Miami Herald (Sunday)

PEN America and Penguin Random House sue Florida school district over book bans

- BY SOPHIA NGUYEN The Washington Post

The advocacy group PEN America, along with Penguin Random House, filed a lawsuit Wednesday against the school district and board in Escambia County in the Florida Panhandle, challengin­g decisions to restrict or remove books from school libraries.

The other plaintiffs include five authors of books for children and young adults, as well as two parents whose children attend schools in the district.

“Books are being ordered removed from libraries, or subject to restricted access within those libraries, based on an ideologica­lly driven campaign to push certain ideas out of schools,” the suit says.

The suit contends the book removals violate the First Amendment because they constitute illegal viewpoint discrimina­tion, as well as the 14th Amendment, “because the books being singled out for possible removal are disproport­ionately books by non-white and/ or LGBTQ authors.” The suit asks that the court restore the books to the shelves, and restrain the school district from removing or restrictin­g access to them.

Escambia County is “a vivid example of the troubling pattern that we see across the country,” said Suzanne Nossel, the chief executive of PEN America. She added, “The rights that are at stake are interlocki­ng: It’s children’s rights to read, parents’ right to make books accessible to their kids, authors’ rights to reach an audience, publishers’ rights to distribute their books.” In April, PEN America issued a report saying that, compared to the prior six months, book bans rose 28 percent during the 2022-2023 school year so far.

On Tuesday night, the Escambia County School Board voted 3-2 to fire superinten­dent Tim

Smith, citing staff shortages and book banning controvers­ies, among other issues. Pressure had been building for Smith to resign for a variety of reasons, public radio station WUWF reported in March, including frustratio­ns that he declined to unilateral­ly remove challenged books. At the board meeting, Smith said that he had followed district policy and the advice of the district’s general counsel. (Smith did not respond to an interview request.)

Reached for comment about the lawsuit and the board’s vote to terminate Smith’s contract, Cody Strother, the spokespers­on for Escambia County Public Schools, responded in an email: “Unfortunat­ely, we are unable to make comment on potential pending litigation.”

According to the lawsuit, starting in August 2022, a language arts teacher submitted lists of titles to be evaluated for removal due to content she deemed objectiona­ble. The filing alleges that the school board “constantly acceded” to these objections, even when they were “nakedly ideologica­l.” It also describes a change in district policy: Where books previously remained on library shelves during the review process, the district started automatica­lly restrictin­g access to many challenged titles. Students can only access them if a parent signs a form allowing them to enter the restricted section.

The lawsuit names 10 books that the School Board ordered to be removed from the shelves, overriding the recommenda­tions of a district review committee, including two written by plaintiffs in the suit, George M. Johnson and Kyle Lukoff. Among the books removed: “The Bluest Eye” by Toni Morrison, “The Perks of Being a Wallflower” by Stephen Chbosky and “Lucky” by Alice Sebold.

The district also allegedly restricted access to more than 100 other books, including “Slaughterh­ouse-Five,” by Kurt Vonnegut, and “Draw Me a Star,” by Eric Carle.

For many children, school libraries are their only means of accessing books, Nossel said. “Their families may not have the resources to go out to a bookstore or be ordering from Amazon. There are also kids for whom certain books might not be the parents’ choice, but might be something that a child wants to explore, and school has always been a place for that.”

Nihar Malaviya, chief executive at Penguin Random House, said the publisher joined the suit to strongly upport freedom of expression and to support authors, teachers, librarians and readers.

“The reason school libraries exist is so they can provide students easy, free access to any kind of content that they believe is interestin­g,” Malaviya said.

Claire von Schilling, director of corporate communicat­ions at Penguin Random House, said that it would take “legislativ­e and judicial action as needed” against the wave of book bans in communitie­s around the country.

To Johnson, who has seen their memoir “All Boys Aren’t Blue” removed from dozens of school districts, the lawsuit sends an important signal: “Anyone who thought that this would just be something that we would not fight against – I hope that this is a message to them that if this is the fight they want, then we are ready and prepared to go the distance with them.”

 ?? RICK BOWMER AP File ?? ‘The Bluest Eye’ by Toni Morrison is one of 10 books the Escambia County School Board has ordered removed from some school libraries. Penguin Random House and PEN America sued the board Wednesday.
RICK BOWMER AP File ‘The Bluest Eye’ by Toni Morrison is one of 10 books the Escambia County School Board has ordered removed from some school libraries. Penguin Random House and PEN America sued the board Wednesday.

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