Current:Home > ContactVoters in Iowa community to decide whether to give City Council more control over library books -GrowthProspect
Voters in Iowa community to decide whether to give City Council more control over library books
View
Date:2025-04-14 03:21:23
PELLA, Iowa (AP) — Voters in a small Iowa city will decide in November whether to give their City Council more say over what books the public library can and can’t offer.
A ballot proposition in Pella, a community of about 10,500 residents in central Iowa, asks voters if they support changing the structure of the Pella Public Library Board of Trustees. The change would limit the board’s authority over the library and give the City Council more control over library policies and decisions, the Des Moines Register reported Tuesday.
The effort follows attempts by some community members two years ago to ban or restrict access to Maia Kobabe’s LGBTQ+ memoir “Gender Queer” at the library. The library board eventually voted to keep the book.
Like many Iowa communities, Pella’s board holds independent control over how money is spent, who is hired as director and other key issues. It also decides whether to keep books if community members challenge them. The City Council appoints the board’s members and approves the library’s budget.
The referendum would make the library board an advisory committee that makes recommendations to the City Council, with no formal authority. Even with voter approval, the council could still decide not to change the current system and to allow the board to maintain direct control over library decisions.
The referendum comes amid a push in conservative-led states and communities to ban books, the American Library Association said last month. Such efforts have largely focused on keeping certain types of books out of school libraries, but the ALA said they now extend just as much to public libraries.
Through the first eight months of 2023, the ALA tracked 695 challenges to library materials and services, compared to 681 during the same time period last year, and a 20% jump in the number of “unique titles” involved, to 1,915.
Opponents of the Pella referendum say the changes would erode a necessary independence that ensures libraries can offer diverse materials, free from political interference. They say the changes would amount to censorship and erase stories about underrepresented groups.
“There isn’t pornography in the library,” said Anne McCullough Kelly of Vote No to Save Our Library. “There are books that people might personally object to because it’s not aligned with their values, books whose content might make them uncomfortable for different reasons. But there isn’t any actual pornography in the library.”
Referendum supporters say the changes would give taxpayers more say in how public money is spent. They frame the proposal as a way to keep material they view as pornographic and harmful away from children.
“None of this prevents parents from getting ahold of what they want,” said state Rep. Helena Hayes, a Republican who chairs Protect My Innocence, a group that supports the referendum. “All they have to do is go on Amazon and click buy.”
In late 2021, the library board heard concerns from residents who believed “Gender Queer” — an illustrated memoir of the author’s real-life journey with sexuality and gender that includes frank sexual images — should be removed or placed behind the checkout counter.
A Register review has found that parents have challenged the book eight times in Iowa school districts since August 2020.
When a Virginia school system removed “Gender Queer” in 2021, publisher Oni Press issued a statement saying that limiting the book’s availability was “short-sighted and reactionary.”
“The fact is, GENDER QUEER is an important, timely piece of work that serves as an invaluable resource for not only those that identity as nonbinary or genderqueer, but for people looking to understand what that means,” the publisher said in a statement.
veryGood! (9448)
Related
- See you latte: Starbucks plans to cut 30% of its menu
- Powerball winning numbers for June 1 drawing: Jackpot climbs to $171 million
- Firefighters make progress, but wildfire east of San Francisco grows to 14,000 acres
- Eiza González defends Jennifer Lopez, takes aim at 'mean' criticism: 'So disturbing'
- Nearly half of US teens are online ‘constantly,’ Pew report finds
- Mental health is another battlefront for Ukrainians in Russian war
- World War II veterans travel to France to commemorate 80th anniversary of D-Day
- World War II veteran awarded Pennsylvania high school diploma 2 days before his death at age 98
- IRS recovers $4.7 billion in back taxes and braces for cuts with Trump and GOP in power
- Salt in the Womb: How Rising Seas Erode Reproductive Health
Ranking
- Biden administration makes final diplomatic push for stability across a turbulent Mideast
- Climate solution: Massachusetts town experiments with community heating and cooling
- Shiloh Jolie-Pitt wants to drop dad Brad Pitt's last name per legal request, reports state
- Sally Buzbee steps down as executive editor of the Washington Post
- The city of Chicago is ordered to pay nearly $80M for a police chase that killed a 10
- GameStop leaps in premarket as Roaring Kitty may hold large position
- Let's (try to) end the debate: Does biweekly mean twice a week or twice a month?
- Pride Month has started but what does that mean? A look at what it is, how it's celebrated
Recommendation
A White House order claims to end 'censorship.' What does that mean?
Remembering D-Day, RAF veteran Gilbert Clarke recalls the thrill of planes overhead
What to know about Mexico’s historic elections Sunday that will likely put a woman in power
Few kids are sports prodigies like Andre Agassi, but sometimes we treat them as such
Former Danish minister for Greenland discusses Trump's push to acquire island
NCAA baseball super regionals: Who has punched their ticket to next round of tournament?
Environmental activist sticks protest poster to famous Monet painting in Paris
Trump Media stock drops in Friday trading after former president's guilty verdict