You are reading

Remaining Queens Public Library Branches to Reopen In-Person Services Next Month

Kew Gardens Hills library, one of 14 QPL branches scheduled to reopen on July 12 (Photo: Charlie Smith)  

June 28, 2021 By Allie Griffin

Nearly every Queens Public Library (QPL) branch across the borough will reopen in-person services beginning next month in a move to return to pre-pandemic service.

All library branches were temporarily closed last year to mitigate the spread of COVID-19. QPL has gradually phased in in-person services since last summer and reopened nearly 30 locations for browsing last month.

Fourteen branches which have remained closed to the public will reopen on July 12, QPL announced Friday.

The branch locations are Bay Terrace, Broad Channel, Corona, Far Rockaway, Kew Gardens Hills, Lefferts, McGoldrick, North Forest Park, North Hills, Poppenhusen, Rosedale, Seaside, South Hollis and Windsor Park.

Branches began reopening for to-go service last summer before reopening for masked and limited browsing.

“We have made many strides since COVID-19 forced the temporary closure of our buildings to the public 15 months ago, and as the public health situation shifted during that period, so did we, putting the safety of our customers and staff above all else,” said QPL President and CEO Dennis Walcott.

QPL also announced Friday that many COVID-19 restrictions previously enforced at branches will be lifted on July 6 onward.

“In light of the progress we — as a community, as a city, as a state — have worked so hard to achieve, we can now finally lift many of our restrictions for staff and the public and introduce a model of service that brings us closer to pre-pandemic levels,” Walcott said.

Masks, for example, will be optional to staff and customers who have been fully vaccinated. Those who aren’t fully vaccinated will still be required to wear a mask.

Capacity limits and social distancing requirements will be lifted as well and customers will be allowed unlimited browsing and extended 60-minute computer time limits.

QPL will continue to offer virtual programs and resources, but has already begun planning for indoor public programs and classes.

QPL is also offering extended hours at different branches. Details can be found online.

“I have been hearing from so many people that they cannot wait to return to our libraries and use them as they had in the past,” Walcott said. “They are yearning to return to places that welcome, inspire and provide vital opportunities to everyone, no matter their background or circumstances, and we look forward to continuing to be here for them.”

Some branches will remain closed due to construction, repair work or use as a city COVID-19 testing center or vaccine site. These include Flushing, Glendale, Ozone Park, Pomonok, Queens Village, Queensbridge Tech Lab, South Jamaica, Steinway and Woodhaven.

email the author: news@queenspost.com
No comments yet

Leave a Comment
Reply to this Comment

All comments are subject to moderation before being posted.

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Recent News

Queens leaders react to New Year’s night mass shooting at Jamaica event space, security measures scrutinized

Queens elected officials were left shocked and dismayed by a mass shooting outside a Jamaica event space on New Year’s night that left ten young people injured while they waited to get into a “celebration of life” for a teen who was gunned down in Brooklyn.

An urgent manhunt is underway for the four young men who opened fire on people who were waiting in line outside the Amazura Concert Hall at 91-12 144th Place at around 11:20 p.m. Police from the 103rd Precinct in Jamaica responded to multiple 911 calls of shots fired and arrived at the scene to find six women and four men between the ages of 16 and 19, who suffered gunshot wounds as they ran for their lives when the gunmen fired at least thirty shots.

Port Authority dedicates LaGuardia Career Center to retired Assembly Member Jeffrion Aubry

A storied Queens political career drew to a close on New Year’s Eve when Jeffrion Aubry officially retired from the New York State Assembly, where he represented East Elmhurst and Corona in Albany for over three decades.

The Port Authority announced the renaming and dedication of the LaGuardia Career Center as the Jeffrion L. Aubry LaGuardia Career Center on Dec. 18 to honor his decades of public service and his commitment to ensuring that Queens residents reap the benefits of the redevelopment of LaGuardia Airport.