Brundidge, Alabama
The Library's community vision is to see everyone happy, healthy, educated, and safe.
Help us make that happen!
Help us make that happen!
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LIBRARY MISSION
The Mission of the Tupper Lightfoot Memorial Library is to bring community together in a comfortable, encouraging, enriching and engaging environment. The Library is to strive to promote life-long learning and all types of literacy, especially reading, and information literacy.
COMMUNITY VISION
Children are happy, healthy, educated, safe. Children love to read, have curiosity and have a love of learning.
Those from twelve- to eighteen- years old show curiosity, have self-esteem, are good communicators, are prepared for the world of work and know “who they are.” They are open-minded.
The nineteen to forty-year olds have great jobs and have good family environments. They are life-long learners, who have not lost their curiosity about life and things. They have adequate housing. There is a rich community life, and they are contributors to that community life. They live by Christian values, such as showing respect for their fellow man. They are ruled by government leaders who are attuned to their needs and represent them as a whole. The forty-one-years old and upward have an economy supportive of their retirement. They have solid coping skills and can balance work and leisure time. They use leisure time for volunteering, rest, hobbies and family time. They have good decision-making skills.
The Mission of the Tupper Lightfoot Memorial Library is to bring community together in a comfortable, encouraging, enriching and engaging environment. The Library is to strive to promote life-long learning and all types of literacy, especially reading, and information literacy.
COMMUNITY VISION
Children are happy, healthy, educated, safe. Children love to read, have curiosity and have a love of learning.
Those from twelve- to eighteen- years old show curiosity, have self-esteem, are good communicators, are prepared for the world of work and know “who they are.” They are open-minded.
The nineteen to forty-year olds have great jobs and have good family environments. They are life-long learners, who have not lost their curiosity about life and things. They have adequate housing. There is a rich community life, and they are contributors to that community life. They live by Christian values, such as showing respect for their fellow man. They are ruled by government leaders who are attuned to their needs and represent them as a whole. The forty-one-years old and upward have an economy supportive of their retirement. They have solid coping skills and can balance work and leisure time. They use leisure time for volunteering, rest, hobbies and family time. They have good decision-making skills.