Luanne James, who's been leading Rutherford County Library System (RCLS) in Tennessee with passion and dedication, isn't backing down without a fight. The library board recently decided they want over 100 books featuring LGBTQ+ themes moved from where kids can find them easily, straight over with adult reads. James isn't having it, calling this "clear viewpoint discrimination." Her stance has sparked an important conversation about libraries' roles in defending intellectual freedom and keeping ideas accessible.
In a blunt letter addressed straight at board members, James didn't mince words: "I will not comply." Her message was loud and clear: "Public libraries are vital spaces where all kinds and colors and shapes and sizes and sounds and flavors and feels belong—like it or not. When you start moving books around based on personal opinions, you're sliding down a slippery slope that threatens free speech and our community's right-out-there open access."
This controversy isn't happening in isolation; it's all part and parcel with a statewide age-appropriateness review kicked off by Tennessee Secretary Tre Hargett. Libraries all across Tennessee are feeling this tug-of-war over their collections.
You could cut through tension with a knife at that board meeting. Board chair Cory York stood firm in his belief that "gender confusion" isn't suitable material in children‘s hands. Still, that doesn't mean everyone nods along.
Many in Rutherford County, including local leaders and groups, are standing by James. They admire her courage and commitment. Keri Lambert, VP at Rutherford County Library Alliance (RCLA), praised, "Luanne James shows us what it means being an American Patriot; she's shining a light on how vital librarians are in our communities."
Adding her voice, RCLA's communications director, Tatiana Silvas, couldn't have been prouder. "This kind leadership," she said, "is exactly what Rutherford County needs. Every one at RCLA sees her as nothing less than a hero."
Despite all this support, York isn't backing off threats against James. He's talking about “serious disciplinary consideration, up till letting her go” if necessary. And as if that weren't enough, they've voted on cutting ties with American Library Association, stepping away from ethical principles that support intellectual freedom and push back at censorship.
The stakes are pretty high here. James puts it plainly, “Our libraries are funded by and serve our citizens. That means our citizens get unfiltered access—no government fingers dabbling in what stays or goes—is a core democratic value.”
There's a public meeting on March 30th that could tip these scales and set a new course, not just in Rutherford County but perhaps beyond.
This isn't James's first rodeo against York. They've crossed swords before on similar grounds about book removals and who gets access. Back in December, James accused York cutting corners by skipping over proper channels when he wanted some books gone. He even went after personal info about library patrons. York, unsurprisingly, denied it all.
Whatever comes from this, what happens now matters a lot—not just here but wherever people care about intellectual freedom. Luanne James, armed with community support, shines a light on a bigger fight: keeping public libraries true guardians against censorship, and champions in keeping ideas open and available.
Keep your ears open as this story unfolds, and this community digs in its heels on keeping doors open wide on diverse ideas and stories that shape our understanding.
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