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Great Falls Public Library expands hours with levy funds; discusses management


The Great Falls Public Library has expanded its Monday hours as part of increased levy funding approved by voters last summer.

Starting March 4, the library will be open Mondays from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.

The library had previously been open noon to 6 p.m. on Mondays.

Hours for the rest of the week remain the same, Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m.; and Friday and Saturday from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.

Phone service hours remain the same: 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. on Monday, Friday and Saturday and 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. on Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday. The pickup window is open 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Saturday.

Judge dismisses lawsuit against city over library election

In June 2023, voters approved an amendment to the city charter, increasing the allowable mills for the library from two to 17.

Library staff and board members said the increased funding would allow for expanded hours, programs and services and the staff needed to support those programs.

When the library began their levy effort, the increase to 17 mills was estimated to generate another $1.5 million for library operations, but it was a reappraisal year for the Montana Department of Revenue and for many, property values increased, so those mills generated another $382,725, according to the city finance department.

That means the library could receive closer to $2 million in the current budget.

Tryon asks to review library management; library board to discuss at Feb. 27 meeting

But those numbers don’t account for tax collection rates or tax protests. Calumet has filed a significant tax protest that equates to about $1 million in tax revenue not available to the city this year while the protest is being addressed.

The library previously received a $350,000 subsidy from the city’s general fund annually, but with the levy passage, that contribution ceased.

The library board also has a management agreement with the City Commission from 1993 that contributes seven mills to the library fund.

For the current budget, library staff estimates the tax revenue from those seven mills as $838,809.69, or 24 percent of their expected revenue this year.

During their Feb. 27 meeting, the library board discussed their management agreement with the city, after Commissioner Rick Tryon had again asked fellow commissioners to reconsider that agreement during their Feb. 20 meeting.

Tryon has indicated he wants to consider the library’s seven mills for public safety funding.

Susie McIntyre, library director, told the board during their Feb. 27 meeting that the city had a library since 1892 that has operated as a city department.

State law changed for libraries and the city decided it needed a more specific agreement, which led to the 1993 management agreement still in force currently, McIntyre said.

Tryon renews proposal to review library management agreement; lacks support from other commissioners

About two years ago, the Montana Municipal Interlocal Authority, which is the city’s insurance provider, said they wouldn’t cover libraries unless they had some sort of management agreement with the city, McIntyre said.

She said MMIA reviewed the existing library management agreement with city officials and determined it met their insurance coverage requirements.

Regarding the city commission’s interest in renegotiating their management agreement, McIntyre said she didn’t know if the city had a plan for how the process would work.

Her understanding from the last commission meeting was that the city would form a small committee with the city manager, city attorney and one or more commissioner to start the discussion.

“This would be a long process,” McIntyre told the board, and any renegotiated agreement would have to go before the library board and commission for approval.

McIntyre told the board that saying they’re open to talk about renegotiation doesn’t obligate them to make any changes.

City to review budget; Tryon drops push to move library funds to public safety

During the meeting, Whitney Olson, library board chair, read notes from Jessica Crist, a library board member who couldn’t attend the Feb. 27 meeting.

Crist wrote that she was “deeply frustrated” that the library board and staff had planned ahead and discussed the funding structure and then be “essentially abandoned by the city” during the levy process, including no legal assistance when it became clear it was needed to ensure a fair election. The library sought outside counsel for that effort and filed a lawsuit to get a court appointed election monitor.

Crist said the continuance of the management agreement was articulated and understood by city leadership two years ago.

Now, she said, “the city is proposing taking money away from the library because the library mill…



Read More: Great Falls Public Library expands hours with levy funds; discusses management

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