Toronto Women’s Bookstore needs cash

The Toronto Women’s Bookstore announced on Dec 16 that it may soon close, unless it raises $40,000 by January. The store, the largest nonprofit feminist bookstore in Canada, has been open for 36 years. This comes just three months after Pages bookstore at Queen and John shut down.

This is not the first time the Toronto Women’s Bookstore has suffered financial crisis. In the early ’90s, closure seemed imminent but was avoided thanks to a successful community fundraising campaign headed up by local feminists. Fifteen years on, there are still many folks who would be sad to see it go.

“It would really deeply sadden me,” says Teresa Chun-Wen Cheng, who has been the store’s academic course books coordinator since May of last year. Before taking on the position, Cheng was a customer for six years.

“I would make trips from Peterborough to Toronto and hang out in the bookstore for hours,” she says. “When I was just coming into my politics it was always very welcoming. It was okay for me to sit there and read and browse.”

Toronto Women’s Bookstore was always intended to be as much a community resource centre as a bookstore, and revenue generated by book sales helps cover the operating costs, as well as the cost of organizing and hosting events.

Robyn Bourgeois, the chair of the bookstore’s board of directors, says she is hopeful about the fundraising campaign.

“I can’t imagine that people will just let it go without a fight,” she says. “People are really mobilizing and being supportive.”

Some organizations have already offered to help raise money, including Canada’s largest workers’ union, CUPE Ontario.

The $40,000 the store’s managers estimate they need to overcome the immediate crisis will give them and the board time to devise a more long-term strategy to keep the store open.

“Looking at the long term, we realize that the way the store is structured isn’t working,” says Bourgeois. “Alongside fundraising, we’re going to have to look at reorganizing to be more self-sustaining as a business.”

“I’m really optimistic. We’ve always been able to rally and find a way to survive.”

Independent bookstores increasingly have to fight to stay open as they compete with discounted online retailers and big-box stores. Toronto Women’s Bookstore is no exception, and Cheng says that sales in her department have dropped off considerably.

“I guess students’ reading habits have changed. There’s Google Books, or people have no money, so they share books. Because we generate so much revenue from course books sales, the drastic drop signalled for me that we were heading towards a not very good place,” she says.

Unless the store’s board of directors raises the necessary $40,000, the store is slated for closure by May of next year. The best way to donate immediately is by calling the store directly. A PayPal link for online donations will soon be available on the store’s website.

 

Keep Reading

Trans issues didn’t doom the Democrats

OPINION: The Republicans won ending on a giant anti-trans note, but Democrats ultimately failed to communicate on class

Xtra Explains: Trans girls and sports

Debunking some of the biggest myths around trans girls and fairness in sports

How ‘mature minor’ laws let trans kids make their own decisions

Canadian law lets some youth make medical or legal decisions for themselves, but how does it work?

To combat transphobia, we need to engage with the people who spread it

OPINION: opening up a dialogue with those we disagree with is key if we want to achieve widespread social change