***We do this. I came into this position finding incomplete
things bound - not knowing about it until a volume was actually removed from
the shelf & opened - to find a notation inside, e.g. “Missing April”. It
turned me into a total bear and I do not bind anything incomplete. Ever.
***That said, we’ve cut our bindery budget by close to 95% so of
course I bind very little and the cost of any additional pages isn’t that much.
Jeanette
L. Skwor
Cofrin
Library, Serials Dept.
UW-Green Bay
2420 Nicolet
Drive
Green Bay, WI
54311
From: SERIALST: Serials
in Libraries Discussion Forum [mailto:SERIALST@list.uvm.edu] On Behalf Of Peter
Picerno
Sent: Tuesday, June 02, 2009 12:53 PM
To: SERIALST@LIST.UVM.EDU
Subject: [SERIALST] Replacing missing pages
Dear Collective Wisdom:
I am hoping that a few of you
will be able to give me some input on the following:
My administration would like
to know what other libraries experience in getting ILL documents to replace
missing pages in journals. We have been doing this as part of our bindery prep,
but are questioning the time and cost effectiveness versus the lasting result.
Has your library done this in the past and (a) discontinued the practice, (b)
continues this practice, or has this not ever been a practice at your library?
What are the considerations in your decision??
Please feel free to reply
off-list (and I’ll be at NASIG from 4 – 8 June, so not able to reply to e-mails
during that time).
Thanks,
Peter V. Picerno
Serials & E-Resources
Asst. Head, Resource
Development
Green Library GL 810
Florida International
University
University Park
Miami FL
33199
Ph: 305.348.6279
Fax: 305.348.1798