennsylvania Department of Education where the kids can get a free lunch in the summertime and so the kids would come in the morning, the smaller kids and the library would serve them like a free lunch and the lunch was done in partnerships with four restaurants in Millwell so in the afternoon like the older kids would come to the camp and I know that in the fashion camp they used the sewing machine and they had a little fashion show at the end of the week and so that's something that I want to do this summer with the kids and make like recycled fashion and I was thinking we could do like a rock and roll fashion theme to coincide with the theme library's rock. I know last year they also had the Audubon Society brought an owl in one day and they also took a boat and went on the Allegheny River. So this year our maker camp is going to include art camp, fashion camp, pottery camp. We're also going to do a week of music camp. The library partnerships, we have a partnership with the gardens of Millwell. Another thing we have at the library is we have four garden plots out back and these were started I believe a few years ago. They are raised beds and so this year since we are a sustainable library I'm going to learn about organic gardening and have like my own little garden plot out back so this is very exciting for me because I haven't garden since I grew up in Armstrong County which is probably an hour north of where I work and so my parents used to garden as a kid so I'm excited to like learn about organic gardening. So we have partnerships with our local school district, Shaler North Hills Library, Millwell Borough. Another awesome partnership we have is the Millwell Police Department. They have an officer which comes down on Tuesdays because we get a lot of after school kids in here and so Officer Jen comes down and spends some time with the children maybe one or two hours as much time as she can on Tuesdays and she spends time with the kids just to get to know them and also the children get to know that you know the police is like a wonderful they have a wonderful presence in our community as well and the police and fire department help us with our Halloween party which is sort of the Millwell Library signature event and we get about 300 people that come through the library for our Halloween party. We also have a partnership with North Hills Community Outreach and they provide like free tax assistance to our area residents. Millwell is a food desert. It's a small town of 3,700 people so we don't have a grocery store in town so if we have patrons that are in need of food or housing assistance or financial assistance then we can send patrons in need to North Hills Community Outreach. They have a satellite office here in Millwell and they have been very wonderful to work with. We also have partnerships with the local colleges and universities in the Pittsburgh region. We also have wonderful relationships with the businesses, the churches so it's great that this was already established when I started working here and I'm also working to develop and create new partnerships while I'm here at the library. So some future plans that I would like to work on is we have so many children coming in after school that are hungry and they get served lunch early in the day and they want to eat, they bring in sugar and so I just wrote several grants that I use the healthy food of our community garden to make salsa and pesto and some healthy food in conjunction with tuplo tea over the summer so I wrote some grants for that and as part of the one grant I incorporated in what it would look like if we could get money to get some canning equipment at tuplo teas and teach the children about canning so that in the fall they would have some take-home food. 40% of children live below the poverty level. We're in a low-income community and so I want to be able to make sure that the children do not go to bed hungry at night. I think that healthy food for the children around is very important and so we have... I have a VISTA volunteer, Sheena, who is amazing and she had just started a Facebook campaign to raise some funds and we had $520 that was donated so far towards an after-school program or towards getting some healthy food for the kids and so we've been using some of that money right now to feed the kids some sandwiches after school and so I would rather, of course, feed them sandwiches than all the sugary snacks after school. Get them hooked on the good foods, yes. Definitely. I don't know how much the kids are going to be into salad and produce over the summertime but we're definitely going to give that a try. And I heard the kids... The canning and making their own stuff I think is something that they would definitely be interested in and catch their attention. Well, I heard last year this also was like a big hit in the pesto so I definitely want to try that this year. Another thing that I'm working on right now is Pittsburgh was very well known like years ago for manufacturing and so since we do have a small maker space I'm currently working on writing a maker-to-manufacturer grant and so we don't have a lot of manufacturing industry in Millville itself. I'm looking to partner with maybe some local artists and I'm trying to picture in my head what this would look like in the future but I want to work with some local makers in the region and some local teens and my idea is to pair up the teens with some people in the manufacturing industry so that the teens learn some manufacturing skills so that they can go out into the workforce and be prepared and have skills and some technical skills when they graduate. We're also working on a grant to create an Air Quality Fellowship because we do not have the cleanest air in Millville or in Pittsburgh itself and Pittsburgh does have a problem with air pollution and that's also a national problem as well and a national concern so also I want to add more business programs to the community because we do have a lot of small business and local business in Millville and so I think that that is a great need for a community as well. So at this time I'd like to take some questions. Great, yes. So anybody have any questions for Susan? Please do go ahead and type them into your go-to webinar questions section. If you have a microphone, you could use that as well. Go ahead and type in there. I'm monitoring that and grab your questions. From the beginning of your presentation, Susan, I did not realize that your library is so young. Only about 10, 11 years that you've had the library? Well, the library opened in 2013 so it's very young. It's the newest library in Allegheny County and there are 70 library locations in Allegheny County. So we are the smallest library in Allegheny County. But you said you had great support and requests for it, I guess, from the community. Yes, the community is very, very supportive of the library and the borough is very supportive as well. Did you have any other libraries that are, before you had your own, were there libraries close to you that people would go to? What was the closest, what's the closest other location? The closest library to us is Shailor and Wirtals Library where I used to work eight years ago. And that is probably a 10-minute drive and that is a large library with probably, I'm going to say 140, 150,000 items. And so we are very small. Now Millville is a walking community and so the town really needed this library. Mm-hmm, mm-hmm. Awesome. Okay, oh, someone does have a question if you mentioned this. Someone wants to know if you get free tea from the tea shop there. I know, but everything is wonderful at the tea shop. That sounds like a great partnership you have with them doing the classes and everything at the library. Definitely very creative. That's one that I've never heard of before but having them right there, next door to you makes it obvious, yeah. Well it's wonderful because we have the opportunity to partner with them and do a lot of creative programming together. Mm-hmm. And the tea shop has a wonderful reputation and Danielle, the owner, was just profiled by a podcast in Pittsburgh called Better The Burg and she is a sustainable restaurant as well. We have a lot of sustainable green businesses in Millville. It sounds like, yeah, that's something that a lot of your community is very passionate about especially with, you know, the solar that you said you're going to work on trying to expand that to more buildings in town. Yes. Awesome, all right. Ah, okay, here's a good question. Yeah, something I was wondering about too, we didn't get too much into that. How does it work having the tenants above the library? You said there's some apartments above there? Yeah, so there are three apartments above the library. The tenants are wonderful. In fact, one of the tenants above the library was a former maker educator and so everything has been fantastic with the tenants. And so they actually rent those apartments from the library or is it from the town? How does that work? No, they rent from the library. Ah, okay, so it's a little income for you. Yes. So the library owns that whole whatever, you said you got a couple of addresses wide and then whatever's above it? Yes. Nice, okay. So the library has its own sustainability coordinator in the borough of Millville and that person used to be like under, like supervised under the Millville library and right now our sustainability coordinator works for another nonprofit in town called New Sun Rising but his name is Zaheen Hussein and he works on initiatives for like clean air, water and energy and mobility in Millville and so he works to promote like resource energy in the community. And he was hired several years ago and so he worked with the solar, getting the solar panels on the roof as well. How many staff do you have at the library besides yourself? Well, I'm the only full-time person at the library and I had replaced someone who was at the library about 20 hours a week but had put in a lot more hours at the library. So I have one... Roman works about... who's the maker educator? He works about 20 hours a week. I have Aminata who works about... who's in high school. She works about 15 hours a week and I have Maria who works about 15 to 20 hours a week and then I have Sheena who's a full-time VISTA volunteer under AmeriCorps. So that's one, two, three and a full-time VISTA volunteer who does community outreach. And obviously people from the community are volunteer, I assume, sometimes. I mean, that's how you got started from the beginning was volunteer. Right. We have Joanne who does the volunteer tutoring and then we do have some volunteer groups as well and in the summertime we will have volunteers that help with... and we do have groups from the University of Pittsburgh and then some other groups that will come in and help with just general cleaning outside the building and inside the library as well. Mm-hmm. Well, that's amazing. It's just a very surprise but thrilled to hear at the very beginning of your presentation that you are a brand-new library. Just started up, we hear too many stories about libraries having budget issues struggling on the verge of or actually being closed. They're actually opposite of what you're doing and it's very... really bolsters you to hear that it's not like that everywhere. Libraries are still needed and desired in places. We just got to keep that in mind that it'll be okay. We are actually driving and I have lots of ideas for programs. We are very utilized. We are very children focused here and we are very utilized by the children after school. Yeah. That is a huge thing in a lot of libraries. As soon as school is out, the library is filled. Now, I am trying to promote literacy more because I notice that I have a lot of people that come in for DVDs more so than books but I think that happens in a lot of libraries and so I'm purchasing new materials and trying to get more people reading as well. Mm-hmm. That makes sense, definitely. All right. Let's see. I think maybe we might wrap it up. Anybody have any other questions you want to ask of Susan? Get them in before we wrap up today's show. Get them typed into your questions section and you want to ask her about her, the library in Millvale and what they're doing. Oh, they came in a little late. I don't remember how much you got into this. Someone does want to know, not sure if they mentioned it earlier, but where does your funding come from, your basic budget monies come from? We get money from Pennsylvania State Aid. We get money from Millvale and we get money, some money from donations but we also write a lot of grants. Like right now, we, like last year, the summer maker camps were funded through a grant and that's what we're hoping to do this year as well but some income comes from the apartments of course and we also get some through Millvale borough and then some through what's called in Allegheny County, the regional asset district tax and that would get divided up among all the libraries in Allegheny County. Oh, okay. So lots of different places you got to pull monies from. I didn't notice that you did mention grants a lot and that I think is very important that a lot of libraries, there are so many opportunities out there and so many different places to get grants from and to get monies for what you might need to do and it sounds like you're definitely on top of that. I wish more libraries would reach out and it takes some time to do some of those grant writing, definitely, and get them all submitted but... Well, I like to write grants and I would say we have probably written about 8 to 10 in the last two months. Wow. Okay. Yeah, so we've been writing a lot of grants. Oh, another thing I forgot to mention is Maria, who works here part-time, she is a former VISTA volunteer and I'm not sure exactly if it was her idea or someone else's but we're in the process of starting a tool-ending library and the tools are like adjacent to the library. Sort of, I would call it like a basement area room and the tools were donated so there are going to be over 200 tools for checkout and these would include everything from a lawn mower to your basic power tools like a drill to like a circular saw and so we hope to have that ready to go in a few months as well. So, where are you going to store all of that? That's my first thought, that many tools. How is that going to work? Well, it's in a room like... I mean connected to the library like a basement room so it's already down there but the landing records are something that we're in the process of creating right now. So people would have to physically come into the library, pick up the item and then return it. So these would not be items. We're obviously not going to be like sending out a lawn mower to another library in delivery. We have a delivery system in Allegheny County where a van driver comes and takes our materials to other libraries in the county to like a sporting center in our county but there are probably... I don't know if you have that in Nebraska or not. We do not have a statewide or near account anything like that. It's been attempted to set something up and just haven't been able to get it coordinated yet but I know lots of other states, many other states do have that same kind of thing, a delivery system among between the different libraries for doing interlibrary loans or things like that, sharing of resources, yeah. Yeah, so we have countywide resource sharing. So our van driver probably goes from maybe eight to ten libraries within our region. So, yeah, but the tools would be something they would have to pick up here and return here and since we're in the small community that would be relatively easy. Mm-hmm, yeah, yeah. But the idea what the tool-ending library would be that it would obviously... we could do tool education here for people that might not know how to use those tools and whether being a low-income community it would help people that could not afford those tools as well. I like the training part of the education because I know there's many... either small-handhold tools or even some of the more compressed air type things that I would not have a clue what to do. I know I would have uses for them but I would be very nervous myself to sometimes use some of those more heavy-duty things. Oh, I know. There are a lot of tools in my... I don't know how to use a lot of my husband's tools so that would be a great learning experience for me. Absolutely. All right. Anybody have any other questions? We're a little before 11 a.m. Central time here so if you do have anything else you want to ask get it in, type it in there and we'll get Susan to answer for us. Thank you. Thank you very much. If you have any questions you can go to our website or follow us on Instagram. Yeah, and here I'm going to... Well, I mentioned that I'm going to pull back the presenter screen sharing to my page here, to my computer. This is a student session here on our website and I did link to... I'll link this up. Your library's website here so if you want to know more about what to do you'll be able to pop over here and there's a link to your Instagram right on your page which I did open up anyways when you mentioned it. I just decided to go and see what kind of things had been posted. So, lots of... Look at the clay. There's your guitar. Yeah, there's the guitar. Making phone cases it looks like? Yeah, so we had a team that went to make... She actually made a phone case out of parchment paper I brought in. I'm not exactly sure how that worked with it, but yeah, she had a great time doing it and pottery and some of the photos below were from the mini makers. Of course, Slimer's very popular here, the slime making. Oh, yes. So, yeah, definitely take a look there. There's a whole lot of things of all the different programs you have going here on your website and when the recording is posted it will include this link as well. So, anybody who wants to, you'll be able to get to that from our recording. All right. There I am. Okay. So, nobody typed in anything at the last minute here. So, I think maybe we'll wrap it up for this morning. Unless anybody does, you want to get one last question in before we go. Type fast. But otherwise, thank you so much, Susan, for being with us this morning. This is great. When I saw your information about your library that you had sent me, I was very intrigued by all the different things you're doing with the solar and the makerspace and having tenants about the library and everything. Lots of things. There's always new things I'm learning that libraries are doing out there, getting very creative and involved in their communities and just coming up with these amazing new unique ideas. Thank you so much, everyone. Yeah. Thank you so much. All right. We will wrap it up for today. So, that will be today's show. It has been recorded and will be available on our website. I'll show you over here. This is our Encompass Live website where we have our upcoming shows listed. But underneath all of our upcoming ones is a link to our archives, archive Encompass Live sessions, where you can find all of our archives going back to the very beginning. As I said at the beginning of the show, we started Encompass Live in January 2009 and we do have all of our recordings here on the site. So, you can find things going all the way back to the very beginning. Everything is posted. The video is posted to the Library Commission's YouTube account. And if there is any handouts or presentations or anything involved with it, we also include those as well. There are links to them or links to slideshare, wherever we post them. So, do be aware if you are going to be using this. Looking for things in here. This does go back to 2009. So, there will be some old, obviously shows here, potentially topics that may seem outdated or no longer valid information, old information. But everything is dated. You can see when the sessions were actually presented. So, you'll know how old they are. We are librarians, so we archive everything. So, we will continue just adding to our archives here. And we also do have a search feature just recently added this week. Thank you very much to our Library Commission IT people. So, you can now search the archives, which was going on 10 years worth of sessions. Every week is a good thing to have finally. So, you can search by, it will search the title, presenters, and description of a session. And you can search everything or you can just get the most recent ones if you want to. So, definitely take a look there. Here's our most recent one. Our recording will be available. This is one from a few weeks ago. The recording and presentation will be here and links to the Millill Library's website when the recording is available. When the recording is done, I will send an email out to everyone who registered and watched the show today. So, you'll get notification of that. As soon as it's ready, it should be sometime this afternoon as long as YouTube cooperates with my uploading and processing of the video. Other than that, I hope you join us next week when our topic on Encompass Live is why diverse literature matters for youth services. This is a presentation being done by Erica Rose, who is one of the faculty at the Library Science Program at the University of Nebraska in Omaha, and she's going to be on the show to talk about diverse literature in youth services. So, definitely sign up for that next week and any of our other shows that you see on our list here. We have everything booked up through April and we're adding more all the time. So, take a look at all of our topics there and register for anything. Encompass Live is also on Facebook. You can see we've got links to our Facebook page, which I've opened over here. So, if you are a big Facebook user, please do give us a like. We post reminders. Here's reminders for today's show that I posted saying, don't forget to log in for today's show. When our recordings are available, ads for the upcoming shows. So, everything I post on here on our Facebook page. So, as I said, if you like Facebook and that's where you get a live information, give us a like over there and you keep up on what we're doing. Other than that, that wraps up for today's show. Thank you very much everyone for attending. Thank you very much for being here with us this morning, Susan. You're welcome. Thank you so much. Have a great day. You too. And we'll see you next time on Encompass Live. Bye-bye. Okay, thanks. Okay, bye.