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Offering no explanation, Osceola County permanently removes multiple books from its school libraries
More than one year has passed since the School District of Osceola County removed five books from its libraries for review after several community members complained about them at a . Now, without any public explanation â and in defiance of its own review committeeâs â the district has permanently removed the books from its collection.
FIRE first wrote Osceola County in January, explaining that its process for reviewing the books violated district policy and likely the First Amendment. The districtâs promised response to our letter never came, so we followed up again in February.
Radio silence.
FIRE then learned the district had quietly decided to permanently remove the books â including âAll Boys Arenât Blue,â âMe and Earl and the Dying Girl,â âLooking for Alaska,â âGender Queer,â and âOut of Darknessâ â from all of its libraries.
Thatâs why the principle of viewpoint neutrality is so important â it protects books from ideologically driven purges coming from either side of the political spectrum.
So today FIREsent another letter to Osceola County. Again, we called on the district to explain its willful disregard of its policies and the First Amendment. As we told Superintendent Debra Pace, the âââreview process was tainted from the startâ:
Nobody filed a formal challenge to any of the books as required by district policy. Nevertheless, you formed an ad hoc committee to review the books. After the committee voted in September 2022 to retain the books in at least some school libraries, the books nevertheless remained off all library shelves. The school board assumed the authority to decide whether to restore the booksâdespite Chair Terry Castillo admitting the board was violating district policy by doing so, as ânot one single parentâ appealed the committeeâs decision.
The argument here isnât that parents and local residents should never be able to challenge the inclusion of certain books in school libraries. Itâs that when schools review these challenges, they must adhere to established, impartial procedures and objective criteria that ensure decisions rest on legitimate educational factors â not the personal whims of school officials or of a vocal minority of community members that have their ear.
Schools certainly have discretion to determine the content of their libraries, but as Supreme Court Justice William Brennan wrote for the plurality in Board of Education, Island Trees Union Free School District No. 26 v. Pico, âthat discretion may not be exercised in a narrowly partisan or political manner.â Justice Harry Blackmunâs concurring opinion likewise explains that school authorities âmay not remove books or the purpose of restricting access to the political ideas or social perspectives discussed in them, when that action is motivated simply by the officialsâ disapproval of the ideas involved.â
Florida school district removes library books in response to public complaints, defying First Amendment and district policy
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At an Osceola County School Board meeting last April, several community members objected to books in the school districtâs libraries that the district then removed.
School districts have broad authority over curriculum. But, as Justice Brennan explained, curricular and library materials differ in important ways. Unlike textbooks and assigned readings in class, the âselection of books from these libraries is entirely a matter of free choice; the libraries afford [students] an opportunity at self-education and individual enrichment that is wholly optional.â
have applied this reasoning in school districts to reshelve or lift restrictions on library books when those restrictions were motivated by school officialsâ disapproval of the booksâ ideas. In 2003âs , for example, a federal district court in Arkansas found that school board members unconstitutionally restricted access to âHarry Potterâ books to shield students from ideas about âwitchcraftâ and âthe occult.â
Likewise, some complaints about the challenged Osceola County school library books â including criticism of âtransgenderismâ and a comment that the board should âstop grooming children to think they can change their genderâ â are rooted in opposition to the booksâ alleged themes or ideas. If Osceola County has reasons to remove the challenged books that actually concern their educational suitability, those reasons need to emerge from the review process mandated by district policy. Simple as that.
Those who support todayâs ideologically motivated book removals should be careful what they wish for. The power to make these decisions may not always reside with individuals who share their political worldview. Thatâs why the principle of viewpoint neutrality is so important â it protects books from ideologically driven purges coming from either side of the political spectrum. Itâs why schools also canât, for example, ban âTo Kill a Mockingbirdâ from libraries because of that it promotes the âwhite savior myth.â Library shelves would have lots of empty space if schools removed all books that contain an idea that some school official or community member doesnât like. And students â our future leaders â would be far worse off for it.
Osceola County owes its students, its staff, and the public an explanation for its failure to adhere to its own policies and constitutional obligations. FIREhas asked the district to provide that explanation by June 5.
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