US | library NJ City Plans to Close Public Libraries Broke Camden can't afford library system By Nick McMaster Posted Aug 6, 2010 2:22 PM CDT Copied Fourth-graders Nick Phan, left, and Marcus Lee, right, visit in the school library at Kennydale, Elementary School, Tuesday, June 22, 2010, in Renton, Wash. (AP Photo/Ted S. Warren) A budget crisis is forcing Camden, NJ, to shut down its public library system, MyFox New York reports. Unless emergency funding can be secured, Camden's three branch libraries will close at the end of this year, and the 106-year-old system's collection of 187,000 books will be liquidated. "We're going to fight back with every weapon we've got, not just for us, but for the people of Camden," a librarian tells the Courier-Post. Read These Next White House makes Hegseth put his polygraph away. A new book argues the Sacagawea legend is all wrong. US denies visas to Venezuelan team bound for Little League tournament. A New Zealand neighborhood is being stalked by a feline laundry thief. Report an error