There is a popular stereotype of librarians: Mild-mannered, quiet, unassuming, and of course, bookish. But the Republicans in the Texas legislature seem to think that behind that compliant demeanor lies a sinister purveyor of dangerous ideas and books. What other explanation can there be for proposed legislation that would place book selection in the hands of a parent committee? And why strip away the legal protections accorded to librarians doing their job?
Sara Stevenson, a retired middle school librarian in Austin, wrote the following article, which was published in the Dallas Morning News.
As a former school librarian and mother, I have always believed parents have total control over what their children select to read from the school library.
However, Senate Bill 13 goes too far. Between July 2021 and June 2022, only 22 of 1,650 Texas school districts experienced formal book challenges in the past school year, less than 2%. All school districts already have formal challenge and reconsideration policies in place.
SB 13 transfers the decisions for acquiring library materials into the hands of a council of parents, the majority of whom do not work for the district but only have children attending. What possible experience or credentials or rights does this committee have to make decisions on what children can and can’t read in an entire school district? After a long, convoluted process spelled out in the bill, the school board must then approve the list of library books before they may be purchased.
First of all, it is clear the authors of this bill have a poor understanding of school library programs. In Austin ISD, there are 116 schools. This Local School Library Advisory Council, appointed by the school board, is required to meet only twice a year to decide on the library collections for all 116 schools. A single campus librarian purchases materials throughout the year. It’s not a one and done process.
This bill will greatly delay the timeline between ordering books and getting them into the hands of children. The additional 30-day waiting period further impedes the process. As a librarian, I had the freedom to pre-order the next book in a popular series so that I could add it to our collection the very day it was published. Kids clamoring for the next book in a beloved series will now have to wait for months if not all year.
The bill also invites parents to opt in to a program in which the librarian emails them each time their child checks out a book, including the book’s title and author. One elementary school in south Austin averages 196 checkouts per day. How is it possible for the librarian to send these emails while also running her library program? Instead, why not integrate the library catalog information into the parent portal, the website which parents already access to see their child’s grades? Parents can then look up their students’ library records. It would even help librarians with the bane of our existence: long overdue books.
The portion of the bill that enables anyone to prosecute individual librarians for distributing “harmful material” under the Texas penal code (Sec. 43.24) is the most shocking and destructive piece in this bill. It removes affirmative defenses for educational purposes. Does this also remove legal protections from members of the advisory council if a “bad” book slips through the cracks?
I can’t believe the state of Texas wants to allow frivolous lawsuits against librarians, school boards, principals, and teachers. We are already experiencing a teacher shortage, with at least 59 districts switching to four-day weeks.
If passed, this bill will bring a culture of fear and intimidation to our schools.
The men and women who choose to serve as school librarians are among the most intelligent and ethical people I know. They are not just serving the children of the five parents on the Local School Advisory Committee; they are representing the interests of all children and the parental rights of all families at their schools, upholding their First Amendment Rights to read.
If the Senate Public Education Committee had only consulted in good faith with the vast majority of school librarians whose patrons are extremely satisfied with the library collections they curate, this bill would have been able to find a balance between respecting parental rights and ensuring better oversight in purchasing materials without adding unwieldy, impractical layers of bureaucracy and red tape that will prevent children from having ready access to the books they want and need to read.
Sara Stevenson is a former school librarian in Austin ISD. She wrote this column for The Dallas Morning News.
Nothing constructive has ever been found in a sentence that begins, “I can’t believe the state of Texas…”
But “I can’t believe the state of Texas” is a perfectly accurate statement.
Because we can’t believe a single word Texas officials say.
Because 95% of what they say is a lie and there is no way of telling when they are saying the remaining 5%
True, and I was a bit harsh. After all, I can’t believe the state of Texas has such a wonderful musical tradition. That history and diversity is hard to match. And I also can’t believe someone as articulate and passionate about our future came from Houston! And, of course, Guy.
These hateful, divisive “culture war” bills put the state leaders’ bias on full display. In the next election cycle, voters with common sense should show up and vote these extremists out.
Unfortunately, these people are the norm in Texas.
That’s why they keep getting elected.
I have a dream. That people with common sense in every red state go to the polls and vote the rascals and the fascists out.
YES!!!!
Were it to be that easy. Sadly, there are too many voters in these red states who agree with/believe what the regressive xtian fundie theocrats push on to others. The pulpit has far too much power in this country. . . until this generation passes and more and more reject that xtian nonsense.
https://encyclopedia.ushmm.org/content/en/article/book-burning
Our TX Legislative collective silence has gotten us in this mess. That must change. SB 13 passed out of the TX Senate Education Committee April 5. If convicted, school librarians and school personnel would have a criminal record and could potentially no longer work in school or with children in Texas. This is overkill of a Texas political party agenda! Texas Criminal Justice impact statement: https://capitol.texas.gov/tlodocs/88R/impactstmts/html/SB00013IB.htm It states: “The offense is punishable as a Class A misdemeanor or a third degree felony if certain conditions are met.
Limiting an affirmative defense to an existing offense may result in additional demands upon state and local correctional resources due to a possible increase in the number of individuals placed under supervision in the community or sentenced to a term of confinement.
In TX fiscal year 2022, there were 57 individuals arrested, 16 individuals placed on adult community supervision, 22 individuals placed on juvenile probation supervision, no individuals admitted to an adult state correctional institution, and no individuals admitted to a juvenile state correctional institution for the offense of sale, distribution, or display of harmful material to a minor.”
The bill was sponsored by Republican state senator, Angela Paxton. On 3-23-2023, the Archdiocese of Galveston-Houston posted, “Texas Catholic Conference of Bishops Supports Parental Choice in Education Bills.” The site identifies the sponsors of the bills, including Paxton. At Paxton’s site, she posted, “Pray to End Abortions.”
Defenders of public institutions should not ignore the extensive politicking of the bishops which largely advances the right wing.
Marlene,
You will have greater understanding about the threat to liberalism if you read, “error has no rights” (Wikipedia) and the training manual of the Koch-funded Paul Weyrich, posted at Theocracy Watch. Weyrich was conservative Catholic and. a co-founder of the religious right.
A research paper posted at the Scielo site, “The new official contents of sex education in Mexico: laicism in the crosshairs,” describes the campaign against public schools in the U.S.
Spoke too soon…?
Don’t forget that there are also people that do not vote for Republicans in Texas. Still, that may explain why the fascist MAGA RINOs are so desperate to make it more difficult for those that vote Democratic to vote. MTG said she thinks anyone that moves from a blue state to a Red state should not be allowed to vote for five years. I’ve already read that there is talk in Red states to increase to voting age to 25, to get rid of the threat from that generation that is overwhelming voting for Democrats.
2020 Election results:
Donald Trump GOP
5,890,347
52.1%
Joe Biden DEM
5,259,126
46.5%
https://www.politico.com/2020-election/results/texas/