Utah Library Assoc., LGBTQ+ advocacy groups criticize Orem City Council for ‘censorship’ of city library’s child-oriented Pride Month display

Orem Public Library. Photo: Google Streets

OREM, Utah, June 13, 2022 (Gephardt Daily) — The Utah Library Association has released a statement criticizing the alleged censorship of Orem Public Library’s Pride Month Display in the children’s section of the library.

The statement is signed not only by the ULA, but by representatives of Equality Utah, PFLAG Provo/Utah County, and the Utah LGBTQ+ Chamber of Commerce.

“The Utah Library Association became aware of a censorship issue at Orem Public Library through social media posts on May 29 which stated that the Orem City Council is forbidding the library from doing any displays in the children’s area related to Pride Month in Utah,” says the statement.

“The library director has indicated that in spite of the positive reception and thankful comments from parents last year, there will not be a Pride display in the Children’s wing this year, and instead there will be a single display in another location in the Library away from the children’s area.

“In the interest of serving all members of the community, library staff have wide latitude to create or not create displays, and to decide where to locate them. However, it is unacceptable, and a possible infringement of citizen’s first amendment rights, when politicians intervene and direct staff to eliminate planned displays or have them moved to a less frequented area of the library because those politicians do not like the topic or viewpoint being expressed.”

Moving a children’s book display to the adult section where materials may not be age appropriate for children “is problematic because it actually increases the likelihood of exposing children to material that is unsuitable for their age and makes the materials less accessible for families and harder to discover,” the statement says.

It is important to note that Pride Month is a nonpartisan observance and recognition of the fight by LGBTQ+ Americans to have their rights as American citizens fully recognized under the law.”

The Utah Library Association noted that again this year, Gov. Spencer Cox again issued a proclamation naming June as LGBTQ+ Pride month in Utah.

“The Proclamation says, ‘we must encourage relevant and vital conversations about what it means to love each other, understand our differences, and support our LGBTQ+ friends and family members.’ We stand with Governor Cox, and agree with his recent statement in conjunction with the Utah Pride Month Proclamation that ‘there should be nothing controversial about supporting a group of people in our state who have historically been marginalized.'”

The ULA noted that LGBTQIA+ youth “have a higher incidence of mental health issues and the highest youth suicide rate in the nation and (according to a CDC report) are four times as likely to attempt suicide than their peers. Additionally, research from the Trevor Project reports that LGBTQ+ youth are less likely to attempt suicide when they have access to LGBTQ+-affirming spaces and information, which means there are literally life and death implications at stake.

“In short, a display of curated, age-appropriate materials, in conjunction with Utah Pride Month, is an absolutely appropriate and important way for the library to serve Orem’s parents and youth, families, neighbors and friends.

“It must also be noted that in a state where hate crimes against LGBTQ+ residents nearly doubled last year, there are real and measurable health and safety impacts to be considered when Council members forbid age-appropriate displays of LGBTQ+ materials.”

The ULA statement says in trusts librarians “to fulfill the library’s mission, and to create collections and displays for all community members, without illegitimate, politicized pressure to restrict, impede, or limit community members’ access to age-appropriate information based on viewpoint.”

“We therefore request that Orem City Council members publicly and transparently address their actions in this matter, rescind any directives they have given to the library related to displays of materials, and commit to refraining from future directives that seek to restrict library staff from carrying out the mission of the library, or directives that seek to limit access to information for the residents of Orem.”

The letter was signed by:

  • Utah Library Association: Marissa Bischoff, President; Katie Wegner and Rikki Carter, Intellectual Freedom Co-Chairs; Peter Bromberg and Rebekah Cummings, Advocacy Co-Chairs
  • Equality Utah: Troy Williams, Executive Director
  • PFLAG: Provo/Utah County, Heather Kester, Vice-President
  • Utah LGBTQ+ Chamber of Commerce: Liz Pitts She|They, President & CEO

Gephardt Daily has reached out to all six Orem City Council members requesting reactions to the statement. We will publish any responses we receive.

3 COMMENTS

  1. Thank you for having the journalistic integrity to surround the term “censorship” with quotation marks and refer to it in this case as “alleged.” The city made a common sense decision in the interests of parents and their impressionable children. It’s about them, not any “alternative lifestyle” politicization.

    • Exactly! Does everyone else lose their rights during Pride Month? I think having one Pride display in a common area of the library is completely appropriate. Those people who want to show it to their children can do so easily, and those who don’t can avoid it. It’s not censorship to put it in a neutral place. For the advocacy groups to elude that not having a pride display in the children’s section is literally a matter of life and death is disingenuous, and sounds like they are grasping at straws to make this a political issue.

      • You made a good response, I am a retired RN and I have through the years taken care of very young children that “sounded” and acted/dressed how they “felt and were, who they were”. I have a nephew that I knew from a young age, he was “her”. It is the 2100 century, and people need to get information that is true. The Mormon church then and still now refuses to understand genetics.

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