Showing posts with label Berry v Yosemite Community College District. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Berry v Yosemite Community College District. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 20, 2026

Policy Shell Game Hides Parents' Rights in Kansas Libraries

Just moving these books
to the adult section
won't matter, Sunflower eLibrary
lets kids download their own copy anytime.

Public libraries in Kansas shuffle policies with Sunflower eLibrary and trample Parents' Rights to object to s*xually explicit materials freely accessed by children in online accounts. 

The Kansas State Library Handbook (2020 edition, pp. 18–19) directs public libraries to maintain a clearly defined method for handling complaints about materials. The guidance recognizes that challenges may occur and requires the library board policy to oversee a formal reconsideration process, including meeting personally with the Director, submission of a written request, review by designated staff or a committee, and appeals to the governing board, which holds final decision authority.

The 2017 version of the Handbook stated that "the library director should explain that they are complying with the law’s requirements for consideration” (p. 19). 

Reconsideration is a procedural right...

The guidance did not change, however the 2020 version states “the library should explain to the complainant its materials selection policy, stating that the library board "subscribes" to the ALA (American Library Association) Freedom Statements (ALA Bill of Rights)  (p. 19). The ALA's Library Bill of Rights has no legal force, with the judge describing the statements as an "aspirational creed" rather than a binding legal standard. (Berry v. Yosemite Community College District, Case No. 1:18-cv-00172-LJO-SAB. (E.D. Cal. Apr. 17, 2018). It is not a federal statute and the ALA has no authority in Kansas.  No identified cases show any ALA policies being upheld in court (or by libraries in litigation) specifically to deny reconsideration requests for shared digital items. Berry v. Yosemite Community College District limited the legal weight of the ALA Library Bill of Rights in court.

The Kansas State Library Handbook is weaker and less defensible by the recent changes made. Compliance with Kansas statues is required regardless of what inspired the language in the Handbook, which is produced with public funds and issued as governmental guidance to public libraries.

Children have unfiltered access to adult titles and parents can't object...

Sunflower eLibrary, a statewide consortium serving up to 150 Kansas public libraries, enforces a policy that categorically bars reconsideration of tens of thousands of shared digital materials stating, “Due to the nature of consortium or digital content, it is not possible for individual libraries to remove shared and/or content from the consortium. Individual libraries may remove content purchased under their Advantage accounts. Patrons wishing to challenge content need to submit a formal reconsideration request with each library that owns a copy of the title on the consortium, according to each library’s individual reconsideration policies and processes. Individual libraries who object to content shared by other libraries are encouraged to reconsider their participation in Sunflower eLibrary” (quoted from email dated January 9, 2026 from Hays Public Library Director).

The Hays Public Library adoption of this policy is even more restrictive, stating, “Due to the nature of consortium or digital collections, content on Sunflower eLibrary (Libby) cannot be reconsidered if it was purchased and shared by another library. Content on other online resources may also be ineligible for reconsideration depending on how the library subscribes to content on each online resource.”  As a result, patrons are denied any meaningful reconsideration process for all the materials that libraries make available through consortium access unless their local library owns the title.

There is no statutory, constitutional, or delegated authority under Kansas law that permits a library consortium to unconditionally bar reconsideration of shared digital materials, redirect reconsideration exclusively to an “owning” library, or preempt local library board authority under K.S.A. 12-1225 Powers and duties of board. This restriction contradicts the Kansas State Library Handbook (2020, pp. 18–19)) requirement that public libraries maintain a clear, accessible method for complaints about any material available via its catalog or credentials—no exceptions for shared digital items—and exceeds the consortium’s statutory authority.

Because participation in Sunflower eLibrary is conditioned on compliance with this policy, its adoption produces a uniform statewide practice among member libraries that essentially prevents patron reconsideration of shared digital content.

Enter the Consortium...

The Kansas Public Library Handbook lists no barriers to the formal reconsideration process. The process applies whenever a member of the public objects to any material available in the catalog. A library makes material "available" when it appears in the catalog, and can be borrowed, downloaded, or viewed with library credentials, or are presented as part of the collection. Kansas law attaches full reconsideration obligations at that point, with no statutory exemptions for vendors, consortium membership, awards, nor licensing terms. The Handbook makes no exceptions for digital materials, shared/consortium-purchased materials, nor ownership by another library.

The Sunflower eLibrary is not an independent legal entity but a voluntary cooperative consortium formed by member public libraries to share digital resources via OverDrive. It operates through administrative agreements coordinated by regional library systems. A consortium derives its authority solely from its member libraries and cannot acquire oversight authority nor override the legal requirements for compliance of those individual public institutions.

The consortium does not have the authority to ban reconsideration of library materials in any format, regardless of ownership, in conflict with the reconsideration policies and statutory requirements of participating library boards.

Libraries must break the law to stay in good standing as Sunflower eLibrary members...

By conditioning participation in the Sunflower eLibrary consortium on compliance with the terms that exceed its statutory authority, (eliminate meaningful reconsideration and skip over local library board governance), the consortium violates the State ultra vires doctrine. In Kansas, an act is ultra vires when a public body, board, or agency exercises power not affirmatively granted by statute and is therefore void and unenforceable.

No matter who writes the policy, Kansas law has the last word...

Kansas courts consistently hold that Kansas public institutions, including the State Library, public libraries, regional libraries, and by extension Sunflower eLibrary, possess enumerated powers only. Any guidance issued must implement or interpret only existing law and remain tied to express statutory authority.

Kansas law does not permit a public entity to require waiver of statutory protections or duties as a provision of voluntary participation in a public program. Participation and membership fees (paid with public funds) do not create new authority to restrict patron rights or bypass statutory due process. Neither vendor terms by private entities (i.e., publishers, book sellers) nor consortium policies can supersede public-law obligations. Such conditions are void and unenforceable because they are contrary to statute and public policy.

The consortium is exercising power it does not have, enforcing it through conditional participation, and requiring public institutions to act unlawfully to remain members.

Nice try, Kansas doesn't allow that...

The consortium policy that bans reconsideration of shared materials at the point of access through Sunflower eLibrary is ultra vires under Kansas law. Neither K.S.A.75-2547 et seq. (Regional LIbrary Systems), K.S.A. 12-1225, nor any other statute grants a regional library system authority to override or condition away the statutory and board-governed duties of member public libraries, rendering the policy void from the beginning.


Laundering the Accountability

This arrangement constitutes a public-private policy shell game, deliberately diffusing and obscuring accountability across multiple layers to evade statutory duties:

  • Local public library boards deflect reconsideration requests by pointing to the consortium's "rules" banning reconsideration of shared titles.
  • Sunflower eLibrary enforces the restrictive policy in up to 150 public libraries as a condition of participation and redirects local libraries to enforce intentionally difficult and burdensome procedures to discourage reconsideration directly from owning libraries as the only other option.
  • Upstream guidance from the publicly funded Handbook lends aspirational cover from a private lobby group (ALA) with no statutory authority in Kansas.
  • The result: responsibility is shuffled so no single entity bears practical liability, while patrons face prohibitive obstacles, in violation of the intent of the governmental guidance in the Handbook.

A public entity may not do indirectly what it lacks authority to do directly.

As an extension of Kansas public library systems established under K.S.A. 75-2547 et seq., and as a recipient and administrator of public funds, the Sunflower eLibrary consortium must operate within the bounds of Kansas law governing public libraries and regional systems. While the Kansas Public Library Handbook does not itself carry the force of law, it constitutes official, publicly funded government guidance intended to implement statutory duties.

Each member library remains a governmental entity subject to Kansas law, and participation in the consortium represents an extension of local library operations, not the creation of separate governing authorities. Neither the consortium nor its member libraries may rely on consent, contractual agreement, or voluntary participation to shield unlawful policies from enforcement or corrective action.

Nothing in the Public Library Handbook or Kansas statute authorizes a director to refuse a request or reroute it solely because another library bought the title. A public library does not have the lawful authority to defer responsibility or duties once their patrons are granted access to the materials.

Direct conflict with Definitions in the Kansas Harmful to Minors Law...

The Kansas Harmful to Minors law (K.S.A. 21-6402) prohibits knowingly distributing, presenting, or making available material that is harmful to minors (appeals to prurient interest of minors, patently offensive s*xual conduct descriptions, and lack of serious value). The consortium policy barring reconsideration of shared digital materials directly conflicts with the law by preventing or redirecting evaluation of material made available to minors. While K.S.A. 21-6402 applies to commercial establishments (may not cover public libraries), K.S.A. 21-6401 (Promoting Obscenity to Minors) broadly prohibits promoting obscenity to minors, using overlapping definitions in the 'harmful to minors' language to how 'obscene' is defined in K.S.A. 21-6401. This statute reinforces the legislative requirement to shield children from sexually explicit books, and does include public entities like libraries.  Any public library policy that allows children to access sexually explicit materials is in conflict with the coordinated definitions K.S.A. 21-6402 Harmful to Minors and K.S.A. 21-6401 Promotion of Obscenity to Minors and undermines the statutory librarian defense, preempts local board authority under K.S.A. 12-1225, exceeds regional system powers under K.S.A. 75-2547 et seq., and is ultra vires, void, and unenforceable. The statute requires accountability at the point of access, being at the library serving the minor. There are no exceptions in the law for shared digital materials.

Your kid gets to see it whether you like it or not...

The policy “Shared digital materials cannot be reconsidered” is a categorical elimination of review for the largest and fastest growing category of access. The practical effect is no local review of shared digital content, no local ability to restrict, reclassify, or remove content for minors, no governing board oversight where the minor lives, and effectively no reconsideration process at all for most titles offered by all of the libraries in the consortium across the entire state.  Kansas law gives no authority to the consortium to prevent reconsideration of any library materials.

The Sunflower eLibrary policy ensures no reconsideration body has authority over shared digital materials and is incompatible with the statutory design. By creating an unauthorized digital exemption and refusing statutory review at the point of access, whether that be on a library computer or on a personal device accessing the library patron account, the consortium policy flies in the face of the legislative intent. 

Sunflower says the Library Board of Directors cannot object, either...

The law holds the Board of Directors responsible, not the Library Director who is following the Board approved policy, so the consortium policy undermines the statutory librarian defense under K.S.A. 21-6401(g)(2) (Safe Harbor) by cutting out board-approved governance. The consortium policy is used by local libraries to shield digital materials offered to minors from reconsideration, but it in effect increases the risks to the Directors by removing the protection of this law.

By stripping local boards of authority to reconsider shared digital materials, the consortium rule exceeds delegated authority and conflicts with K.S.A. 12-1225’s (Library Board Powers and Duties) allocation of governance responsibility. A consortium policy cannot lawfully remove board oversight without express statutory delegation.

The policy surpasses the service-coordination limits of K.S.A. 75-2547 et seq. (Regional Library Systems Scope of Authority) which does not authorize Sunflower eLibrary to preempt locally accessed content governance, nor elimination of local complaint procedures, nor allows the library to use the policy of a consortium to override the guidance of the Handbook regarding reconsideration (which allows no exceptions for shared digital materials).

The Consortium operates outside the law...

No statute authorizes denial of reconsideration based on ownership, licensing structure, or consortium participation. A library consortium that bans reconsideration of materials without statutory authority is ultra vires (Latin for “beyond powers”). A public library board that adopts a policy that contradicts state law is ultra vires and cannot defer responsibility to the consortium who is already in violation of statute by banning reconsideration of shared library materials at the point of access.

The Sunflower eLibrary policy—as applied—is ultra vires, void, and unenforceable. It conflicts with statutory reconsideration requirements, protections for minors, and local board governance. The redirection defense creates an intentional barrier that effectively nullifies patron rights for shared digital content.

Local boards remain ultimately responsible and cannot lawfully defer to the consortium or rely on private ALA guidance. Patrons retain the right to request reconsideration directly from their local board for any accessible material.

Almost half of the public libraries in Kansas have adopted the Sunflower eLibrary policy as an active defense for refusing reconsideration requests and all patrons who use those libraries have been misled by these policies to accept that they have no right to request reconsideration of any of those shared materials, all in violation of Kansas law.

Kansas law—not consortium policies, not private lobby guidance—has the final word. Kansas statutes do not bend to voluntary agreements that strip away statutory rights and parental oversight. Communities have the right and responsibility to protect children, and no shell game of deflection and misdirection can lawfully deny that role.  


Resources include: 

Statutes (Kansas Statutes Annotated)


Official Government Guidance & Regional Library Sources

See also:

URL of this page: 




Monday, November 24, 2025

Informing Iowa Legislators About American Library Association

Critique of the American Library Association's Influence on Libraries and Legislation

The American Library Association (ALA), headquartered in Chicago, Illinois, has pursued policies for over 60 years that critics argue undermine parental rights in favor of unrestricted access to materials for children. Central to this is the ALA's "Library Bill of Rights," adopted in 1939 and amended multiple times (most recently in 2019), which prohibits denying library use based on age, among other factors. This policy effectively treats age-based restrictions as discrimination, allowing children access to any materials without barriers. For historical context, see Rita Koganzon's analysis of 1970s school book controversies, which highlights how such disputes empowered parents to challenge perceived indoctrination in educational content.

This approach has accelerated the inclusion of s[*]xually explicit or educationally unsuitable materials in public and school libraries, prompting increased parental challenges. In response, librarians—often aligned with ALA guidance—portray these complaints as burdensome, despite the ALA's role in creating the underlying policy tensions.


ALA's Push to Codify the Library Bill of Rights into Law

To preempt parental challenges, the ALA has advocated for codifying its "Library Bill of Rights" into state laws, potentially overriding the U.S. Supreme Court's ruling in Board of Education v. Pico (1982). In Pico, a plurality opinion held that school boards cannot remove books from libraries solely due to ideological disapproval but may do so if materials are pervasively vulgar or educationally unsuitable. Books like Gender Queer have been removed from schools under this standard, which ALA opposes.

One court has ruled that the "Library Bill of Rights" holds no legal weight—it's merely aspirational and "means nothing" in a binding sense, as stated in Berry v. Yosemite Community College District (2019). Despite this, ALA has influenced over a third of state legislatures to consider such codification through initiatives like the "Right to Read Act" (also known as the "Freedom to Read Act"). As of November 2025, at least nine states have passed versions since 2023: California, Colorado, Delaware, Illinois, Maryland, Minnesota, New Jersey, Vermont, and Rhode Island. Additional states like Connecticut, Massachusetts, New Mexico, Pennsylvania, and others are considering or have advanced similar bills in 2025 sessions. For a detailed parent-focused critique, see the World Library Association's page on the Right to Read Act, which outlines how it limits parental petitions and grants librarians immunity from obscenity laws.

Part of ALA's push to get laws passed includes building in exemptions or affirmative defenses to obscenity crimes for librarians. That has been a long term ALA goal. See: Reisman, Judith A. and McAlister, Mary E. (2018) "Materials Deemed Harmful to Minors Are Welcomed into Classrooms and Libraries via Educational 'Obscenity Exemptions,'" Liberty University Law Review: Vol. 12: Iss. 3, Article 3. Available at https://digitalcommons.liberty.edu/lu_law_review/vol12/iss3/3:
Similarly, the American Library Association leans upon First Amendment protections against censorship to justify the obscenity exemption for libraries, often offering derisive remarks about parents' efforts to use "harmful to minors" statutes to remove inappropriate books.
ALA's strategy positions itself as both the source of the issue (unrestricted access) and the solution (legislative protections), aiming for nationwide adoption. In Iowa, from which ALA President Sam Helmick hails, this raises questions: Will Iowa follow suit and embed this Chicago-based organization's creed into state law?


Tactics for Influencing Legislators

ALA employs sophisticated methods to advance its agenda, often through affiliates like EveryLibrary, which provides training on "long-term inoculation"—building relationships with legislators to shape policy preemptively. This includes "getting to know your legislators" and "identifying and activating" supporters to prioritize children's unrestricted access. View the training here: https://tinyurl.com/IntellectualFreedomAndBooks. EveryLibrary's ties to ALA are detailed in analyses showing how it facilitates advocacy while maintaining a "crypto" (hidden) affiliation.

Another tactic involves "sustained messaging" to reframe s[*]xually explicit materials as essential for diversity, inclusion, and self-representation, downplaying concerns about appropriateness. This was revealed in training by ALA's former top lawyer, which Utah Senator Mike Lee highlighted in a 2025 Capitol Hill hearing on "banned books." Lee described it as "saying the quiet part out loud," accusing ALA of grooming and s[*]xualizing children to provide minors with explicit content while hiding it from parents. Watch the clip: https://www.c-span.org/video/standalone/?c5085234/user-clip-sen-lee-comments.



The "book ban" narrative has been debunked by the U.S. Department of Education, which dropped actions against parents after investigations. Critics trace this hoax back to ALA influence, used to mislead the public and maintain access to controversial materials.  Official U.S. Department of Education Press Release (January 24, 2025) announces dismissal of 11 complaints, rescission of guidance, and end to the "Biden's book ban hoax." https://www.ed.gov/about/news/press-release/us-department-of-education-ends-bidens-book-ban-hoax


ALA's "Unite Against Book Bans" and Legal Setbacks

In response to successful Pico-based removals of "Gender Queer," ALA launched "Unite Against Book Bans" to lobby for laws blocking parental complaints and First Amendment redress rights. Recent setbacks include Mahmoud v. Taylor (2025), where the Supreme Court affirmed parents' rights to opt children out of certain classroom content conflicting with religious beliefs. ALA has interpreted this narrowly, claiming it doesn't apply to libraries and warning against its misuse for censorship, but critics argue it's spreading misinformation to downplay parental opt-out options.

ALA's policies have real-world impacts, including harm to children. Detransitioner Maia Poet has publicly shared how a school librarian promoted trans ideology, leading to her binding her breasts and lasting physical damage, without parental knowledge. Watch her testimony, also shown below: https://x.com/thepeacepoet99/status/1890950617998217606. Another case involves a public library director reporting a child's death linked to ALA-recommended practices: https://safelibraries.blogspot.com/2013/11/ALAKillsBoy.html.


Deceptions and Hypocrisy

ALA often misleads on legal standards, insisting the "as a whole" test from Miller v. California (obscenity) applies over Pico's "pervasively vulgar" threshold, confusing discussions on school materials. It portrays challengers as extremists, ignoring polls showing most Americans oppose explicit books in schools. Tactics include faking "banned books" lists to mobilize communities (e.g., inflating LGBT book challenges until exposed), plagiarizing maps, and funding astroturf groups to overwhelm legislators with emails and turnout. ALA even trains librarians to evade open records laws by, among other things, using private channels like Signal.

Internally, ALA faces hypocrisy accusations. Trevor Dawes, a university librarian, criticized its shift to closed-door meetings, violating its own transparency policies and undermining advocacy for open government. As Dawes notes: "The irony is particularly sharp: an organization whose members fight daily battles against censorship... is now restricting access to its own decision-making processes."

ALA critiques rating systems by parents like BookLooks or Rated Books (https://www.ratedbooks.org/) while creating its own "Book Résumés," (https://bookresumes.uniteagainstbookbans.org/) which omit excerpts and emphasize awards, always deeming books suitable for all ages.  Compare the ratings for Gender Queer on Rated Books with Gender Queer on Book Résumés.


Another significant deception is the claim of an ongoing "culture war." After 60 years of effort by ALA to accelerate the inclusion of s[*]xually explicit or educationally unsuitable materials in public and school libraries, to the point where such material is essentially in every school library today, efforts to stop this are characterized by librarians as merely for political gain.  

For example, at the 5:39 mark of ALA's new documentary called "The Librarians," someone says, "Politicians are playing a very dangerous game when they try to make school libraries battlegrounds for their political war, because the only people that that is going to hurt are kids." See https://thelibrariansfilm.com/. So 60 years of effort by ALA cannot be countered by politicians because supposedly the kids are going to get hurt in a very dangerous game, all for politics.  It is a significant deception.


Implications for Iowa

Iowa legislators should scrutinize ALA's influence, given its president's local ties. Past Iowa issues include unfiltered library Internet leading to child molestation (exposed in 2011, prompting failed filtering legislation), s[*]x offenders in libraries (addressed in 2009 law), and misleading claims by directors like LaWanda Roudebush on filters. Recent writings highlight Iowa librarians supporting ALA's Marxist-leaning president https://safelibraries.blogspot.com/2024/12/list-of-librarians-who-agree-marxism-is.html and details on stopping indoctrination: https://safelibraries.blogspot.com/2023/01/details-on-stopping-indoctrination.html.

Should Iowa adopt laws from an organization that flouts its own standards? Legislators face ALA-orchestrated pressure—expect astroturf campaigns—but prioritizing parental rights and child safety aligns with constitutional precedents.

If more details are needed, let me know.



Endnotes

1. American Library Association, “Library Bill of Rights” (adopted 1939, latest revision 2019)  

2. Rita Koganzon, “There Is No Such Thing as a Banned Book: Censorship, Authority, and the School Book Controversies of the 1970s,” American Political Thought 12, no. 1 (January 2023): 1–26  

3. States that have passed “Right to Read Act” / “Freedom to Read Act” legislation (as of November 2025)
EveryLibrary Bill Tracking (includes Freedom to Read protections for libraries/librarians): https://www.everylibrary.org/billtracking Note: This page tracks positive "right to read" bills alongside other library legislation. For recent examples, see Delaware's passage announced November 10, 2025: https://www.alsc.ala.org/blog/2025/11/go-delaware-another-state-steps-up-for-the-freedom-to-read/ (confirms Delaware as a new adopter, building on prior states like California, Illinois, and others). ALA's adverse legislation page also contextualizes supportive bills: https://www.ala.org/advocacy/adverse-legislation-states.

4. World Library Association – Detailed parent-oriented critique of the Right to Read Act  

5. Board of Education v. Pico (1982) – key Supreme Court case on school library book removal  

6. Berry v. Yosemite Community College District (2019) – court rules ALA’s Library Bill of Rights “means nothing” legally  

7. EveryLibrary / ALA training on “long-term inoculation” and building relationships with legislators  

8. Documentation of EveryLibrary as a “crypto” ALA affiliate and its “long-term inoculation” tactics  

9. Senator Mike Lee (Utah) – “saying the quiet part out loud” clip from 2025 Capitol Hill hearing on banned books  


10. Mahmoud v. Taylor (2025) – Supreme Court affirms parental opt-out rights; ALA’s response  

11. Maia Poet (detransitioner) testimony on harm caused by school librarian promoting trans ideology  

12. Public library director reports child death linked to ALA-recommended practices  

13. Trevor A. Dawes, “ALA’s Closed-Door Dilemma: When Governance Reform Conflicts with Organizational Values” (July 19, 2025)  

14. Guide for parents/legislators on obscenity law, Pico vs. Miller standards, and stopping indoctrination  

15. Harris Poll and other surveys showing majority opposition to s[*]xually explicit books in schools  

16. Exposure of ALA faking “banned books” lists to inflate LGBT challenges (2011)  

17. ALA caught plagiarizing a student’s “Censorship Map”  

18. ALA astroturfing: creating and funding local “grassroots” groups to pressure legislators  
    Bribes/incentives detail: https://safelibraries.blogspot.com/2024/03/ala-details-bribes.html Recently in Alabama, four separate ALA-created groups failed to stop the library board from voting against ALA:
Meanwhile, the board finalized a restriction on transgender books for children and teens. Once approved by legislative services, the code states that “any library material regarding transgender procedures, gender ideology or the concept of more than two genders” must be weeded out of library circulation or moved to the adult section. See: https://www.al.com/news/2025/11/alabama-library-board-finalizes-transgender-book-restrictions-delays-fairhope-funding.html

19. ALA’s deleted article on “sneakily” pushing Drag Queen Story Hour into conservative towns (archived)  

20. Librarians trained to evade open-records/FOIA laws using private channels (Signal, Slack, etc.)  

21. Iowa-specific posts referenced and other Iowa posts covered by SafeLibraries
    - Iowa librarians supporting Marxist ALA president: https://safelibraries.blogspot.com/2024/12/list-of-librarians-who-agree-marxism-is.html  
    - Child molestation in Iowa library linked to unfiltered porn (2011): https://safelibraries.blogspot.com/2011/07/porn-and-sex-abuse-in-our-public.html  "Consider the case of a child molested in a public library bathroom and no one knew that it was the result of p[*]rn viewing!  I was the person who exposed the truth.  As a result of my work, the Iowa state legislature attempted to pass state library computer filtering legislation.  It would not have happened but for my involvement in that community."
    - Davenport Public Library director misleads on filters (2010): https://safelibraries.blogspot.com/2010/04/revive-iowa-internet-filtering-law-for.html
    - Unimpeded child p[*]rn viewing in the Council Bluffs Public Library" (2009): https://safelibraries.blogspot.com/2009/07/terminal-cancer-in-council-bluffs.html
    - Iowa nixes s[*]x offenders from libraries (2009): https://safelibraries.blogspot.com/2009/05/iowa-nixes-sex-offenders-from-libraries.html
    - ALA ruse keeping p[*]rn in Council Bluffs (2008): https://safelibraries.blogspot.com/2008/08/ala-ruse-keeping-porn-widely-available.html
    - Burlington library director misleads on Internet filters (2008): https://safelibraries.blogspot.com/2008/04/burlington-ia-library-director-misleads.html
    - Media needs to wake up to library crime (2008): https://safelibraries.blogspot.com/2008/04/media-wake-up-to-library-crime-source.html
   

Monday, July 21, 2025

After Mahmoud, ALA Bluffs to Set ALA's Library Bill of Rights as State Law; Massachusetts H3591, H3594, H3598, and H2328

Regarding Bill H.3591, Bill H.3594, Bill H.3598, and Bill H.2328
Submitted by Dan Kleinman, Executive Director, World Library Association

Dear Joint Committee on Tourism, Arts and Cultural Development,

Why are we here?  We are here because the American Library Association [ALA] based in Chicago, Illinois, has been working for over half a century to s3xualize and indoctrinate America’s children via the medium of its so-called "Library Bill of Rights" that half a century ago made it "age" discrimination to keep anything from children. See, Koganzon, Rita. “There Is No Such Thing as a Banned Book: Censorship, Authority, and the School Book Controversies of the 1970s.” American Political Thought 12, no. 1 (January 2023): 1–26. https://doi.org/10.1086/723442 (archived: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1PZ2pDhKhRAtlNgR7gek_1kcdGFoskHpa/view?usp=sharing). This has driven the faster and faster pushing of inappropriate material into public libraries and school libraries, causing parents to challenge such material in greater numbers and frequency.  Then the librarians complain about all the parents complaining, after ALA first caused the problem.  

So in an effort to stop all parents anywhere from challenging materials, ALA had to come up with something.  ALA wants its "Library Bill of Rights" to be codified into state law nationwide, thereby effectively overruling the US Supreme Court case of Board of Education v. Pico ( https://reason.com/volokh/2022/08/09/removal-of-books-with-lascivious-content-from-school-libraries-likely-not-unconstitutional/ ) and blocking parents from even filing complaints in the first place.  This Chicago organization called ALA has over a third of state legislatures considering whether to codify this "Library Bill of Rights" that one court ruled means "nothing" ( https://safelibraries.blogspot.com/2019/08/library-bill-of-rights-means-nothing.html ).

Now such legislation to overrule the Pico case and the First Amendment comes to Massachusetts in the form of Bill H.3591, Bill H.3594, Bill H.3598, and Bill H.2328.  So that’s why we are here.  The question is, will Massachusetts legislators pass into law what a private organization from Illinois has put forth to try to turn its nothing "Library Bill of Rights" into Massachusetts law?

ALA caused the problem and provides the solution: legislation to essentially codify its own "Library Bill of Rights" nationwide.  Such legislation has passed in a few states but ALA wants more.  Now it wants Massachusetts.  And in a big way.  American Library Association is to be the Massachusetts standard setter in Bill H.3591, Bill H.3594, Bill H.3598, and Bill H.2328.

    Bill H.3591 requires: "E. Adopt the American Library Association's Library Bill of Rights ...."

    Bill H.3594 requires: "Section 82B. The school committee or other administrative authority of a school library shall establish a written policy...."  "The written policy shall be in accordance with standards adopted by the American library association."  "The policy shall provide that if a material is the subject of a complaint or attempt to remove or restrict its use, it shall remain on the shelves pending a vote of the school committee during the process for responding to challenges...."  The latter is a direct violation of Board of Education v. Pico that allows for immediate removal.  The concept of ignoring Pico and leaving the book on the shelf until a long process has completed is the sole idea of Chicago's American Library Association.  "SECTION 11. Section 15 of said chapter 78, as so appearing, is hereby amended by adding ... : (iv) the process to respond to book challenges, in accordance with the standards adopted by the American Library Association...." "The board of library commissioners ... shall make resources available ... in accordance with the standards adopted by the American Library Association."

    Bill H.3598 requires: "Section 82B. The school committee or other administrative authority of a school library shall establish a written policy ... in accordance with standards adopted by the American library association."  "SECTION 11. Section 15 of said chapter 78, as so appearing, is hereby amended by adding ... (iv) the process to respond to book challenges, in accordance with the standards adopted by the American Library Association...."  "The board of library commissioners ... shall make resources available ... in accordance with the standards adopted by the American Library Association."  "SECTION 12. Section 19B of said chapter 78, as so appearing, is hereby amended by ... inserting ... (8) adopt and make public a written policy for the selection and use of library materials and facilities in accordance with section 33; provided, that such policy shall incorporate the American Library Association’s Library Bill of Rights...."

    Bill S.2328 requires: "SECTION 3. Said chapter 71 is hereby further amended by inserting ... Section 82B. The school committee or other administrative authority of a school library shall establish a written policy ... in accordance with standards adopted by the American library association."  "SECTION 11. Section 15 of said chapter 78, as so appearing, is hereby amended by adding ... (iv) the process to respond to book challenges, in accordance with the standards adopted by the American Library Association and as required by section 19B.  The board of library commissioners ... shall make resources available ... in accordance with the standards adopted by the American Library Association."  "SECTION 12. Section 19B of said chapter 78, as so appearing, is hereby amended by ... inserting ... 8) adopt and make public a written policy ... that such policy shall incorporate the American Library Association’s Library Bill of Rights...."  "SECTION 14. Said section 33 of said chapter 78, as so appearing, is hereby further amended by inserting after the word 'Association', in line 6, the following words:- including, but not limited to, its Library Bill of Rights...." 

Can you all see how Chicago ALA's "Library Bill of Rights" aspirational creed is set to set the standard for Massachusetts law?

I’m Dan Kleinman, the Executive Director of the World Library Association [WLA] based in Bee Cave, Texas.  WLA is the new alternative to ALA.  For opposing a similar law in New Jersey, also promoted by that same Illinois private organization, NJ state senator Andrew Zwicker called me a "meddling minority."  So the World Library Association from Texas is a meddling minority, but the American Library Association from Illinois that essentially wrote the Massachusetts legislation and that of all other states is not.  The meddling being done is by the Illinois organization trying to mislead Massachusetts legislators into violating Pico with false claims of First Amendment rights, intellectual freedom, the "right to read," and the right for children to "see themselves" in the book they are reading.

This effort by ALA has encompassed about 22 states so far, almost half of the United States.  The details of exactly how and why it is so bad, along with what states are considering codifying the Illinois organization’s aspirational creed that means nothing, is written at the Right to Read Act page on World Library Association here: https://worldlibraryassociation.org/right-to-read-act/  I feel there is no better guide on the topic from the point of view of parents.

To be very clear, ALA has worked for a very long time to mislead legislators nationwide into doing what the Illinois private organization wants, namely, ensure children get access to all materials at any age per the "Library Bill of Rights."  As you consider this legislation, ask yourselves if you wish to be misled and to discard US Supreme Court precedent designed to protect children from harm, and to discard the First Amendment and your own state constitution.  

And there it is, the Massachusetts Constitution, Article XIX (a real Article XIX, not the fake ones in the "Library Bill of Rights"), "The people have a right, in an orderly and peaceable manner, to assemble to consult upon the common good; give instructions to their representatives, and to request of the legislative body, by the way of addresses, petitions, or remonstrances, redress of the wrongs done them, and of the grievances they suffer."  People have the right to seek redress of the government.  Bill H.3591, Bill H.3594, Bill H.3598, and Bill H.2328 basically remove that right.  No one will be able to seek redress of the government for inappropriate books because Bill H.3591, Bill H.3594, Bill H.3598, and Bill H.2328 enjoin that via the application of legislation written in Chicago, Illinois, by an organization tired of losing past efforts to keep kids reading inappropriate materials in school libraries. 

The right of redress is so important in Massachusetts that there is a second article in the constitution about it, and solely about the right of redress.  Article XXII: "The legislature ought frequently to assemble for the redress of grievances, for correcting, strengthening and confirming the laws, and for making new laws, as the common good may require."

Does a law making available to children books about butt plugs and how to upload pictures to Grindr to meet a man for a night and blocking people from seeking redress serve "the common good"?  How many legislators have even done either?  Why might they create that right for school children if Bill H.3591, Bill H.3594, Bill H.3598, and Bill H.2328 pass into law?

Will Massachusetts legislators toss away Article XIX and Article XXII of their own state's constitution so blithely just to pass a law written by a Chicago organization working for 60 years to harm school children with inappropriate material that a court has already ruled its "Library Bill of Rights" means "nothing" and is just an organizational creed?

So if the four pieces of legislation crowning American Library Association as king pass into law, they will immediately violate the Massachusetts Constitution because parents will lose the right to seek redress without new, stringent preconditions from school and library boards whose hands are now tied by the law.  This is why people don’t want a private organization from Illinois writing any laws for Massachusetts.  ALA simply doesn’t give a whit about the Massachusetts Constitution, nor anything or anyone else for that matter.

One way ALA plans to manipulate legislators is with "long-term inoculation."  This is in training from EveryLibrary, a crypto ALA affiliate.  As part of long-term inoculation, ALA (via EveryLibrary) specifically states, "Get to know your legislators and local leaders," in the context of "identifying and activating others who care."  Have any Massachusetts legislators been "identified and activated" to "care" about ensuring children have unlimited access to anything whatsoever?  Have any librarians or library associations gotten to "know their legislators"?  See this for yourselves here: https://tinyurl.com/IntellectualFreedomAndBooks. And the crypto nature of EveryLibrary being a part of American Library Association is detailed here, as well as details on its "long-term inoculation": https://safelibraries.blogspot.com/2023/06/library-boards-trained-to-lie-by-ala.html

A second way ALA plans to manipulate legislators is via training ALA’s top lawyer gave to librarians, that before legislation is written, because that’s the goal they are after, before legislation is written, there needs to be "sustained messaging" that takes away the idea that certain materials are s-xually inappropriate for children and "reframes" the issue as one of diversity, inclusion, and the right for kids to "see themselves" in the materials they are provided.  This statement was surfaced and reported by me, after which Utah Senator Mike Lee discussed it at a recent "Banned Books" hearing on Capitol Hill.  He played the recording, then afterwards said ALA’s lawyer was "saying the quiet part out loud," that ALA is gr—ming and s-xualizing children.  His words.  As Utah Senator Mike Lee put it, “the goal is to s-xualize children, to provide minors with s-xually explicit material, and then hide this content from the parents.”  Watch Senate Mike Lee display then discuss this video World Library Association surfaced and listen to his discussion of the issues regarding the contents of supposed "banned books": https://www.c-span.org/video/standalone/?c5085234/user-clip-sen-lee-comments

And remember, the "book ban" hoax has been exposed by the United States Department of Education and it has dropped all of its actions against parents.  I proved years ago it was ALA that caused US Dept of Ed to promulgate the "book ban" hoax in the first place ( https://safelibraries.blogspot.com/2023/06/library-boards-trained-to-lie-by-ala.html ).  The hoax is over.  Now Bill H.3591, Bill H.3594, Bill H.3598, and Bill H.2328 is no longer needed.

So ALA has decades ago made it age discrimination to keep kids from materials.  The Pico case allows for the removal of inappropriate material; books like Gender Queer have been successfully removed from many schools under the Pico case, and ALA couldn’t stand for that.  Result?  It created "Unite Against Book Bans," one of the goals of which was to get legislation passed nationwide that would prevent parents from applying the Pico case and prevent parents from exercising their First Amendment and state constitutional rights to seek redress of the government from governmental actions.  And here you are in Massachusetts discussing this very legislation that has been the subject of "long-term inoculation" and "sustained messaging" that essentially "reframes" known inappropriate material as diversity, equity, and inclusion.

Along comes Bill H.3591, Bill H.3594, Bill H.3598, and Bill H.2328. Compare them with the "Library Bill of Rights" that the Berry v. Yosemite Community College District court case ruled means "nothing" ( https://safelibraries.blogspot.com/2019/08/library-bill-of-rights-means-nothing.html ).

American Library Association diktat has a trail of child victims, like Maia Poet who exposed how she was directly harmed by a school librarian predator.  Watch: https://x.com/thepeacepoet99/status/1890950617998217606?s=61


Not only does Bill H.3591 eliminate the US Supreme Court Pico case, it also eliminates the First Amendment’s and Massachusetts Constitution’s grant of the right of redress.  If the school board is constrained by law from removing Gender Queer and similar books, then parents' rights to seek redress of the government are eliminated, gone, or an unconstitutionally huge burden is placed on them and no book will ever be removed, no matter how inappropriate.  This is the goal of ALA.  Under the new legislation, there is no longer a right to ask a school board to remove a book from the school, or the right is so limited that nothing will ever be removed.  Never.  So those rights are gone.  The new legislation takes those rights away.  Under the wording of Bill H.3591, there is not a single book in the library now or ever that may be challenged by a parent and removed by a school board.  This is the goal of the Illinois-based private organization called ALA.

ALA recently lost a big case in Mahmoud v. Taylor.  Parents can now opt out of what ALA is pushing.  The US Supreme Court allows parents to opt out, but Massachusetts legislators want to make ALA legislation into law via Bill H.3591, Bill H.3594, Bill H.3598, and Bill H.2328?

Look at the Massachusetts Association of School Committees [MASC] in what it said about the Mahmoud case.  https://www.masc.org/scotus-decision-in-mahmoud-v-taylor-considerations-for-district-policy/  It says:

"This case has been viewed as an attack on the LGBTQ+ community and a direct challenge to the fundamental responsibilities of local school committees and their districts. MASC will be examining to what extent this decision requires revisions to our current policy recommendations. Crafting an appropriate policy that will protect districts, and avoid unwelcomed results when applied, is challenging given that these cases are so fact specific and the latest decision provides minimal guidance." 

Look how hard MASC will be working to craft a proper policy in light of the Mahmoud decision to "protect districts, and avoid unwelcomed results when applied."  One policy "is challenging" and "these cases are so fact specific and the latest decision provides minimal guidance."   Yet Massachusetts legislators are ready to pass  Bill H.3591, Bill H.3594, Bill H.3598, and Bill H.2328 just on the trust of the American Library Association and its claimed and assumed adherence to and trend setting on "intellectual freedom"?

Let's be very clear, ALA being the trusted expert on intellectual freedom is illusory.  It doesn't even hold its own organization to the same standard.  See, "ALA’s Closed-Door Dilemma: When Governance Reform Conflicts with Organizational Values," by Trevor A. Dawes, Vice Provost for Libraries and Museums and May Morris University Librarian at the University of Delaware, https://trevordawes.wordpress.com/2025/07/19/ala-closed-door-meetings/

Quoting from Mr. Dawes: 

“The irony is particularly sharp: an organization whose members fight daily battles against censorship and for intellectual freedom is now restricting access to its own decision-making processes. When librarians advocate for open government meetings in their communities and resist attempts to conduct public business behind closed doors, how can their professional association justify adopting the very practices they oppose?”

“The library profession has long served as a bulwark against information gatekeeping. Librarians regularly advocate for government transparency, fight against secret deliberations by public bodies, and champion the public’s right to know. When ALA adopts the very practices its members oppose in other contexts, it undermines the moral authority of the profession’s advocacy efforts.”

“ALA’s credibility as an advocate for transparency and intellectual freedom depends partly on its willingness to embody these values in its own operations.”

“When librarians testify before city councils about the importance of open meetings or when they argue against secret deliberations in school board decisions, they draw moral authority from their profession’s commitment to these principles.”

“By retreating to closed-door deliberations without adequate justification or member input, ALA risks undermining not just its own democratic processes but the broader advocacy efforts of the library profession.”

“President Helmick and the ALA Executive Board have positioned this change as a technical adjustment to improve governance efficiency. However, the decision represents something far more significant: a choice between convenience and values, between operational ease and organizational integrity.”

“The question isn’t whether ALA can afford to maintain transparent governance practices. The question is whether it can afford not to.”

So, will Massachusetts constituents want their legislators to pass laws written by an outside organization that doesn't even live up to its own standards?  Won't enforce intellectual freedom within its own ranks?  This is the model to follow for Massachusetts?

I feel certain no parent wants any of this legislation to pass into law in Massachusetts, except those few who support that Illinois organization more than they support the law, community standards, and common sense, and except those few legislators who have been successfully co-opted by the "long-term inoculation" and the "sustained messaging" from the Illinois based private association of librarians and members of the local Massachusetts Library Association and the like.  To me, any legislator passing anything from American Library Association into law knowing the history of ALA and how it doesn't even stand up to its own standards will be complicit in the harm done by this legislation.  Any lawsuits brought under any of these laws if passed should include the legislators who knew ahead of time the harm being done but who chose to let the harm be done.

I further feel certain that should any of Bill H.3591, Bill H.3594, Bill H.3598, or Bill H.2328 pass into law, it will be challenged in court for First Amendment violations, among other things, then eventually struck down.  Will that out-of-state private organization fund all that legal footwork to protect Massachusetts's children?  Of course not.  You'll all be on your own.

Bill H.3591, Bill H.3594, Bill H.3598, and Bill H.2328 should never become law in the first place, and it should never be reworded because it is fatally flawed.  It comes from an out-of-state organization as part of an over half-century effort to "long-term inoculate" adults, especially legislators, so they drop their guard and allow children to be s3xualized and indoctrinated in schools and public libraries despite that being against the law, community standards, and common sense.  When the ALA lawyer says to "reframe" inappropriate material as DEI so kids can "see themselves," anyone can see for him or herself what’s going on, and Senator Lee’s words make it crystal clear.  And ALA won't even follow its own policies it expects you to pass into law.

Do not pass Chicago ALA’s Bill H.3591, Bill H.3594, Bill H.3598, or Bill H.2328 into law, else Massachusetts children will be directly harmed, and legislators could possibly be complicit in harming them.

Respectfully submitted,

/s/

Dan Kleinman, Executive Director
World Library Association

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