The Freedom to Read Act was signed into law by the governor in April.
House Bill 785 passed by a largely party-line vote of 100-36. The cross-filed Senate Bill 738 passed by a vote of 36-10, showing overwhelming support for measures to combat right-wing book banning trends.
The bill sponsored by Del. Dana Jones (D-Anne Arundel) leads a “ decency agenda ” championed by House Speaker Adrienne A. Jones (D-Baltimore County), which is part of a national conversation on what books and other materials should be publicly available in schools and libraries.
The bill requires public schools and public libraries to adhere to state standards that books, library resources, and other materials are not to be removed from a catalogue “because of partisan, ideological, or religious disapproval.” The bill also prohibits “governing bodies of certain libraries from retaliating against employees performing their job duties consistent with the state standards…”
Materials that a person or group objects to being in a school will be reviewed but must remain available for students and school personnel until the review process has concluded.
Last year, Carroll County school officials pulled nearly six dozen books off shelves so the school board’s reconsideration committee could review the literature’s content.
This year, that county’s school board unanimously approved a policy stating that “aside from the instructional materials approved for instruction related to family life and human development or as otherwise approved by the superintendent, all other instructional materials…shall not contain sexually explicit content. Sexually explicit content is defined as unambiguously describing, depicting, showing, or writing about sex or sex acts in a detailed or graphic manner.”
The Freedom to Read Act requires school and county library officials to adopt state standards, which will be developed by the Maryland State Library Board.
If state standards aren’t followed by a county library, regional resource center or metropolitan cooperative service programs, then the state comptroller must withhold state money until compliance is certified by the state Library Board.
Maryland is one of the first states in the nation with major protections for access to books and materials in libraries and with penalties against governing bodies who don’t follow state standards.
Because the bill is designated as an emergency measure, it goes into effect immediately.
“I can’t wait to talk to all the librarians and the parents and the advocates who worked with me the last 12 months,” a smiling Dana Jones said after the House passed her bill. “They love literature. They love helping people find books that are right for them.”
.Watch this Video by Sidney Nauman, from Capitol News Service:
Maryland librarians praise passage of the Freedom to Read Act, which thwarts attempted book bans in the state.
Capital News Service is a student-powered news organization run by the University of Maryland Philip Merrill College of Journalism. For 26 years, they have provided deeply reported, award-winning coverage of issues of import to Marylanders.
Maryland Matters is a nonprofit and nonpartisan news site, reporting news about Maryland government and politics.
Title image: Pond at Pickering Creek Audubon Center, Talbot Co. Photo: Jan Plotczyk