Library Parking for Dummies
What Part of “This Parking Lot is for Library Patrons Only” Is Confusing You?
By Roz Warren and Janet Golden
A library patron is a person who uses the library — to take a toddler to story time, to reserve the novel that every book club in America has just decided to read, or to pay the whopping replacement fee for that dog training book that Bowser just chewed to pieces.
If you aren’t a library patron, please do not park in the library parking lot.
Yes, it’s free. And it’s right in the center of town. But it’s a small lot, and we need every space for our patrons. Seems simple, doesn’t it? But many of you apparently need a more detailed explanation.
So we’ll spell it out for you.
The fact that you own a library card does not entitle you to park in our lot if you aren’t in fact using our library.
Stopping in to use our bathroom before spending the afternoon shopping does not mean you can park here all afternoon.
Nor does displaying a library book on your dashboard.
If you’re in town to shop? Park at the store. If you’re in town to pick up your dry cleaning? Park at the dry cleaners.
We don’t have your freshly ironed shirts at the library, so unless you’re going to come in and check out a book about ironing, don’t park here.
We recently installed a large sign. It didn’t help.
What part of THIS PARKING LOT IS FOR LIBRARY PATRONS ONLY is confusing you?
You fully intend to visit the library after you lunch at the deli? Great! But while you lunch, please park in a metered space outside the deli. Not in our parking lot.
Speaking of which, smuggling your corned beef sandwich into the library to nosh while browsing is not a good idea. Crumbs attract rodents. The only rodent who belongs in this building is Stuart Little.
Yes, that battered green van belongs to a homeless man who spends all day in the library and lives in the van at night. When he parks his van in our lot all day he is hogging that parking space, which is unfortunate. On the other hand? He, unlike you, is actually using the library.
(And yes, he’s using it to take long naps, plug into recharge all his battery-operated devices and lock himself in the bathroom to perform his ablutions. So what? He’s a member of the community. We’re here to serve the community. End of story.)
The fact that you are going to the church down the block does not make it okay to park in our lot. God does not want you to park in the library parking lot when you are not using the library. Even if the church lot is full.
If you don’t believe me, please come in and check out some of our books about religion.
We’re happy you gave us a generous donation during our fundraising drive. Thank you! And yet our sign doesn’t actually say that it’s okay to park here as long as you’ve recently written the library a large check.
Maybe next time, instead of nabbing the last free space in our lot and then strolling off to shop while ignoring the actual library patrons who are circling the lot trying to find a place to park, you could come inside and check out a book about common courtesy?
While you are doing so? You are more than welcome to park in our lot.
(This essay appears in Our Bodies, Our Shelves: A Collection of Library Humor by Roz Warren, who writes for everyone from the Funny Times to the New York Times and is also the author of Just Another Day At Your Local Public Library. If you want to buy inscribed copies or just want to say hi, you can reach her at [email protected])
