Mission Statement
The purpose of the Government Publications Department of
the Auraria Library is to provide access to U.S., state,
and local government information as needed by the faculty,
staff, and students of the Auraria Campus, comprised of
the Community College of Denver, Metropolitan State College
of Denver, and the University of Colorado at Denver. The
collection supports the curriculum and research in all areas
from the undergraduate level to the doctoral level. The
Auraria Library is a selective federal depository library,
a Colorado state depository library, and a depository for
the Denver Regional Council of Governments.
Non-depository Publications
Gifts which meet the selection criteria or which fill needed
gaps in the collection will be added at the discretion of
the Head of Government Publications. Gift items which are
not added to the collection will be offered to other depository
libraries or discarded.In addition commercial electronic
databases and reference books are selected to support the
collection, including access to historical documents, even
though the actual documents may not be owned by the library.Selection
of electronic databases is made in consultation with the
Electronic Resources Committee, subject bibliographers,
and reference librarians.In addition, specific publications
may be purchased from GPO or NTIS with deposit account funds
to provide additional copies of heavily used titles or titles
not available from the depository program but appropriate
to the curriculum and research needs of the campus.
Current commercial electronic database subscriptions containing
government information include:
LexisNexis
Academic
LexisNexis Congressional
LexisNexis Environmental
LexisNexis Statistical
STAT-USA
(site license)
Subject Areas and Agencies Collected
Based on the mission statement and general subject areas
defined earlier, the Auraria Library collects federal information
with an emphasis in the following areas:
Aerospace and aviation
Business
Census (population and economic)
Colorado
Congressional
Court cases
Criminal justice
Education
Foreign affairs
Housing
Public administration/public affairs
Regulations (all agencies)
Statistical (all agencies)
Selection within lesser used subjects is influenced by
the close access to the two regional depositories in the
state: Denver Public Library one mile away and the University
of Colorado at Boulder 25 miles away.
Format
With over 90% of new GPO depository materials now distributed
in electronic format, this is now the dominant format of
the new documents added to the collection. This format serves the off campus students
and faculty well and is most often the preferred format.
Catakig records for online documents as well as tangible documents produced by the U.S. Government Printing Office are purchased from the Marcive company and loaded into the Library's catalog. In addition, an effort is made to catalog other online documents.
Paper copies may still be acquired in addition
if possible depending on the content, demand, and use. Microfiche is being phased out by GPO but still may be selected if that is the only format available for a title..
Additonal web sites which are useful are organized on library web pages under Government Information..
Selection Tools
Selection tools, both print and online, available from
GPO will be used to review item selections.The GOVDOC-L
discussion list, journals, and other informal notification
may be used to identify non-depository publications in print
or online.
Collection Arrangement
Most of the print, microfiche, and CD-ROM collection is
housed in the Government Publications Department in open
stacks arranged by the Superintendent of Documents Classification
system, with selected publications in other areas of the
library, such as Reference, in the Library of Congress classification.
Any government publications placed on Reserve are available
for use to any campus or non-campus library patron.
Access
All federal government publications are cataloged in the
library's online public access catalog, Skyline,
including Internet resources.Catalog records, including
brief shipping list records, are purchased from the Marcive
company for depository publications.Other publications are
cataloged individually by the cataloging department. The
cataloging department will also add URLs to existing catalog
records or create records for Internet sites as requested.Periodicals
are checked in on the library's serials records system.
Most U.S. government publications may be checked out for
the same time period as other library books.Serving 3 state
colleges, the Auraria Library is open to the general public.
Colorado residents may check out up to 6 library publications
as part of the Colorado Library Card reciprocal borrowing
agreement.Publications are also loaned via the Prospector
online union catalog or traditional interlibrary loan. Non-circulating
publications include census data, periodicals, Foreign Relations
of the U.S., and reference titles and are stamped "NONCIRCULATING."Most
CD-ROMS check out but selected titles are placed on computers
with CD-ROM/DVD drives for in-house use only. These are
generally reference type data such as statistics or CD-ROMS
needed for assignments. New personal computers for public
use CD-ROM/DVD workstations are purchased according to the
current Recommended
Specifications for Public Access Workstations in Federal
Depository Libraries
Internet access is available on the library's public access
computers, unrestricted by any filters. Word processing,
spreadsheet, and other software are available in the Computer
Commons lab in the library to students, faculty, staff,
and public users.
Federal agencies, publications, and comprehensive sites
are linked from the library's Government
Publications Department web pages, by agency and by
subject.These pages are updated regularly.
Reference service for government publications is provided
by the general reference desk at all times the library is
open.In addition, the Government Publications Department
provides additional assistance weekdays 10-12 a.m. and 1-5
p.m.
Weeding and Collection Maintenance
Due to space limitations of the building, the library is
mandated to maintain zero physical growth. The collection
size has been limited through weeding and transfer of low
use publications to the offsite storage facility PASCAL.
More recently efforts are underway to reduce the physical size of the collection. Tangible versions of selected titles are weeded if they are online and online is only is an appropriate format for usabiity and level of use. Superseded materials are withdrawn regularly. Weeding of
second copies and older, less used publications will be
done by evaluating age, the subject covered, the circulation
record, and replacement by another format, such as electronic.
High demand publications, such as statistical, reference and publications for key programs on campus such as the Graduate School of Public Affairs may also be retained in print. All withdrawals are made in conjunction with the U.S. Government
Printing Office Superseded
List and according to GPO discard regulations. Substitution
of an electronic full-text database for tangible publications
will be considered according to the FDLP
Guidelines on Substituting Electronic for Tangible Versions
of Depository Publications and the accompanying Substitution
List: Official FDLP Permanent Full-Text Databases.
An example would be substituting the online Federal Register
(1994 - ) for issues more than 2 years old, thereby saving
considerable space and subscription cost for microfiche.
Documents which have not been superseded are retained for
at least five years. A discard list is prepared and submitted
to the two regional depositories in the state, Denver Public
Library and the University of Colorado at Boulder, for distribution
to other depository libraries in the state.
The collection is maintained in accordance with the Instructions
to Depository Libraries , other GPO guidelines, and
the current federal law governing depository libraries.
Preservation
Periodicals are bound regularly. Damaged or worn documents
are repaired or bound. Lost documents are replaced as needed.
All publications are tattletaped for detection by the library's
security system.
Promotion
Promotion of the collection will be accomplished through
library web pages; library exhibits, such as census and
elections; posters in the library; and as part of other
library promotion efforts. Bookmarks from GPO Access are
available on the service counter. Course related library
instruction is conducted by the Head of Government Publications
when assignments involve government information.Other instructors
also integrate government information into their basic instructional
classes as well.
Resource Sharing
For depository publications, selection is coordinated with
the selections of other selective depositories in the Denver
region as well as the two regional depositories. Such information
is shared at regular Government Publications Interest Group
meetings and informally via e-mail or telephone conversations.
Retention decisions may also be made on the basis of regional
holdings, as assessed through the Prospector union catalog
and other libraries' online catalogs.
The Auraria Library cooperates in the purchase of electronic
databases as a member of the Colorado Alliance of Research
Libraries, the BCR network,the University of Colorado system,
and other cooperative arrangements.
Colorado State Depository Publications
The Auraria Library has been a Colorado State Depository
Library since 1981. At that time most Colorado publications
were received in microfiche.These were selectively cataloged,
but some remain uncataloged.Print Colorado publications
were cataloged in the Library of Congress classification.In
the late-1980s Colorado depository publications migrated
to print format and were cataloged by Library of Congress
classification.Starting in 1995 Colorado depository publications
have been cataloged on the library's online catalog Skyline
and arranged by the Colorado State Classification system
and housed in open stacks in the Government Publications
Department.Some publications have been transferred from
other parts of the library but some will probably always
remain in LC due to space limitations in Government Publications.Most
Colorado state publications circulate, including CD-ROMS,
except for those designated as reference sources.
Selection is made by the Head of Government Publications
in consultation with the bibliographers and reference librarians.
Selection may be made by agency and almost all agencies
are selected with the exception of local interest publications
of some state supported colleges. Legislative publications-bills,
journals, and laws-are received in paper on a weekly basis
and retained permanently or until replaced by bound volumes,
such as the House and Senate journal obtained from the Legislature.
Legislative publications are housed in the library's general
reference section with other law materials.
Publications are retained according to guidelines from
the State Publications Depository System, which allows discard
at any time without formal procedure. Most publications
are retained indefinitely unless the information is superseded
or out of date. Damaged or lost publications are replaced
if deemed necessary through the issuing agency or photocopying.
Denver Regional Council of Governments
The Auraria Library is a depository for Denver Regional
Council of Governments publications.The publications are
cataloged according to the Library of Congress classification
system and designated as circulating or reference depending
on the content.
Local Government Publications
Publications from cities and counties in Colorado are selectively
collected.
Foreign and International Publications are selected
by the subject bibliographers.
State Data Center Affiliate
The Auraria Library is a Census Bureau State Data Center
affiliate, which means it receives selected additional census
publications, which are cataloged, and may send librarians
and staff to semi-annual update meetings where they regularly
receive state and local population estimates and projections
and economic data. Much of this data is also on the Colorado
Department of Local Affairs web site which is linked
from the Auraria Library's Colorado state publications web
page.
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