Paul Chapin

Manager, Operations & Staff Development at Spokane Public Library

Paul Chapin is an accomplished manager with extensive experience in public service and customer engagement, currently serving as the Manager of Operations & Staff Development for Spokane Public Library since July 2018. In this role, Paul oversees public service operations across a seven-branch library system, supervising a team of six direct reports and 36 line staff. Prior to this position, Paul held various leadership roles in student travel programs, including Senior Vice President at People to People International Student Travel Programs since September 2015, and held previous positions at People to People Ambassador Programs and People to People Student Ambassador Programs. Paul possesses a Bachelor’s Degree in English Language and Literature from Whitman College and studied Politics, History, and Psychology at the University of Freiburg.

Location

Spokane, United States

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Spokane Public Library

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Spokane Public Library aims to inspire a thriving city through cultural and educational opportunities. An award-winning library that spans six branches and houses nearly half-a-million items, Spokane Public Library circulates nearly two million items and welcomes one million visitors annually. Customers can enjoy traditional library media and can also access digital downloads, databases, historical collections, art exhibits and interesting free programming. For general information about the library, please visit spokanelibrary.org or call us at 509-444-5300. Land Acknowledgement All Spokane Public Library buildings sit on the traditional homelands of the four bands of the Spokane Tribe of Indians: Sntútʔulixʷi, Snxʷmeneʔi, Sc̓qesciłni, and Sčewíleʔ (Upper Band, Middle Band, Lower Band, Chewelah Band). Since time immemorial, the Spokane Tribe of Indians has lived and cared for these grounds. Identifying themselves as “sqélixʷ,” or “Flesh of the Earth.” We pay our respects to their Elders – past, present, and emerging. We show gratitude to the land, river, and peoples who have been fishing, hunting, harvesting, and gathering here for generations. May we learn from one another’s stories, so that we may nurture the relationship of the People of the Spokane Tribe and to all those who share this land.


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51-200

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