CHICAGO — The Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA)
Investor Education Foundation and the American Library Association
(ALA) have announced $1.19 million in grants to 17 recipients as
part of the Smart investing @ your library® initiative.
Smart investing @ your library® is administered jointly by the
Reference and User Services Association — a division of ALA — and
the FINRA Investor Education Foundation. The program funds library
efforts to provide patrons with effective, unbiased educational
resources about personal finance and investing. Now in its seventh
year, the program has awarded a total of $8.2 million to public
libraries, community college libraries and library networks
nationwide.
The new grant recipients will use the funds to implement a variety
of programs designed to increase patrons' access to and
understanding of financial information. The grants target a diverse
group of library patrons — among them youth, veterans, college
students, rural residents, grandparents and their grandchildren and
low-income families. Participating libraries will use a variety of
technologies and outreach strategies to connect library users to the
best financial education and information available. This year’s
projects give special attention to intergenerational learning and
helping adults model effective financial behaviors for children.
The grantees will partner with schools, universities, community
colleges, various nonprofit organizations and local governments to
expand the impact of the services and resources the grants enable.
Library patrons will be empowered to make educated financial choices
for both long-term investing and day-to-day money matters.
“The Smart investing @ your library® grant program aligns with the
emerging, transitional nature of library services and demonstrates
the library’s role as a community innovator. Libraries across the
country are helping family members expand their personal
understanding of basic financial concepts, and that builds a lasting
framework for success,” said ALA President Barbara Stripling.
“The libraries participating in this grant program have a deep
commitment to expanding access to effective, unbiased financial
education,” said Gerri Walsh, president of the FINRA Foundation.
“They are taking action to ensure that patrons in search of reliable
information about personal finance and investing will be guided by
knowledgeable staff to the best available learning opportunities and
resources.”
2013 Smart investing @ your library® Grantees
Albuquerque Bernalillo County Library, Albuquerque, N.M.
Albuquerque Bernalillo County Library will collaborate with a nearby
charter school and a statewide, nonprofit small business development
and training organization to deliver financial education for teens
ages 14 to 17. Eight library locations throughout the county and Amy
Biehl Charter High School in Albuquerque will host learning
activities. Program modules will address: managing your money;
planning your future; making your money grow; and protecting what
you have. Grant amount: $63,270
Brooklyn Public Library, Brooklyn, N.Y.
Brooklyn Public Library will engage adult and teen patrons through a
series of programs and services tailored to the borough’s diverse
audiences. The project has several components, including:
integration of financial concepts into existing adult basic
education programs (such as GED preparation programs and English for
Speakers of Other Languages); virtual investment clubs for adults
and teens; teen financial literacy workshops; and a financial
empowerment fair with in-person and virtual components delivered in
conjunction with the New York City Office of Financial Empowerment
and the Bedford-Stuyvesant Restoration Corporation. Grant amount:
$100,000
Central Library of Rochester & Monroe County, Rochester,
N.Y.
Rochester Public Library and the Consumer Credit Counseling Services
of Rochester (CCCS) will provide personal finance education to
participants in library-hosted English as a Second Language classes
and integrate financial literacy activities into the library’s
summer camp for ESL children. The adult classes will be co-taught by
the library’s ESL instructors and a financial educator from CCCS.
Grant amount: $58,509
Chesterfield County Public Library, Chesterfield, Va.
Chesterfield County Public Library will focus on the
intergenerational transfer of financial learning, while improving
participants’ facility with the mathematics of money. The project
will give special attention to grandchildren and the grandparents
who have an influential or primary role in raising them. The library
— in partnership with the County Office of the Senior Advocate, the
Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond and the Chesterfield County Public
Schools — will seek to equip these “grandfamilies” with financial
literacy skills necessary to address immediate needs and longer-term
well being. For the broader community, the library and its partners
will deliver a series of mini-workshops on: developing a financial
plan and setting goals; reducing debt; avoiding fraud and identity
theft; investing fundamentals; saving and paying for college;
retirement planning; and managing healthcare costs. Grant amount:
$78,280
Florence County Library System, Florence, S.C.
Working with nearby Francis Marion University, the South Carolina
Department of Consumer Affairs and the South Carolina Department of
Social Services, Florence County Library System will engage
children, teens and lower-income adults in a series of financial
literacy activities that appeal to the different learning
preferences of the target audiences. For children, the library will
conduct a “Dewey Dollars” campaign that incentivizes young readers
to explore the library’s financial literacy collections. For teens
in middle and high school, the library will sponsor a graphic novel
contest and a video contest. Students will create narratives
illustrating financial themes learned through their engagement with
the FDIC Money Smart for Teens program and other multimedia
curricula. For low- to moderate-income adults, the library will work
with its partners to provide money management instruction and
resources to job seekers and residents in economic distress. A
separate track of adult workshops will help residents understand and
prepare for their retirement needs. Grant amount: $50,605
Glen Carbon Centennial Library, Glen Carbon, Ill.
Glen Carbon Centennial Library will collaborate with nearby Six Mile
Regional Library District (Granite City, Ill.), the local chamber of
commerce and the Madison County Employment and Training Department
to provide personal finance education for the county’s families and
small business owners. For children, the project team will create
interactive, portable kiosks housing age-appropriate learning
materials and manipulatives. The kiosks will allow elementary
students to explore, independently or with a caregiver, the
financial concepts outlined in the Money as You Grow sequence
endorsed by the President’s Advisory Council on Financial
Capability. For adults, Glen Carbon Library will host a series of
workshops designed to reduce stress and achieve financial stability
among low- and moderate-income families. For single mothers, Six
Mile Library District will join with local Head Start programs and
community partners to provide financial planning strategies to deal
with high-risk circumstances. And for small business owners, Glen
Carbon Library and the Edwardsville-Glen Carbon Chamber of Commerce
will co-host workshops using the FDIC’s Money Smart for Small
Business Owners program. Grant amount: $54,590
Idaho Commission for Libraries, Boise, Idaho
The Idaho Commission for Libraries will partner with the University
of Idaho Extension, the Idaho Financial Literacy Coalition, the
College of Southern Idaho and 12 public libraries to bring
much-needed financial education to residents in an eight-county
region of south-central Idaho, where more than half of the
population has an income below 200 percent of the federal poverty
level. Public programs will kick-off with family financial literacy
fairs to showcase financial education opportunities available to
residents and introduce the resources provided by and through their
public libraries. The fairs will be followed by multiple financial
education events coordinated by the 12 participating libraries. All
of the educational events will address the project content areas,
namely basic financial literacy, financing a college education,
investing fundamentals and retirement planning. Grant amount:
$71,014
Middle Country Public Library, Centereach, N.Y.
Middle Country Public Library, in partnership with the Children’s
Museum of Manhattan, will create interactive, hands-on learning
activities for children, teens and their parents/caregivers focusing
on money and mathematics. The project will include portable learning
stations, special activities integrated into established, ongoing
programs serving preschool and school-age children, financial
literacy outreach visits to elementary schools and circulating
family financial literacy math kits to reinforce learning at home.
Children will learn fundamental concepts such as prioritizing,
exchange and valuation. Teens will receive training to act as
“financial math buddies” and help facilitate learning for younger
students. For parents and caregivers, the project will improve their
ability to model exemplary financial practices and teach their
children essential personal finance skills and knowledge.
Participating adults will also have opportunities to learn about
financial planning, credit and investing best practices. Grant
amount: $71,000
Monroe County Public Library, Bloomington, Ind.
Monroe County Public Library and its partners — including Indiana
University and the local United Way Financial Stability Alliance —
will help residents ages 20 to 39 create a savings and spending
plan, manage credit and debt, make prudent decisions about major
purchases (a home, for example) and invest wisely. The project
complements Indiana University’s newly established Money Smarts
initiative by extending financial learning to residents experiencing
the demands and opportunities of post-college life. The project will
follow a “Say – See – Do” approach to adult education. For the “Say”
portion of each program component, faculty from Indiana University
will deliver short presentations inclusive of topical videos created
for each project theme. During the “See” portion, instructors will
demonstrate various personal finance tools and processes (such as
how to review your credit report). During the “Do” portion,
participants will practice using online tools and begin to build
their own financial plans with assistance from the instructional
team. Participants will also have opportunities to schedule
one-on-one or small group “talk to an expert” sessions with
instructors and obtain more in-depth guidance. Grant amount: $87,230
Nebraska Library Commission, Lincoln, Neb.
The Nebraska Library Commission will partner with the University of
Nebraska-Lincoln Extension to bring financial education programs and
services to 23 libraries in mostly rural locations across the state.
The program will combine face-to-face educational sessions with
online learning. The inaugural educational event at each location
will be face-to-face, allowing educators to introduce the online
curriculum. Participants will then work through self-paced online
courses. These courses address balancing risk, cutting investment
costs, choosing an investment adviser and managing an investment
portfolio and are segmented for different age cohorts with attention
to specific needs depending on life stage. Participants will receive
support and encouragement from library staff and coaches at the
local level. They will also have access to online Q&A services
staffed by Extension educators. At the conclusion of the online
series, participants will reconvene for face-to-face sessions to
assess outcomes and maintain momentum for continued learning on
financial topics. Grant amount: $100,000
New Hanover County Public Library, Wilmington, N.C.
New Hanover County Public Library will lead a coalition comprising
New Hanover County Schools, Cape Fear Community College, the main
library at the University of North Carolina-Wilmington and the North
Carolina Council on Economic Education to help students from the
middle grades through college make informed financial decisions
during their early adult lives. The project will give particular
attention to budgeting, managing consumer debt, paying for education
and investing fundamentals. Grant amount: $36,500
Pelham Public Library, Pelham, Ala.
Pelham Public Library will concentrate its efforts on improving the
financial literacy of families with school-age children. For
children up to age 8, the library will collaborate with educators
from the Milwaukee-based Betty Brinn Children’s Museum to create
hands-on money smart exhibits. These exhibits will develop
children’s financial math skills and basic money management
knowledge. Children ages 9 to 13 will participate in Money on the
Bookshelf and Bank on Books — two programs that combine reading
development with lessons in personal finance. Students will learn
about saving, budgeting, credit, compound interest and related
mathematics concepts. High school students will learn about
budgeting and the financial considerations of living on their own
through the interactive Reality Check simulation. Supplementary
lessons from the University of Tennessee’s Love Your Money online
program and the National Endowment for Financial Education’s High
School Financial Planning Program will enhance learning. Parents
will work with project educators to examine the Money as You Grow
sequence of financial competencies (endorsed by the President’s
Advisory Council on Financial Capability) and learn to help their
children establish good money management skills. Grant amount:
$83,500
Piscataway Public Library, Piscataway, N.J.
Piscataway Public Library will collaborate with libraries in nearby
Dunellen and New Brunswick, N.J., and with Rutgers Cooperative
Extension to deliver an online and in-person financial education
initiative to help the “sandwich generation” — those adults who are
simultaneously managing their own finances while raising children
and assisting aging parents, both financially and otherwise.
Workshop topics will include: creating a savings plan; basic
investing principles; getting started as an investor; selecting and
monitoring investments; investing for long-term goals; investing for
college; and avoiding fraud. Grant amount: $63,671
Santa Fe College Library, Gainesville, Fla.
Santa Fe College Library will focus on increasing financial
capability among several audiences in the college’s service area:
the college’s veteran population and their dependents;
first-generation college-goers; students receiving financial aid;
students who were displaced but have returned to campus (including
some who have previously defaulted on student loans); students in
the college’s Displaced Homemaker Program; high school dual-enrolled
students; and middle and high school students and their parents in
pre-college assistance programs. The initiative will give special
attention to building financial self-sufficiency and making sound,
informed decisions about paying for college. Instructional units
will be integrated into the college’s continuing education courses,
credit-bearing courses and various college readiness and student
support programs. Project leaders will also collaborate with
community agencies to refer students to supplemental services and
one-on-one financial counseling as necessary. Grant amount: $100,000
Saratoga Springs Public Library, Saratoga Springs, N.Y.
Saratoga Springs Public Library will sponsor separate financial
literacy series for adults and teens in the region. Adult workshops
will address: financial fundamentals (from banking to sound credit
practices); personal finance for veterans (including understanding
military benefits); introduction to investing; retirement planning;
college financing; and personal finance considerations for small
business owners. Teen workshops will be activity-based and will help
young people create a budget, examine how credit works and how to
establish good credit, prepare for important financial decisions
such as paying for college, establish goals and understand their
first paychecks. Librarians will conduct outreach visits to
business- and finance-related clubs at Saratoga Springs High School
and deliver programs both during and after school hours. Grant
amount: $60,596
Springdale Public Library, Springdale, Ark.
Springdale Public Library will collaborate with the local school
district to improve the financial literacy of immigrant families
with school-age children. The library will organize a series of
family finance events (with translation services) at selected public
schools in the district. Parents and children will attend together.
Each event will encompass a rotation through four financial literacy
sessions led by educators from Credit Counseling of Arkansas, the
University of Arkansas Cooperative Extension Service, the Economic
Opportunity Agency serving northwest Arkansas and Economics Arkansas
(an affiliate of the Council for Economic Education). Session topics
will include: bank products and services; comparing credit
opportunities; obtaining and reviewing a credit report; how to build
or repair credit; making good decisions about large purchases;
saving for college; avoiding financial fraud; and teaching children
about money. Participating children will receive age-appropriate
learning materials about money concepts. Parents will obtain
resources to improve household financial management and will have
the opportunity to enroll in more in-depth, topical workshops
conducted at library locations with the assistance of the Economic
Opportunity Agency. These workshops will address household savings,
taxpayer topics, the Earned Income Tax Credit and introduction to
investing. Grant amount: $34,055
Toledo-Lucas County Public Library, Toledo, Ohio
Toledo-Lucas County Public Library and United Way of Greater Toledo
will partner with three social service agencies to help residents
with income of 200 percent or less of the federal poverty level
achieve financial stability through participation in the FDIC Money
Smart program and follow-up financial coaching. In addition to the
Money Smart sequence, the participating library branches will host a
menu of financial workshops taught by educators from Ohio State
University Extension, the regional Social Security Office and Better
Investing. Scheduled classes and workshops will be positioned as
gateways to one-on-one financial stability services offered by East
Toledo Family Center, Lutheran Social Services and United North (a
community development corporation). Grant amount: $81,881
The FINRA Investor Education Foundation supports innovative research
and educational projects that give underserved Americans the
knowledge, skills and tools necessary for financial success
throughout life. For details about grant programs and other FINRA
Foundation initiatives, visit
www.finrafoundation.org.
FINRA, the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority, is the largest
non-governmental regulator for all securities firms doing business
in the United States. FINRA is dedicated to investor protection and
market integrity through effective and efficient regulation and
complementary compliance and technology-based services. FINRA
touches virtually every aspect of the securities business — from
registering and educating all industry participants to examining
securities firms, writing and enforcing rules and the federal
securities laws, informing and educating the investing public,
providing trade reporting and other industry utilities and
administering the largest dispute resolution forum for investors and
registered firms. For more information, please visit
www.finra.org.
Smart investing @ your library® is a partnership between the
Reference and User Services Association (RUSA), a division of the
American Library Association, and the FINRA Investor Education
Foundation. The program supports public libraries and community
college libraries across the country in their efforts to meet
financial education needs at the local level. Visit
http://smartinvesting.ala.org
for details.
The Reference and User Services Association, a division of the
American Library Association, is the foremost organization of
reference and information professionals who make the connections
between people and the information sources, services and collection
materials they need. For more information, please visit
www.ala.org/rusa. The American
Library Association is the oldest and largest library association in
the world, with more than 60,000 members. Its mission is to promote
the highest quality library and information services and public
access to information. For more information, please visit
www.ala.org or call (800) 545-2433
ext. 4279.