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Early History as Part of California Library Association
CARL'S
HISTORY as an organization actually dates back to 1929, when academic librarians
first met as a group during the annual conference of the California Library
Association. The 1929 Handbook and Proceedings describes the
meeting as follows:
The round table for college and university librarians, in charge of Willis
H. Kerr, met in room 202 of the State Library, where the State Teachers
College librarians joined them, after meeting as a separate group under
the direction of Alice Anderson and deciding that they would gain more by
combining with the college and university people. The meeting opened
with a roll call of California college and university and state teachers'
college librarians, with two minute responses giving volumes, student and
faculty enrollment, budget, date of establishment, number of student assistants,
etc. This was followed by descriptions of special collections in college
and university libraries and a discussion of recent technical and professional
books of significance to the librarians of the group. The meeting
was so successful that those present passed a motion requesting the incoming
officers to establish a permanent round table or section group for college
and university librarians.
There
was a College, University and Research Libraries Section (CURLS) within
the California Library Association from that time on. In the 1960s,
the section became a division of CLA, and the initialism changed to CURLD.
In 1971, CLA reorganized its structure, and CARL became a chapter, changing
its name to Chapter of Academic and Research Libraries (CARL). CARL
began to develop into its present form under the leadership of Gail Schlacter
(UC Davis), the 1978 chair. The membership grew from 24 to more than
300, and the CARL Newsletter was established. There was a workshop
on "Evaluating Library Services" presented in Long Beach and in Sacramento,
as well as a program at the CLA conference, on "Middle Management in California
Academic Libraries," which drew 150 people.
There
actually were separate sections, divisions and then chapters representing
both community college librarians and California state university librarians
during this entire period. The name of the latter group evolved with
the CSU system, from State Teachers College Librarians, to State College
Librarians, to State University and College Librarians, and finally, State
Universities and Colleges Librarians Chapter (SUCLC).
Founding of ACRL Chapters & Merger with CARL
When
librarians in Southern California, led by George
Bailey (Claremont Colleges) organized a chapter of ACRL in 1977, the group
began planning regional workshops and programs which competed directly with
CARL programs. In 1978, Bailey contacted a number of librarians in
the northern part of the state in an effort to get an ACRL chapter started
there, and a group began to form by 1978. Many librarians became concerned
about the duplication of effort involved in organizing very similar programs
and workshops, north and south, for two different organizations, and at
the December 1978 membership meeting at the CLA conference, ". . . the members
directed the Executive Board to investigate the possibility of establishing
a closer relationship between CARL and ACRL chapters in California."
As 1979 CARL Chair, George Bailey appointed an ad hoc committee to evaluate
what might be done. The ad hoc committee recommended merging the CLA
and ACRL chapters into a single organization, affiliated with both CLA and
ACRL. The merger and an accompanying new constitution and bylaws were
approved overwhelmingly by a mail ballot, in early 1980, and CARL became
Calfornia Academic and Research Librarians instead of the Chapter of Academic
and Research Librarians.
Development of Interest Groups
By 1982,
CARL had grown from 400 to 600 members, developed a system of campus liaisons
to assist with membership activities, and created guidelines for the establishment
of interest groups. The first interest groups, formed in 1982, were
Science and Engineering Academic Librarians (SEAL), organized by Michael
Fineman, Barbara Magnuson, and Al Hodina at UCI, and a California Academic
Reference Librarians Discussion Interest Group (CARLDIG, formed by Nancy
Huling (UCR), George Soete (UCSD) and John Whaley (UCI). SEAL-South
representatives helped start a SEAL-North group at a meeting in Berkeley
in 1983, and CARLDIG-South did the same in 1984, meeting with a group at
CSU Hayward. CALM-North and CALM-South were established together,
at the 1986 CLA Conference. [Formation of ABLE still needs research.]
DIAL (Diversity in Academic Libraries) was formed in the south in 1993,
by Darrin Gitisetan (CSU Northridge), but as yet there is no northern group.
Separation From California Library Association
In 1991,
the California Library Association voted to discontinue chapters and replace
them with sections whose members must also be members of CLA. In January
1992, the CARL president mailed a survey to members outlining CARL's options
and requesting an opinion vote. A majority (71%) of CARL members voted
for independence from CLA, and in September 1992 approved changes to the
CARL constitution and bylaws which codified this decision. Members
of the California State University Librarians Chapter of CLA were faced
with the same set of options, and voted to join CARL as an interest group.
They gathered the requisite number of signatures on a petition and were
welcomed to CARL in November 1992.
Annual Conference
Until
1992, CARL participated in the annual conference of the California Library
Association, usually planning several programs. Beginning in 1993,
under the leadership of President Stephanie Bangert, CARL has organized
its own annual conference. The First Annual Conference, "Undergraduate
Education in California: Where We Stand, Where We Are Headed," was
held at Preservation Park, in Oakland on November 15, 1993. The Second
Annual Conference, "Disaster a La Carte: Lessons Learned As California
Libraries Responded To Multiple Emergencies," was held at the Scripps College
Campus of the Claremont Colleges, on October 17, 1994. The Third Annual
Conference, "Re-Tooling Academic Libraries for the Digital Age: Missions,
Collections, Staffing," took place on October 20 and 21, 1995, at Fisherman's
Wharf, in San Francisco. 
Bill Whitson
February 1996 |
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