Radio Frequency Identification Technology for Logistics, Tagging and EPC

Montgomery libraries curbs theft with some help from RFID

Monday, November 21, 2011

The library district in Montgomery, Ala. has launched a new RFID system to deter theft of books and other library materials.

According to the Montgomery Advertiser, the district has had an ongoing issue with library books disappearing without a trace, which cost the system about $9,000 last year.


The district has more than 500,000 books in its collection. The districts entire book collection will be tagged for the new RFID system, which will also provide better inventory and support an optional self-checkout for library patrons.

Juliette Hampton Morgan Memorial Library will be one of the first in the district to receive the system. Currently, library personnel manually check the inventory every five to 10 years, and the process is said to as long as three months to complete.

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Bibliotheca announced the recent large-scale installation of its RFID-based automated material handling solutions in one of Berlin’s major public libraries, the Dietrich Bonhoeffer Library.

The deployment includes Bibliotheca’s 400 series return and sorting system - ‘smartreturn’ and ‘smartsort’ - which offers sorting speeds of 2,400 item/hour. Additionally, Dietrich Bonhoeffer is able to offer patrons self-service checkout through the ‘smartserve’ 700.

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The St. Albert Public Library in Canada is set to install a $500,000 RFID system to facilitate the tedious task of sorting returned materials before they are shelved, according to local news reports.

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Vaughan Public Libraries in Ontario, Ca. are in the final stages of implementing the Fastrac RFID system.

The Fastrac RFID will provide greater convenience to patrons, time savings for the staff and additional security for the library itself. Provided by the partnership between VTLS and mk Sorting Systems, the installation will include several self-checkout kiosks, staff stations, RFID gates, tagging stations, tagging wands and tags.

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The Buffalo & Erie County Public Library, New York has started using a self-checkout system that makes use of RFID technology, according to a local news report. In the past, if patrons wanted to check out a book or CD, they had to wait for a librarian to do it for them.

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