Casey Cardinia Libraries (CCL) in Melbourne’s southeast is one of Victoria’s largest public library services with eight locations and a mobile library that travels around the City of Casey and Cardinia Shire local government areas. CCL is funded principally by the City of Casey, Cardinia Shire Council and the Victorian State Government, and supports a rapidly growing and diverse community of more than 460,000 people.
CCL’s flagship location is
Bunjil Place Library, a stunning three-level, multiple award-winning library that sets a new benchmark for public libraries in Australia.
“It’s not just a library, it’s a shared living room,” explains Daniel Lewis, CCL’s General Manager, Digital Operations.
Far more than just a place to go to read and borrow books, CCL provides its 135,000 active members (who make more than 1.4 million visits annually) with access to free WiFi, computers, low-cost printing services, meeting spaces, literacy and education programs, and activities and events for both adults and children – in addition to books, CDs, DVDs, audiobooks, magazines and digital resources.
CCL had been operating with a traditional hub and spoke telephony system, with physical hardware on site. The whole system failed if the main branch went down, there was very little flexibility in the configuration options, and any moves, adds, changes or deletes (MACDs) required a 72-hour window for completion with the incumbent telephony provider.
“We had high operating and maintenance costs, very little transparency on what was happening across the system, we had to use another piece of technology for traffic shaping, and we had no remote access to fix or update anything,” said Lewis.
The library had deployed Microsoft Office 365 and Teams, and was using this technology extensively throughout the organisation. With users on these cloud-based applications, CCL staff had a lot more flexibility to access what they needed wherever they were or whatever they were doing - however, their phones did not move with them. “We’d either have to transfer calls to that person’s mobile or take a message,” said Lewis.