Meg Gage: Pull the plug on the Jones Library plan

A long-planned renovation and expansion project for the Jones Library was thrown into jeopardy when the sole bid was $7 million more than expected.

A long-planned renovation and expansion project for the Jones Library was thrown into jeopardy when the sole bid was $7 million more than expected. GAZETTE FILE PHOTO

Published: 06-06-2024 7:31 PM

I have hesitated taking a public position about the expansion of the Jones Library, even though it seems a reach too far, more than we can afford, especially given the branch libraries and top-notch academic libraries to which many of us have access. At the same time, I have found the argument somewhat compelling that the Jones project can achieve both the urgently needed repairs and expand the library for the same price as only making the repairs — although we have not seen a specific estimate for the repairs — only project.

But enough is enough! It’s time to change our mind! With this latest development of only one bid, millions of dollars over projection, it has become blazingly clear that this project is a chimera, taking us down a path of wasting precious town funds, undermining other critical needs, deepening destructive fractures in our civic culture, losing time, and most likely resulting in a compromised library project that will not be what people voted for.

I anticipate, in a desperate effort to reduce the price tag, library leaders will recommend cutting the environmental, energy, historic, landscaping and aesthetic components of the project, central to the project’s appeal! I am tired of hearing unlikely promises from library leaders whose minds are set, and who seem increasingly out of touch with the rapidly changing public opinion, committed to building this library, no matter what, come hell or high water. It’s time to change our mind!

Changing one’s mind isn’t easy, especially when positions have been bolstered by years of taking sides. But history shows us exemplary leaders — Gandhi, Martin Luther King, Einstein, Lincoln, among others — who with new experience and information changed their minds for the better. Let’s have the courage to change our mind about this disastrous library expansion project. Let’s pull the plug on this project and, after taking a deep breath and perhaps a few long walks in the woods, go back to the drawing board. Let’s work together on a new plan. Frankly, I’d be happy with the Jones Library in a Quonset hut in exchange for a political culture where we work together with mutual respect to solve the very real, myriad challenges Amherst faces.

Meg Gage

Amherst