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Reply To: | Iona McCraith (AAO) |
Date: | Mon, 21 May 2012 12:06:13 -0400 |
Content-Type: | text/plain |
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The AAO Board and Administration Office will survive the current loss of
NADP but the programs and services offered to the members have been
drastically affected by these cuts almost to point of extinction. That
loss in services AAO may not survive unless the members rally around their
organization and fight for it.
Iona McCraith
Preservation Consultant
Archives Association of Ontario
Tel: (705) 277-1309 Fax: (705) 277-2091
Email: [log in to unmask]
www..aao-archivists.ca
----- Original Message -----
From: "Paul Henry" <[log in to unmask]>
To: <[log in to unmask]>
Sent: Thursday, May 17, 2012 10:38 PM
Subject: Re: Emergency AAO Board Meeting Update
I wholeheartedly agree Brian. As one of only a few provincial and
territorial archival organizations that may actually survive the cuts, it is
more important than ever that Ontario archivists stand up as one voice, and
say "this line and no further!" and then move that line back until our
colleagues in other provinces and territories have access to the services
that they need to support the national community. The AAO (and the OCA
before it) were formed through a sense of indomitable will and determination
to give Archives a voice in this province. That voice shall not fall silent.
I have already contacted my MP. I encourage others to do so. Danielle has
already posted fact sheets and other tools. Use them.
"Of all national assets, archives are the most precious...". You all know
the rest.
Paul Henry
Ottawa
Sent from my iMac
On 2012-05-14, at 9:40 AM, Brian P. N. Beaven wrote:
> I want to endorse everything that Brian Masschaele says. I will add that
> what he says about raising institutional fees, I say applies equally to
> Individual fees. On the last two occasions when fees were discussed by
> AAO, I made the case that the individual membership fees were too low --
> and they are two low. I let Brian M make the case that institutional fees
> are too low. The AAO has been starving itself for years by trying to keep
> fees artificially low while using the bulk of our resources to provide
> subsidized support for our member institutions. It does not add up. Cheap
> membership fees, subsidized services and overreliance on volunteer labour
> to further subsidize the activity of the AAO is not a winning business
> plan.
>
> The only other point I make is that the orignal cuts that caused this
> domino effect are the real and serious problem and require the active
> intervention of the archival community across Ontario and Canada if the
> dysfunctional effects on the archival community are to be mitigated. In
> the meantime, there are concrete things that we can do as an
> organization to sustain our proud traditions of service and stewardship.
>
> Thanks to Brian and Ellen for taking a leadership roll in these matters.
> It is a sign of strength when archivists in their mid-career take on the
> role of getting the community engaged in important causes. Make no
> mistake the cutsbacks to the Canadian Archival community are a serious
> issue, all the more so because they are unwarranted, unnecessary and
> capricious.
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