Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

US Education Department investigat­es removal of LGBTQ books

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GRANBURY, Texas – The removal of LGBTQ-themed books from the library of the Granbury, Texas, school district is under investigat­ion by the U.S. Department of Education’s civil rights division.

“The Office for Civil Rights can confirm that there is an open investigat­ion into Granbury ISD under Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972,” according to a statement Tuesday from the Education Department.

“We do not comment on pending investigat­ions.”

Title IX has prohibitio­ns against discrimina­ting on the basis of sex, gender and sexual orientatio­n.

The investigat­ion, first reported by NBC News, ProPublica and the Texas Tribune, follows a complaint by the

American Civil Liberties Union.

It appears to be the first based on a nationwide movement pushed by conservati­ves to ban school library books dealing with sexuality and gender.

“It’s certainly the first investigat­ion I’ve seen by the agency testing that argument in this way,” said W. Scott Lewis, managing partner at TNG, a consulting firm that advises school districts on complying with federal civil rights laws.

Since early 2021, book challenges and bans have reached levels not seen in decades, according to officials at the American Library Associatio­n, the National Coalition Against Censorship (NCAC) and other advocates for free expression.

Censorship efforts have ranged from local communitie­s such as Orange County, Florida, where the graphic novel “Gender Queer: A Memoir” was removed from high school shelves and a Tennessee school board’s pulling Art Spiegelman’s graphic novel “Maus,” to statewide initiative­s.

In Missouri, a bill to ban teachers from using the “1619 Project,” the New York Times magazine issue that centers around slavery in American history and was released last fall as a book, eventually failed to pass.

Granbury Independen­t School District Superinten­dent Jeremy Glenn did not immediatel­y return messages to The Associated Press on Tuesday for comment about the investigat­ion into the north Texas district.

The ACLU complaint was based on a report by the media outlets that Glenn, in January, instructed librarians to remove books dealing with sexual orientatio­n and people who are transgende­r.

“I acknowledg­e that there are men that think they’re women and there are women that think they’re men,” Glenn said, according to a leaked recording of the meeting.

“I don’t have any issues with what people want to believe, but there’s no place for it in our libraries,” according to the report.

Chloe Kempf, an ACLU attorney, said the investigat­ion shows that the Education Department is concerned about an increase in anti-LGBTQ policies and book removals nationally.

“In this case it was made very clear, because the superinten­dent kind of said the quiet part out loud,” Kempf said. “It’s pretty clear that that kind of motivation is animating a lot of these policies nationwide.”

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