Reston Citizens Association To Honor Citizen Of The Year Monday

Discarded Fairfax County Public Library books/Credit: RCAKathy Kaplan, a longtime Restonian and community activist, will be honored as the Reston Citizen of the Year at 7:30 p.m. Monday at Reston Community Center Hunters Woods.

The award recognizes Kaplan’s exemplary leadership, perseverance, effectiveness, and commitment to Reston’s values in her continuing efforts to protect the future of the County’s public libraries, including Reston Regional Library, said RCA president Colin Mills.  

“Kathy’s award is a demonstration of the power of individual citizens to make a big difference in the community,” said Mills. “We in Reston love our library, and we’re grateful to Kathy for everything she’s done to protect it.”

A published author of poetry and children’s books, Kaplan is an avid user of the Reston Regional Public Library. She brought to light last year that the library system was no longer recirculating books. Instead, they were dumping them.

After Kaplan noticed that the bookshelves were increasingly empty, she began to investigate why.

Through personal outreach and research of obscure Fairfax County documents, she discovered that the county had thrown away more than 100,000 books, and was slated to reduce the library budget and cut the professional librarian staff as part of a departmental strategic plan.

Reston Regional to be part of the library system’s “Beta Plan,” but Kaplan mobilized citizens to protest the cuts.

Working with concerned librarians and mobilizing civic organizations across the county, including the Fairfax County Federation of Citizens Associations, the League of Women Voters, and RCA, Kaplan helped force a review, which ultimately let to the scrapping of the plan by the Library Board of Trustees and the board of  supervisors, said Mills.

The RCA backed a resolution calling for an end to the destruction of library books, abandonment of the plan and a re-thinking of the library strategy, says Mills.

Kaplan researched and co-authored a report for the FCFCA that detailed the library actions and plans. She also worked with Supervisor Linda Smyth, who visited the site where the library books were being dumped and then directed the suspension of any further destruction of books in good repair.

As a result of her efforts and other concerned county citizens,the supervisors directed the library trustees to investigate the book destruction and re-think the library strategy, says RCA.

The RCA Citizen of the Year Award was established in 1976. It honors a citizen whose goals are consistent with the goals of Reston, and of RCA; who has contributed to the quality of life in Reston; and has helped people in need benefit from his or her actions, among other criteria.

Photo of books discarded books discovered by Kathy Kaplan courtesy of RCA.

Recent Stories

Herndon has finalized its vision for mixed-use development in the Transit-Related Growth Area (via Town of Herndon) In the future, Herndon hopes to see a vast swath of land near…

The Fairfax County Board of Supervisors (staff photo by James Jarvis) The Fairfax County Board of Supervisors has signed off on a 3-cent bump in its real estate tax rate,…

New vehicle lanes and a shared-use trail are officially open to travelers on Route 7 (Leesburg Pike) after almost five years of construction. The Virginia Department of Transportation announced last night…

Morning Notes

Buildings are under construction near the Wiehle-Reston Metro station (staff photo by Angela Woolsey) Man Gets Life in Prison for N. Va. Gang Killings — An MS-13 leader was sentenced…

×

Subscribe to our mailing list