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Lesley
Burger 
Leslie
Burger has directed the Princeton Public Library since 1999. From
1999-2004, Leslie planned and funded the new 58,000 square foot
Princeton Public Library, which opened to great community excitement
in April 2004. After decades of bickering and inactivity, she built
partnerships with civic and community leaders and convinced donors
to contribute $21 million to the library's capital and endowment
campaigns. Leslie raised the profile of the library by challenging
her community's notion of what a public library is all about and
redefining what the public library means for local residents.
In
1991, Leslie also founded her consulting firm, Library Development
Solutions. In her consulting practice, Leslie has guided more than
100 urban, suburban, and rural public libraries, academic and special
libraries, state libraries, and single and multi-type library cooperatives
across the US in strategic planning, space needs assessments, evaluation,
and program implementation. Among her clients are the Reader's Digest
Foundation, New York University Libraries, NY Comprehensive Research
Libraries Group, East Orange (NJ) Public Library, Flint and Genesee
(MI) District Libraries, Charles Stewart Mott Foundation (MI), Palm
Beach County Library System (FL), the Darien Public Library (CT),
The Office of Commonwealth Libraries (PA), the Council on Foreign
Relations (NY), SOLINET (GA), SEFLIN (FL), the Florida Library Association,
The Live Oak Public Libraries (GA) and Rangeview Library District
(CO).
Before
joining the Princeton Public Library, Leslie served as a development
consultant at the New Jersey State Library where she worked on leadership
and marketing initiatives on behalf of the state's libraries. She
served as Executive Director of the Central Jersey Regional Library
Cooperative, a multii-type library cooperative serving a three county
area. She also worked at the Connecticut State Library as the LSTA
Coordinator, Director of Planning and Research, and Director of
Network Services. Her library career began at the Bridgeport (Ct.)
Public Library when she was hired to develop a community information
and referral service.
Recognized
as an accomplished speaker, writer, and consultant, on staff development,
planning and evaluation, organizational development and library
futures, Leslie is also a sought after spokesperson in the media
on issues related to the implementation of CIPA, the future of libraries,
revitalizing downtown areas, and fundraising. During her ALA
Presidency Leslie will focus her efforts issues related to how libraries
can transform the communities they serve.
Leslie
is the president of ALA president beginning in July 2006 through
June 2007. Leslie served as president of ALA's Association of Specialized
and Cooperative Library Agencies (1996-1997), the New Jersey Library
Association (2001-2002), and the Connecticut Library Association
(1982-83), and as an ALA Chapter Councilor. She has served on many
ALA committees and task forces since she joined the association
in 1976 including ALA's Better Salaries and Pay Equity Task Force,
the ALA APA Pay Equity Committee, ALA Council, the SRRT Action Council,
the Committee on the Status of Women in Librarianship, the Public
Awareness Committee,and the ALA Awards Committee.
Leslie
attended library school at the University of Maryland in College
Park and also has a master's degree in organizational behavior from
the University of Hartford.
She
received the Princeton YWCA Tribute to Women Award in 2003, The
New York Times Librarian Award for 2004, and was honored as the
University of Maryland's CLIS Alumna of the Year in 2005.
Leslie
lives with Alan, her husband of 33 years and partner in Library
Development Solutions in Princeton Junction, NJ. She has three
children, Jessica, a sophmore at Dickinson College, Sarah, a graduate
of Dickinson College and currently a gallery assistant in NYC and
Benjamin, a graduate of Emory and Cardozo Law School, an attorney
in NYC. In her free time she loves to read (surprise!), garden,
travel, cook, and entertain friends and family.
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