Politics & Government
Pleasant Hill Library Closure: Historical Documents To Be Moved
With no plans to replace the library's climate-controlled vault, the county has tentative arrangements for relocating historical documents.
PLEASANT HILL, CA — Contra Costa County staff challenged a civil grand jury finding during Tuesday's Board of Supervisors meeting that there is no adequate plan for relocating a collection of local historical documents currently housed at the Pleasant Hill Library when it closes next year. The library's planned closure generated a small but sustained controversy once library users discovered that the county planned to demolish the existing library before construction is completed on a replacement facility.
That led to a grand jury investigation that erroneously concluded that an irreplaceable collection of historical documents had gotten lost in the shuffle. County staff challenged that finding at Tuesday's meeting, citing tentative plans to transfer the collection to a local historical society.
The existing library structure is more than 50 years old and needs an estimated $10 million in deferred maintenance, according to the grand jury. The land underneath it is valuable and a new library can be constructed nearby, but the timing is a problem.
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"A pressing issue is that the county Board of Supervisors decided to close the Pleasant Hill branch a year and a half before the new facility is scheduled to open," the grand jury wrote.
District 4 Supervisor Karen Mitchoff, who represents Pleasant Hill, has repeatedly stated that the highest and best use of that county-owned property is to sell it to housing developers before the Bay Area's red-hot real estate market cools off.
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Karen Yapp and Dick Offerman, however, have taken up the current library's cause. They frequently appear at meetings of the Pleasant Hill City Council and the county Board of Supervisors to advocate against closing the existing library before the new one is ready to move into.
They've argued that the existing facility provides an invaluable resource to parents and families, with literacy programming aimed at young children and a safe after-school space for adolescents.
The grand jury, however, focused on the library's climate-controlled vault. There are no plans to replace it, but the jury found that the Contra Costa Historical Society has the resources and
facilities to take on stewardship of the library's collection, as well as a willingness to do so.
In their response to the grand jury's report, county officials indicated that this possibility requires further analysis.
During open discussion on the matter, Mitchoff asked County Librarian Melinda Cervantes if they were confident that a plan could be devised by the time the Pleasant Hill Library closes in 2020.
"We expect to have a recommendation by September," Cervantes said.
In other matters, the supervisors also approved a plan to let Habitat for Humanity construct 29 townhouses along a bus route in Bay Point.
The 2.4-acre lot is at the intersection of Driftwood Drive and Pacifica Avenue.
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—Bay City News Service