neadods: (disgusted)
[personal profile] neadods
Alerted by a link on Facebook, I did a little research on the saga of Sharon Cook and the Jessamine County Public Library (KY). The most in-depth local article is this one.

Highlights, with some commentary:

Sharon Cook worked for the Jessamine County Public Library for four years full-time. She is technically not a librarian, as she is not in possession of a library science degree. (This does not challenge her ability to work there - I've worked in libraries and I don't have an MLS - but it does send up the first red flag that she has not had any official training that would have covered legal issues like this one.)

A patron of the Jessamine County Public Library requested that the JCPL purchase a copy of the graphic novel, League of Extraordinary Gentlemen, Volume IV: The Black Dossier (aka LXG4, to spare me typing). It was duly ordered after whatever process the JCPL has in place for ordering books and shelved in the JCPL's Graphic Novel section, which is right next to the Young Adult section.

At some point "in fall of 2008" (LXG4 was published in November 2008, so this has got to be close to the time the thing showed up), Ms. Cook discovered that LXG4, like the rest of the LXG series, puts the graphic into graphic novel; it's loaded to the gills with sex and violence. (However, note that throughout the rest of this saga, she's never, ever, going to mention the violence. NEVER. It's apparently just peachy if kids read graphic violence, just not the evil sex!) Legally, creator Alan Moore has walked up to the line but not over it; LXG has never been ruled pornographic. (Judge for yourself: images are up on Flickr. NSFW! Do not open at the office!) Cook's main concern was that Kentucky law prohibits distribution of pornographic material to a child and they are concerned that the Jessamine library could be in felony violation.

Cook challenged the book, taking it off the shelves for months. The challenge was researched, denied, and LXG4 went back on the shelves.

Hilariously (NOT) although Cook is on record saying that adults should have free access to LXG4, "I'm an adult. I do not want you telling me what I can read," she says adamantly when you ask, the next suggested step was defacing it so that it couldn't possibly fall into the wrong reader's hands: "someone suggested we spill a cup of tea on it. Instead I checked it out."

And so she did, renewing it over and over, keeping LXG4 readable... but unread because nobody could get to it.

Until September 21, 2009, when a patron put a hold on it, which denied Cook's ability to keep renewing it herself.

Using her employee privileges, Cook looked up the particulars of the person placing the request and discovered that it was an 11-year-old girl. For the rest of the story Cook and her supporters are going to say that they are nobly protecting children from smut, so I'm going to repeat the REAL crux of this in bold: Using her library employee privileges, Cook looked up the personal information of the person placing the hold on the book and judged for herself without reference to the requester or the requester's family that it was problematic that this patron have access to this book.

September 22, 2009: Cook discusses the problem with friends at JCPL. Cook and Beth Boisvert make the mutual decision to drop the other patron's hold on the book so that Cook could continue to keep it out. Bold again, because this is damned important (and scary as hell): Cook and Boisvert mutually made the decision that Cook would retain indefinite physical possession of the library book and no one could check it out without having their details examined to the personal satisfaction of Cook.

September 23, 2009: The JCPL board fires Cook's and Boisvert's asses. Although the Board has not publicly discussed it, the local paper cites the Employee Manual's possible reasons to terminate employment include "theft or misuse of the Jessamine library's property, [and] breach of confidentiality information," both of which have very clearly happened. (Cook is now being fined a dime a day for continuing to keep the book out.)

October 21: The Board has a public meeting. Although stocked to the gills with people who want to weigh in on the subject (including Cook and Boisvert with a PowerPoint presentation), they are not allowed to speak because it isn't on the agenda. (FAIL, y'all! Cook is completely right that the community should set the community standards. However, I hope that someone somewhere in all of this remembers that the person who requested the library buy the book and the girl who wanted to read it are also community members. I'm just sayin'.) Earliest archived news reference comes out.

October 28: Digital Spy picks up the news.

November 4: The JCLP board sets standards for taking community comment and sets November 18 as the date for public commentary.

November 9-10: The blogosphere starts seriously catching up and covering this. Pro-censorship cites like Safe Libraries continue to hold the position that the former employees were doing their duty to protect children from smut. The ACLU and most commentors are pointing out that the library followed the system and rules already in place and that it's a parent's job to do any censoring deemed necessary.

Nobody is dwelling on the part that creeps me out the most: that Cook blithely looked up personal information. Weren't librarians going to jail a few years ago to keep the FBI from doing the same thing at their libraries?


ETA, because people keep asking: this is all public information in an unlocked post; if you want to link, you don't need my permission. Consider it given.

Date: 2009-11-11 08:50 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] severely-lupine.livejournal.com
Sounds like this all could have been avoided by having some kind of guidelines in place for what the library would and wouldn't buy, and then have someone actually do the research to find out what it was they were buying. It doesn't take that long to google something to find out if it's especially graphic or whatever. And if they want to label some things as only available to be checked out by adults, they could have an adult only section. People still have to pick things up in person, don't they? They could have seen she was 11 at that time, and then denied her the book if it went against some existing rule.

I agree, though, it was very uncool that they looked up personal info and took things into their own hands like that.

Date: 2009-11-11 11:35 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] neadods.livejournal.com
this all could have been avoided by having some kind of guidelines in place for what the library would and wouldn't buy

I've never known a library that didn't have those guidelines because there's never enough money to go around. Certainly they knew *exactly* what they had on their hands after the challenge and still decided that it merited space in the stacks with apparently no limitations. Whether you agree with their assessment (I don't, actually; I don't think a pre-teen should be reading LXG) they had already judged it by community merits and decided against Ms. Cook... who then went on to decide that her opinion overruled the Board's, so if she couldn't get her way by fair means, she'd try foul.

Date: 2009-11-11 11:39 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] severely-lupine.livejournal.com
I see. Yes, that does make it worse, then.

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