Libraries set to close July 20 will now remain open until Sept. 30
Five Annapolis Valley Regional Library branches that were set to close July 20 have been granted a reprieve. At a special library board meeting in the Wolfville on July 13, members voted to use a portion of remaining, unallocated reserve funds to keep the doors of the five branches open until Sept. 30. Board chairperson Janet Ness said all the board’s decisions regarding the potential closures have been made with a great deal of forethought, research, and heart.
“None of these decisions has been made lightly, and we’re in this position because our funding formula has not increased since 2020,” Ness said. Related AVRL CEO says board has provided audited financial statements to province No additional provincial money coming to prevent Annapolis Valley library closures: Ritcey Kentville mayor calls for pause on Annapolis Valley Regional Library closures Lack of sustainable funding behind ‘painful’ decision to close Valley libraries She said the board can no longer afford to operate a full library system that the citizens of the Annapolis Valley deserve.
Ness said she never thought she would have to sit around the library board table and make decisions to close branches. The Annapolis Valley Regional Library announced a major restructuring of library services on June 1, including the closure of the Hantsport, Kentville, Lawrencetown, Middleton, and Port Williams branches on July 20. At the July 13 meeting, Kentville Mayor Andrew Zebian, who represents the town on the board and requested the special meeting, moved to use remaining reserve funds to keep the five branches open temporarily.
The motion was amended to use a portion of the remaining reserve funds. Zebian also moved to keep the five branches open until late October, but this was amended to Sept. 30 so that more of the funds remaining in the reserve can be maintained in event of an emergency. The regional library currently has about $160,830 left in reserve, but this will be reduced to about $88,800 by the end of September.
The board also voted to go back to the eight partner municipalities to ask that they provide the full increased budget amount requested earlier this year. If all eight municipalities agree to provide the full amount that was originally requested, all 11 regional library branches could remain open until March 31, 2027. Only three partners, Kentville, Annapolis Royal, and West Hants, provided the full amount requested.
Following the meeting, Zebian said he’s thankful that the board came together to consider a reprieve. “I would have liked to have a couple more months, but Sept. 30 gives us a little more time. We can go back to the funding partners and the province again,” he said.
Zebian said it’s now up to the partner municipalities whether the five branches will remain open until March 31, 2027. He said now is the time to come together in a regional effort to make this happen. He’ll be reaching out to them, as he’s now wearing two hats, as a board member and a mayor.
Zebian points out that county residents sometimes use town libraries, and in some cases vice versa, so all the municipal partners are in this together. He said whether all 11 branches remain open beyond March 31 depends on a new, sustainable provincial funding formula that is fair and equitable for the municipalities and the library board. The five regional library branches will be kept open until Sept. 30 using a combination of 2025-26 and 2026-27 staffing models.
The three branches located in villages would operate under the 2025-26 service model, while the two branches in towns would operate under 2026-27 restructured staffing and hours. This equates to 8.8 full-time equivalent positions plus casuals. Hantsport and Lawrencetown will have one full-time equivalent position; Port Williams, 1.2; and Kentville and Middleton, 2.8.
- Published
- Jul 13, 2026
- Updated
- Jul 13, 2026
- Source
- Pniatlantic
- Category
- Crime
- Read time
- 3 min
Key facts
Why this matters locally
This crime story matters locally because it may affect readers, businesses, commuters, families, or public services in British Columbia.
Local impact
BC Post links this item to British Columbia coverage so readers can follow related city updates, weather, traffic, events, and category news in one place.
Timeline
Source and credit
BC Post may summarize, organize, and add local context for reader clarity. Original reporting remains with the listed publisher.