Where's the report? Months after consultations, libraries waiting for plan

The 2017 Newfoundland and Labrador budget may not be as dire for libraries as the one presented last year, but advocates warn the institutions and people who work there are still in a "precarious position."

"It hasn't really given us any good, solid answers for the future," said Crystal Rose, who is part of the Newfoundland and Labrador Library Association.

"Will there be branch closures? We don't know."

Where's the report?

Rose said there is good news in this year's budget — namely, that the $625,000 operating grant has been restored.

"I'm so happy there weren't major cuts, that was our big fear," Rose told CBC Radio's Corner Brook Morning Show .

But Rose said much remains up in the air, following last year's announcement that more than half of the libraries in the province would close.

It was after a fierce public outcry that those closures were suspended until a review of the libraries, led by the firm EY, could be completed.

"We would really like to see the report coming out soon. I mean it's been nine months. We had 11 public consultations last fall ... There was an online component to the survey," Rose said.

"So they have a lot of great data and our concern is that it's taking a very long time to get that data into the hands of the public."

For Rose, timing is everything — and the government missed the mark.

"The budget has already been announced ... Our hands are tied, really, for another whole year, so that's concerning for sure."