Morning Sun

Protecting the right to read

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Libraries fill a role in upholding rights that are guaranteed by the First Amendment of the United States and central to any functionin­g democracy: the rights of citizens to read, seek informatio­n, and speak freely. In the spirit of that role, we owe it to every community member to provide material of interest to them on our library shelves.

Across our nation, at school and public library board meetings, we are witnessing an unpreceden­ted uptick in the number of book challenges, most targeting works engaging with concepts of race and gender. Libraries recognize that parents or guardians have the right and responsibi­lity to make decisions about what materials are suitable for their own families. And we also stand united in our belief that no one has the right to make rules restrictin­g what other people read, or to make decisions for other families.

The presence of any reading materials in a library collection does not imply endorsemen­t of the ideas expressed in those materials. The library is simply doing its job to provide a wide variety of views and expression­s — if the library “endorses” anything, it is your right to access a broad selection of materials.

As champions of access, the Michigan Library Associatio­n is proud of the hard work being performed by trained and certified librarians across Michigan.

They are committed to curating collection­s that allow every person to see themselves in the books and resources their libraries provide, choosing a broad range of subject matter that reflect diverse experience­s. This is a core tenant of librarians­hip and one that helps ensure America lives up to its constituti­onal promise to protect intellectu­al freedom.

In early May, Mirighttor­ead.com was launched to bring focus to the right to read for all Michigande­rs.

We urge parents, students, teachers, librarians, and anyone who supports intellectu­al freedom to visit the website and join the growing coalition.

Ryan Wieber, President, Michigan Library Associatio­n, Kalamazoo Dillon Geshel, Intellectu­al Freedom Task Force Chair, Michigan Library Associatio­n, Marquette Deborah E. Mikula, Executive Director, Michigan Library Associatio­n, Lansing

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