In a packed room at the Greater Columbus Convention Center, Kent Oliver with the American Library Association鈥檚 public policy office asked several hundred librarians a question: 鈥淚s anyone here concerned for the future of freedom to read and the First Amendment?鈥
Amid a burst of laughter, almost everyone raised a hand, even the folks in the back sitting on the floor.
Oliver and panelists Erin MacFarlane, deputy director for the Maricopa County Library District in Arizona, and Hallie Rich, editor of Library Journal, gave a talk on book bans and policy during the Public Library Association鈥檚 biennial conference in Columbus this week.
Public Library Association President Sonia Alc谩ntara-Antoine said that most libraries today are dealing with the upward trend in book banning and attempted censorship.
鈥淎nd that is extremely alarming, because in the United States of America, we have the freedom of speech, which includes the freedom to read, the freedom to access information, the freedom of expression,鈥 Alc谩ntara-Antoine said. 鈥淎nd we cannot have a healthy and thriving democracy if people are not able to read freely.鈥
Last year again saw a record number of book challenges, and for the first time, public libraries were targeted almost as often as school libraries.
Public libraries in attempts to remove books from shelves. The American Library Association鈥檚 Office for Intellectual Freedom recorded 1,247 attempts to censor library books, materials and resources in 2023. In libraries and schools, 4,240 different books were targeted.
"We cannot have a healthy and thriving democracy if people are not able to read freely.鈥- Public Library Association President Sonia Alc谩ntara-Antoine
鈥淧olicy attacks鈥
During his talk, Oliver said libraries across the nation are also facing 鈥減olicy attacks鈥 as some lawmakers try to remove legal protections for librarians, change the definition of parental rights or ban the distribution of so-called sexualized content, including LGBTQ+ material.
MacFarlane pointed to a bill going through the Arizona legislature that would redefine grooming. 鈥淭his was flagged by the ACLU in Arizona. And they said, 'We're nervous that this is being done, so that they can then turn around and say, libraries are grooming children simply by having these books on the shelf.'鈥
That leaves the library in a tricky spot, MacFarlane said. If they speak publicly against the bill, it ties librarians to grooming. If they say nothing and the bill passes, it could have repercussions in Arizona鈥檚 libraries.
Rich, who was formerly on the executive team of the Cuyahoga County Public Library system, added that when legislation fails, backers have started reworking language to move it forward.
鈥淭he attacks are getting more sophisticated,鈥 she said.
Educate not advocate
This year is an election year, but Oliver said as government institutions, libraries cannot campaign.
Rich said libraries, however, can lean into civic engagement with candidate forums and voter registration events.
鈥淭hat's educate, not advocate,鈥 Rich said. 鈥淎nd those are places where you absolutely are within your rights. And I would argue your responsibility.鈥
MacFarlane added that library professionals can be advocates, as long as they do that outside of work. Libraries can also ask their friends and allies to speak on their behalf.
鈥淲e need to make sure that the community is talking about it,鈥 MacFarlane said.
Many titles 鈥 many forms
Book challenges have increased so rapidly in the past few years because groups have tried to remove dozens or hundreds of titles at once. Often, the books are about the LGBTQ+ community or people of color.
MacFarlane said libraries can create policies to combat those mass challenges.
鈥淔or example, my library, it was one book per form. So, if you want to reconsider 100 books, you're going to fill out 100 forms,鈥 MacFarlane said. 鈥淰ery rarely do they come back with 100 forms that they've signed off on and said that they've read.鈥
also has developed for often-challenged books. The resumes give each title鈥檚 educational value and accolades, allowing teachers, librarians and community members to easily defend a book鈥檚 importance.
鈥淲e need to make sure that the community is talking about it."- Erin MacFarlane, library deputy director for Maricopa County Library District
Frustrations
For libraries, processing challenges is time-consuming. Rich and MacFarlane said that鈥檚 frustrating when there is other more important work to do.
Rich pointed to a challenge to Shannon Hale鈥檚 鈥淚tty-Bitty-Citty-Corn,鈥 a picture book about a pink kitten that wants to be a unicorn. 鈥淟ike that is absurd, and it is an absurd waste of our time,鈥 Rich said.
MacFarlane laughed about her 鈥渇avorite egregious example,鈥 Adam Rubin鈥檚 鈥淒ragons Love Tacos.鈥 鈥淵ou gotta take it off the shelf, because tacos, as we all know, are a euphemism for female genitalia,鈥 she said. The room burst into laughter.
But MacFarlane said book bans are most frustrating because it feels the like moral outrage isn鈥檛 really moral, but political. 鈥淎nd I don't like that we're being put in a situation where we are political scapegoats,鈥 she said.
鈥淚'm going to talk to people and say, hey, be aware, book challenges are coming. It's a threat to our democracy. It's a threat to the First Amendment."- Leanne Schneider Webb, Columbus publicist
The library community
Debi Stears, a collection development manager from Reno, Nevada, attended MacFarlane, Rich, and Oliver鈥檚 talk for the support.
鈥淥ur library is very much under attack,鈥 Stears said. 鈥淢onday, before I left, I sent out 27 responses to challenges asking to have items either removed or restricted in our library system.鈥
Stears鈥 library鈥檚 policy is to read each challenged book, which meant she spent hundreds of hours reading some 6,700 pages.
Daphne Silchuk-Ashcraft, director of the Orrville, Ohio, Public Library, said she wants to be ready if someone challenges a book in her library. 鈥淲hat I've heard is that we're all on the same page,鈥 she said.
And Columbus freelance publicist Leanne Schneider Webb was interested in the topic because a client is writing a play about banning plays.
Webb鈥檚 takeaway: 鈥淚'm going to talk to people and say, 'hey, be aware, book challenges are coming.' It's a threat to our democracy. It's a threat to the First Amendment. And we need to be ready to stand up and say, 'no, I don't want that in my community.'鈥
Around 7,500 library professionals attended the three-day conference in Columbus.
Librarians, vendors and book lovers traveled from all 50 U.S. states, and nine countries including the U.S. and Canada.