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Independence Library reports record turnout and giveaway programs after summer reading push

August 26, 2025 | Independence, Polk County, Oregon


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Independence Library reports record turnout and giveaway programs after summer reading push
The Independence Public Library recorded a record 1,129 sign-ups for its summer reading program, and staff told the City Council on Aug. 26 that participants and volunteers helped the library expand outreach and giveaways.
Library staff member Patrick said the program attracted the largest number of sign-ups in the library's history: "the library had 1,129 sign ups, which is a new record. We've never had that many people sign up." He told the council that adults turned in tickets verifying roughly 2,300 books read this summer, that teens logged 894 reading hours and children logged 1,602 reading hours.
The library also ran 21 programs (excluding year-round story times) that drew more than 1,400 attendees, Patrick said, and distributed 1,282 prize bags to children as part of participation awards. He thanked dozens of volunteers and city staff who supported the events and named local businesses and nonprofit partners who donated prizes and support.
Why this matters: library programming is a regular municipal service with education and community-engagement benefits. The council heard the figures during its regular meeting as part of staff updates, and the figures show year-over-year increases in participation and reading time.
Councilors and staff emphasized volunteer support and the library's partners. Patrick said the program's giveaways and volunteer work were central to the program's success: "most importantly for the kids that didn't win the big prizes, we gave away 1,282 prize bags to kids." He also encouraged residents to use library services year-round.
The council did not take a formal action on the summer reading report; it was provided for information and community updates. The library staff said the program will continue through the year and thanked the community for participation.
Looking ahead, the library staff asked the public and council to continue supporting library events and volunteers; no budget or policy proposals tied to the report were introduced at the meeting.

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