Whangārei central library users (from left) Hiraani Rieck, Brian Cox and Greg Waite at the community facility on a Tuesday to make their views against its closure on Sunday known Photo / Susan Botting
Whangārei central library users (from left) Hiraani Rieck, Brian Cox and Greg Waite at the community facility on a Tuesday to make their views against its closure on Sunday known Photo / Susan Botting
Many Whangārei residents are fuming the central city library is no longer open on Sundays – a move some say cuts off one of the few accessible community spaces available on that day.
The decision has landed badly with many older adults, who say families, students and weekday workers areall impacted.
The 20-year-old library was shut for the first time under the new regime on Sunday, March 1.
Whangārei Mayor Ken Couper says the closure was necessary to avoid the risk of suburban libraries shutting.
The library has been open for almost 1000 Sundays since openings on that day started 19 years ago, the exceptions being during Covid-19 lockdowns, Cyclone Gabrielle, Easter Sundays and other public holidays.
Sundays at the library were part of looking after her mental health and creating lifestyle balance.
“I went there on Sundays to unwind and it didn’t cost me anything. I was part of the community,” Rieck said.
“Not everybody can afford to destress by going to the beauty parlour, having a haircut or getting a massage.”
Residents spoken to by Local Democracy Reporting Northland want the library reopened on Sundays.
Suggestions floated included closing the library instead for a day or two half-days during the working week and looking for other cost-cutting options.
Whangārei’s Jocelyn Taylor is a Sunday user of the city’s main library and disappointed it’s now shut on that day of the week. Photo / Susan Botting
Retired teacher and library user Jocelyn Taylor said as a local paying very high rates, she expected it to be open on Sunday.
Families used Sundays to take their children to the library to change books.
Doing so normalised books, reading and more, which was a major plus for children’s learning.
She and others said families they visited the library on Sundays because it was the only day when their children weren’t at school or tied up with Saturday sports.
Whangārei Chess Club’s Greg Waite (left) and Brian Cox are forced to play their favourite game outside Whangārei central library after it closed on Sundays, thereby taking out the club’s regular gathering venue. Photo / Susan Botting
Riverside child poverty researcher Greg Waite said Sunday library openings offered families impacted by deprivation access to the facilities, including the internet and books they often did not have at home.
Retired University of Otago public health medicine specialist and library user Brian Cox, from Tikipunga, said Sunday was good for those with a disability or limited mobility.
There was less traffic around, meaning they could get parking close to the library.
“It’s a pity such a big community resource gets knobbled in this way,” Cox said.
“It should be cherished, not shut,” he said.
Waite and Cox are part of Whangārei Chess Club, which has now lost one of its meeting venues with the closure.
The duo protested the library’s closure outside its shut front door on March 1.
They will be attending Whangārei District Council’s March meeting, where Waite will be speaking about the issue.
Following the closure on Sundays of the central library service, Whangārei's Neil Johnson questions how far the council's city library service has come since the old red-brick library to his right was built in 1935, 70 years before the new central library in the background, which opened in 2006. Photo / Susan Botting
Meanwhile, semi-retired teacher Neil Johnson said those who built the first central library next door on Rust Ave in 1935 would be turning in their graves.
“How far have we come if this is happening?” Johnson said.
Johnson described the closure as an act of “cultural vandalism”.
“The central library is part of the essential cultural fabric of the central city,” Johnson said.
Whangārei's Jan Miller says the council closing the city's central library on Sundays could be the thin edge of the wedge. Photo / Susan Botting
Retired Whangārei Hospital radiologist and Sunday library user Jan Miller said he was concerned the library’s Sunday closure would become the thin edge of the wedge as the council looked to potentially halve its coming year’s rates increase.
Council research shows Whangārei’s central library has New Zealand’s lowest staffing level among similarly sized facilities.
Whangārei’s main library in the city’s Rust Ave has hundreds of thousands of books, and other offerings. Photo / Susan Botting
When asked whether the closure would be permanent, Couper said the people of Whangārei had the chance to have their say about the library as a part of the council’s 2026/2027 draft annual plan consultation.
Feedback would be considered in the context of weighing up multiple different demands. Some hard decisions would have to be made.
He said the Sunday closure happened because of the need to boost staffing across the library’s Monday-Saturday opening days because of their patronage growth.
Sunday staff had been redistributed across the rest of the week’s openings.
Staying open on Sundays would have meant employing more staff for that day, which had the week’s lowest patronage.
Couper said there was limited appetite for more staff before the council’s Annual Plan budgeting for the coming financial year.
People had expressed to council the need to lower the size of Whangārei’s rates increases.