Toronto Star

DeSantis inspires push to make book bans easier

Florida teachers union head says governor believes path to presidency lies in his vilificati­on of books

- ANDREW DEMILLO, ANTHONY IZAGUIRRE AND NICHOLAS RICCARDI

As he vies for the Republican presidenti­al nomination, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis is touting a series of measures he has pushed that have led to an upswing in banned or restricted books — not just in Florida schools but in an increasing number of other conservati­ve states.

Florida last year became the first in a wave of red states to enact laws making it easier for parents to challenge books in school libraries they deem to be pornograph­ic, deal improperly with racial issues or in other ways be inappropri­ate for students.

Books ensnared in the Florida regulation­s include explicit graphic novels about growing up LGBTQ, a children’s book based on a true story of two male penguins raising a chick in a zoo and “The Bluest Eye,” a novel by Nobel laureate Toni Morrison that includes descriptio­ns of child sexual abuse. Certain books covering racial themes also have been pulled from library shelves, sometimes temporaril­y, as school administra­tors try to assess what material is allowed under the new rules.

The day before DeSantis entered the presidenti­al race this week, a K-8 school in Miami-Dade County put the poem “The Hill We Climb” by Amanda Gorman on a restricted list for elementary students after a parent complained. The reasons for the objection to the poem, which Gorman read during U.S. President Joe Biden’s inaugurati­on, were not clear. The book version remains available to the middle school students, but Gorman criticized the decision to restrict it for younger grades, saying it robbed “children of the chance to find their voices in literature.”

While efforts to ban books or censor education material have come up sporadical­ly over the years, critics and supporters credit DeSantis with inspiring a new wave of legislatio­n in other conservati­ve states to regulate the books available in schools — and sometimes even in public libraries. The number of attempts to ban or restrict books across the U.S. last year was the highest in the 20 years the American Library Associatio­n has been tracking such efforts.

Every Library, a national political action committee, said it’s tracking at least 121 different proposals introduced in state legislatur­es this year targeting libraries, librarians, educators and access to materials. The group said 39 of those proposals would allow for criminal prosecutio­n.

“He really is blazing a trail,” said Tiffany Justice, the Florida-based co-founder of the conservati­ve parents group Moms for Liberty, whose members have filed challenges to books in libraries in several states. “What Ron DeSantis does that I think is effective is he uses all the levers of power to make longterm change happen.”

“Other governors,” Justice said, “are paying attention and following suit.”

In Arkansas, Republican Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders signed a law, set to take effect this summer, that could impose criminal penalties on librarians who knowingly provide “harmful” materials to minors. The law also would establish a process for the public to challenge materials and ask they be relocated to a section minors can’t access.

“It’s a perverse world when we’re talking about trying to criminaliz­e librarians,” said Nate Coulter, executive director of the Central Arkansas Library System in Little Rock, which is expected to sue over Arkansas’ law.

In Indiana, school libraries will be required by July 1 to publicly post a list of books they offer and provide a complaint process for community members under a law Republican Gov. Eric Holcomb signed this month. In Texas, a bill creating new standards for banning books from schools that the government considers too explicit has been sent to Republican Gov. Greg Abbott’s desk.

In Oklahoma, the state school board has approved new rules that prohibit “pornograph­ic materials and sexualized content” in school libraries and allow parents to submit formal complaints. The rules still must be approved by Republican Gov. Kevin Stitt. On Friday, Iowa Gov. Kim Reynolds signed a bill that includes removing all books depicting sex acts, except religious texts, from school libraries.

DeSantis insists books aren’t actually being “banned” in his state’s schools, preferring to call the forced removal of some books “curation choices that are consistent with state standards.”

“There has not been a single book banned in the state of Florida,” DeSantis said during a live appearance on Twitter Wednesday when he announced his campaign. He later said “our mantra in Florida is education, not indoctrina­tion.”

Librarians, free speech advocates and some parents and educators say the push is driven by a small, conservati­ve minority that happens to have outsized clout in Republican primaries, like the one DeSantis is now competing in.

“This is all part of his plan to run for president, and he believes his vilificati­on of books and what’s happening in public schools is his path to the presidency,” said Andrew Spar, president of the Florida Education Associatio­n, the state’s main teachers union.

Kasey Meehan, who directs the Freedom to Read program at the writers’ organizati­on PEN America, said that when books are targeted in Florida, they later become the subject of complaints filed by parents in other states.

“It’s something that continues to cause alarm for individual­s who are advocating for the freedom to read or for a diversity of knowledge, ideas and books to be available to students across the country,” Meehan said. PEN earlier this month sued the Escambia school district in Florida over the removal of 10 books, including “The Bluest Eye” and “Lucky,” a bestsellin­g memoir by Alice Sebold about her rape when she was 18 years old.

There have been challenges to books in schools for decades — “The Bluest Eye” has been targeted in various states for years. But the restrictio­ns accelerate­d in Florida after DeSantis signed bills last year barring discussion of sexual orientatio­n and gender identity in kindergart­en through third-grade classrooms, a ban that has since expanded through 12th grade. He also created a mechanism for parents to challenge books in school libraries and has targeted how race is taught in Florida schools.

Many teachers and districts complain that the laws’ standards are so vague they don’t know what books might place them in legal jeopardy.

Michael Woods, a special education teacher in Palm Beach County, said new rules compelling him to catalogue books in his classroom led him to empty a small library he set up where students could choose to read something that interested them. Now those volumes are stored in a box he’s stashed in his closet for fear of getting in trouble.

“That kind of positive connection to reading is no longer there,” he said.

The individual challenges to books might be coming from a fairly narrow segment of the population, according to PEN and the American Library Associatio­n, which track requests to pull books. The library associatio­n said 40 per cent of all requests challenged 100 or more books at a time.

Raegan Miller of Florida Freedom to Read, a group fighting the book restrictio­ns, said she has talked about education issues with fellow parents of all political persuasion­s for years and no one has ever complained about inappropri­ate material in their children’s schools. She contends the issue has been ginned up by a small group of conservati­ve activists.

“Do you really think we are all just happily dropping our kids off at Marxist indoctrina­tion and pornograph­y?” Miller said. “You only hear this stuff at school board meetings.”

‘‘ That kind of positive connection to reading is no longer there.

MICHAEL WOODS SPECIAL EDUCATION TEACHER IN PALM BEACH COUNTY

 ?? MARTA LAVANDIER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Protesters march on Wednesday against presidenti­al hopeful Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis’s measures against books.
MARTA LAVANDIER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Protesters march on Wednesday against presidenti­al hopeful Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis’s measures against books.
 ?? ?? Critics and supporters credit DeSantis with inspiring a new wave of legislatio­n in other conservati­ve states to regulate the books available in schools — and sometimes even in public libraries.
Critics and supporters credit DeSantis with inspiring a new wave of legislatio­n in other conservati­ve states to regulate the books available in schools — and sometimes even in public libraries.

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