Current:Home > FinanceGeorgia Senate considers controls on school libraries and criminal charges for librarians -Quantum Capital Pro
Georgia Senate considers controls on school libraries and criminal charges for librarians
View
Date:2025-04-18 00:19:12
ATLANTA (AP) — A proposal that would require school libraries to notify parents of every book their child checks out was advanced by Georgia senators Tuesday, while a proposal to subject school librarians to criminal charges for distributing material containing obscenity waits in the wings.
The measures are part of a broad and continuing push by Republicans in many states to root out what they see as inappropriate material from schools and libraries, saying books and electronic materials are corrupting children.
Opponents say it’s a campaign of censorship meant to block children’s freedom to learn, while scaring teachers and librarians into silence for fear of losing their jobs or worse.
Georgia senators are also considering bills to force all public and school libraries in the state to cut ties with the American Library Association and to restrict school libraries’ ability to hold or acquire any works that depict sexual intercourse or sexual arousal. Neither measure has advanced out of committee ahead of a deadline next week for bills to pass out of their originating chamber.
The state Senate Education and Youth Committee voted 5-4 Tuesday to advance Senate Bill 365 to the full Senate for more debate. The proposal would let parents choose to receive an email any time their child obtains library material.
Sen. Greg Dolezal, the Republican from Cumming sponsoring the bill, said the Forsyth County school district, which has seen years of public fighting over what books students should be able to access, is already sending the emails. Other supporters said it was important to make sure to guarantee the rights of parents to raise their children as they want.
“I can’t understand the resistance of allowing parents to know what their children are seeing, doing and participating in while they’re at school, especially in a public school system,” said Senate Majority Leader Steve Gooch, a Dahlonega Republican.
Opponents said it’s important for students to be able to explore their interests and that the bill could violate students’ First Amendment rights.
“This is part of a larger national and Georgia trend to try to limit access,” said Nora Benavidez, a lawyer for PEN America, a group that supports free expression. “The logical endpoint of where this bill, as well as others, are taking us is for children to have less exposure to ideas.”
The proposal to make school librarians subject to criminal penalties if they violate state obscenity laws, Senate Bill 154, is even more controversial. Current law exempts public librarians, as well as those who work for public schools, colleges and universities, from penalties for distributing material that meets Georgia’s legal definition of “harmful to minors.”
Dolezal argues that school librarians should be subject to such penalties, although he offered an amendment Tuesday that makes librarians subject to penalties only if they “knowingly” give out such material. He argues that Georgia shouldn’t have a double standard where teachers can be prosecuted for obscenity while librarians down the hall cannot. He said his real aim is to drive any such material out of school libraries.
“The goal of this bill is to go upstream of the procurement process and to ensure that we are not allowing things in our libraries that cause anyone to ever have to face any sort of criminal prosecution,” Dolezal said.
Supporters of the bill hope to use the threat of criminal penalties to drive most sexual content out of libraries, even though much sexual content doesn’t meet Georgia’s obscenity standard.
“If you are exploiting children, you should be held accountable,” said Rhonda Thomas, a conservative education activist who helped form a new group, Georgians for Responsible Libraries. “You’re going to find that our students are falling behind in reading, math, science, but they’re definitely going to know how to masturbate.”
Robert “Buddy” Costley, of the Georgia Association of Educational Leaders, said the bill won’t solve the content problems that activists are agitated about.
“My fear is is that if we tell parents that this is the solution — your media specialists, the people that have been working for 200 years in our country to loan books, they’re the problem — we will have people pressing charges on media specialists instead of dealing with the real problem,” Costley said.
veryGood! (51897)
Related
- South Korea's acting president moves to reassure allies, calm markets after Yoon impeachment
- Massachusetts man charged after allegedly triggering explosion in his Chicago dorm
- Sneex: Neither a heel nor a sneaker, a new shoe that is dividing the people
- Boar's Head plant linked to listeria outbreak had bugs, mold and mildew, inspectors say
- Senate begins final push to expand Social Security benefits for millions of people
- Florida to execute man convicted of 1994 killing of college student in national forest
- Patriots to start quarterback Jacoby Brissett in Week 1 over first-round pick Drake Maye
- A second elephant calf in 2 weeks is born at a California zoo
- What were Tom Selleck's juicy final 'Blue Bloods' words in Reagan family
- Love Is Blind’s Stacy Snyder Comes Out as Queer
Ranking
- Former Danish minister for Greenland discusses Trump's push to acquire island
- Escaped killer who was on the run in Pennsylvania for 2 weeks faces plea hearing
- Bills' Josh Allen has funny reaction to being voted biggest trash-talking QB
- Pregnant Brittany Mahomes Details Lesson Learned After Back Injury
- Skins Game to make return to Thanksgiving week with a modern look
- Megan Thee Stallion Seemingly Confirms Romance With NBA Star Torrey Craig
- Jaguar tells owners of older I-Pace electric SUVs to park them outdoors due to battery fire risk
- After diversity pushback, some faculty feel left in dark at North Carolina’s flagship university
Recommendation
Bodycam footage shows high
Tell Me Lies Costars Grace Van Patten and Jackson White Confirm They’re Dating IRL
Free People's Labor Day Deals Under $50 - Effortlessly Cool Styles Starting at $9, Save up to 70%
Kentucky governor says lawmaker facing sexual harassment accusations should consider resigning
This was the average Social Security benefit in 2004, and here's what it is now
Police fatally shoot man on New Hampshire-Maine bridge along I-95; child, 8, found dead in vehicle
Loran Cole executed in murder of Florida State University student whose sister was raped
Watch as abandoned baby walrus gets second chance at life, round-the-clock care