• Re: Upset over LGBTQ books, a Michigan town defunds its library in tax

    From Woke means broken@21:1/5 to governor.swill@gmail.com on Fri Aug 12 02:39:58 2022
    XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, alt.politics.homosexuality, alt.activism.children.molesters
    XPost: talk.politics.guns

    In article <t2nge7$3ocvn$11@news.freedyn.de>
    <governor.swill@gmail.com> wrote:

    Good! It's about time people started fighting back against FORCED ACCEPTANCE of queers.


    JAMESTOWN TOWNSHIP—What started as a fight over an LGBTQ-themed
    graphic novel may end with the closure of a west Michigan public
    library.

    Voters in Jamestown Township, a politically conservative
    community in Ottawa County, rejected renewal Tuesday of a
    millage that would support the Patmos Library. That vote guts
    the library’s operating budget in 2023 — 84 percent of the
    library’s $245,000 budget comes from property taxes collected
    through a millage.

    Without a millage, the library is likely to run out of money
    sometime late next year, said Larry Walton, library board
    president.

    “I wasn’t expecting anything like this,” Walton told Bridge
    Michigan Tuesday. “The library is the center of the community.
    For individuals to be short sighted to close that down over
    opposing LGBTQ is very disappointing.”

    There have been protests at other Michigan public libraries and
    at school board meetings about books with LGBTQ themes. But
    Tuesday may be the first time a community voted, in effect, to
    close its library rather than have it remain open with books
    some consider to be “indoctrinating” children.

    Voters on Tuesday rejected the millage renewal by a 25-point
    margin — 62 percent to 37 percent — on the same day voters
    approved millages for road improvements and the fire department.

    Ten years earlier, a library millage at a slightly lower rate
    was approved by 37 percentage points.

    For the average home with a market value of $250,000, the new
    millage, if approved, would have increased taxes about $24.

    Debbie Mikula, executive director of the Michigan Library
    Association, said Wednesday there were about 40 public library
    millages on ballots across the state Tuesday, and all but a
    handful passed. No others that failed appeared to be due to
    cultural issues like with the Patmos millage, she said.

    The difference, according to voters who spoke to Bridge Tuesday:
    Books in the adult and young adult section of the Patmos Library
    that depict, in some cases in detail, same-sex relationships.

    Earlier this year, a parent raised concerns about the graphic
    novel “Gender Queer: A Memoir,” located in the adult graphic
    novel section. The book tells the story of the author’s coming
    of age as nonbinary, and includes illustrations of sex acts.

    As many as 50 people attended several library board meetings
    this spring, meetings that typically draw only a handful of
    residents. At those meetings, residents demanded the book be
    pulled from the shelves. The library board moved the book behind
    the counter, where children couldn’t happen upon it by accident.

    Complaints were filed about several other books, including
    “Spinning,” a graphic novel about a teen girl and her attraction
    to other girls, and “Kiss Number 8,” a graphic novel with
    similar themes. Those books remain on the shelves of the young
    adult (high-school age) graphic novels section.

    Library Director Amber McLain resigned this spring, telling
    Bridge she had been harassed online and accused of
    indoctrinating children. Interim director Matthew Lawrence
    resigned later.

    When the Patmos staff and elected board of directors declined to
    remove the books from the library’s collection, some upset
    residents organized an effort to defeat the library’s millage
    renewal.

    The group, called Jamestown Conservatives, passed out flyers at
    the town’s Memorial Day parade that referenced “Gender Queer: a
    Memoir,” a Pride Month display at the library and a director
    who, in the group’s words, “promoted the LGBTQ ideology.”

    “Pray that we can make changes and make the Patmos Library a
    safe and neutral place for our children,” the flyer said.

    Yard signs urging residents to vote no on the library millage
    popped up along Riley Street, Jamestown’s main drag. One sign
    was directly across the street from the library, and another was
    conspicuously in the lawn of a library board member. That board
    member could not be reached for comment.

    One resident posted a large, homemade sign that said, “50
    percent increase to GROOM our kids? Vote NO on Library!”

    Salem Sousley, who identifies as nonbinary and lives close by,
    said when they see the sign “it turns my stomach.”

    Having books young adults can access on LGBT themes “is
    incredibly important,” Sousley said. “When I was growing up in
    Jenison (in Ottawa County), the language of who I was as a
    nonbinary person didn’t exist yet. When I read ‘Gender Queer,’
    it was the first time I ever saw myself represented in a book.

    “So many kids are struggling in silence, especially in areas
    like this,” Sousley said. “Having access to resources and
    materials of people who are sharing your experiences is
    literally life-saving.”

    Jamestown Township, population just under 10,000, is politically
    conservative even for conservative Ottawa County. The township
    voted for Donald Trump for president by a margin of 76-21
    percent in 2020. About 92 percent of residents are white, and
    the median income of $81,000 is 37 percent higher than that of
    the state median household income of $59,000.

    The village of Jamestown, which is within the township, has
    streets of well-maintained homes and sidewalks shaded by large
    trees, with construction of new subdivisions nearby. There is an
    ice cream shop at the main intersection, just across a parking
    lot from the township library.

    The library is built to resemble a train depot, commemorating
    the interurban trolley that ran from Holland to Grand Rapids a
    century earlier. Inside the library on Tuesday, staffers helped
    patrons check out books and find materials. A young mother
    laughed as her son played with hand puppets. Someone had brought
    a box of zucchini, with a sign for patrons to help themselves.

    The main display inside the library was of “never out of print
    classics,” including the Bible and Ayn Rand's “The Fountainhead.”

    One of the township’s three voting precincts Tuesday was in the
    community room of the library. Most of the people who spoke to
    Bridge outside the library said they voted to defund the
    facility.

    “We don’t need to see those books out front,” said Sarah
    Johnson. “We’re all for the library. I use it. We want to make a
    statement that we want some say in the books (chosen to be in
    the collection).”

    Steve Wiltz said he voted no because of “some of the materials
    that are in here I don’t agree with.”

    Amanda Ensing, one of the organizers of the Jamestown
    Conservatives group, emerged from the library Tuesday wearing an
    “I voted” sticker. “They are trying to groom our children to
    believe that it’s OK to have these sinful desires,” Ensing said
    of library officials. “It’s not a political issue, it’s a
    Biblical issue.”

    Walton, the library board president, had been optimistic that
    the millage would pass when he spoke to Bridge Michigan on
    election day.

    On Tuesday afternoon as votes were still being cast, Walton said
    that if the millage was defeated, the library would continue to
    receive tax funds from the old millage through the first quarter
    of 2023. After those funds dry up and the library’s fund
    reserves of about $325,000 are depleted, “we would close,” he
    said.

    Walton estimated that closure would be in fall 2023, barring a
    second millage renewal attempt approved by voters before then.

    Most people who said they voted to defund the library Tuesday,
    said they didn’t believe it would close.

    But without tax funds, the library doesn’t bring in enough in
    grants, fines and community room rentals to keep its doors open.

    With a library closure, that community room where residents
    voted Tuesday would be unavailable, Walton said, so would the
    mobile wifi hotspots used by residents who lack wifi in their
    homes.

    “There are community members who sit in the parking lot to use
    our wifi,” said Marcia Frobish, who serves on the library board.
    “The library is a lot more than books.”

    The library has 67,000 books, videos and other items in its
    collection, of which about 90 have an LGBTQ theme, library
    officials said.

    Ensing, who helped organize the no campaign, said she hoped the
    millage rejection would be a “wake-up call” that would encourage
    library officials to remove books from shelves that community
    members find objectionable.

    If that’s done, “they can ask for a millage again,” she said.

    But Walton didn’t appear ready to compromise Tuesday. He said he
    didn’t believe the library needed a wake-up call and shouldn’t
    remove books.

    “A wake-up call to what? To take LGBTQ books off the shelf and
    then they will give us money? What do you call that? Ransom?

    “We stand behind the fact that our community is made up of a
    very diverse group of individuals, and we as a library cater to
    the diversity of our community,” he said.

    Walton could not be reached Wednesday.

    Mikula of the library association said the Patmos Library could
    still get a millage on the November ballot, if ballot language
    is given to the Ottawa County clerk’s office by Aug. 16.

    But after having just lost by 25 points, turning around public
    sentiment in less than three months might be difficult without
    concessions by the library, which Mikula said is difficult
    because public libraries must follow its “collection development
    policies. If patrons have challenged (books) and the library
    board has made a decision to keep them, then … the First
    Amendment protects the process.”

    It’s a difficult position for the library, Mikula acknowledged.
    “It's hard to look at being threatened with the closure of your
    library because they won’t remove LGBT materials.”

    Frobish, the board member, said she doesn’t want to remove
    materials from the library, but didn’t know what the board would
    do. “We’re in uncharted territory,” she said.

    A millage ballot effort in 2023 would be difficult because there
    are no elections scheduled for that year, which would force the
    library to pick up the cost of holding a millage vote, Mikula
    said.

    The library board will talk about its financial outlook at its
    next meeting on Monday.

    “I love my country, and I believe what is happening is going
    against the First Amendment,” said Lawrence, the former
    director. “The people who need the library the most can’t vote
    because they are children.”

    Children don't need to have queerness forced in their faces.
    Let them be children.

    https://www.bridgemi.com/michigan-government/upset-over-lgbtq- books-michigan-town-defunds-its-library-tax-vote

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Woke means broken@21:1/5 to governor.swill@gmail.com on Fri Aug 12 05:01:12 2022
    XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, alt.politics.homosexuality, alt.activism.children.molesters
    XPost: talk.politics.guns

    In article <t0lbvr$2h6vb$5@news.freedyn.de>
    <governor.swill@gmail.com> wrote:

    Good! It's about time people started fighting back against FORCED ACCEPTANCE of queers.


    JAMESTOWN TOWNSHIP—What started as a fight over an LGBTQ-themed
    graphic novel may end with the closure of a west Michigan public
    library.

    Voters in Jamestown Township, a politically conservative
    community in Ottawa County, rejected renewal Tuesday of a
    millage that would support the Patmos Library. That vote guts
    the library’s operating budget in 2023 — 84 percent of the
    library’s $245,000 budget comes from property taxes collected
    through a millage.

    Without a millage, the library is likely to run out of money
    sometime late next year, said Larry Walton, library board
    president.

    “I wasn’t expecting anything like this,” Walton told Bridge
    Michigan Tuesday. “The library is the center of the community.
    For individuals to be short sighted to close that down over
    opposing LGBTQ is very disappointing.”

    There have been protests at other Michigan public libraries and
    at school board meetings about books with LGBTQ themes. But
    Tuesday may be the first time a community voted, in effect, to
    close its library rather than have it remain open with books
    some consider to be “indoctrinating” children.

    Voters on Tuesday rejected the millage renewal by a 25-point
    margin — 62 percent to 37 percent — on the same day voters
    approved millages for road improvements and the fire department.

    Ten years earlier, a library millage at a slightly lower rate
    was approved by 37 percentage points.

    For the average home with a market value of $250,000, the new
    millage, if approved, would have increased taxes about $24.

    Debbie Mikula, executive director of the Michigan Library
    Association, said Wednesday there were about 40 public library
    millages on ballots across the state Tuesday, and all but a
    handful passed. No others that failed appeared to be due to
    cultural issues like with the Patmos millage, she said.

    The difference, according to voters who spoke to Bridge Tuesday:
    Books in the adult and young adult section of the Patmos Library
    that depict, in some cases in detail, same-sex relationships.

    Earlier this year, a parent raised concerns about the graphic
    novel “Gender Queer: A Memoir,” located in the adult graphic
    novel section. The book tells the story of the author’s coming
    of age as nonbinary, and includes illustrations of sex acts.

    As many as 50 people attended several library board meetings
    this spring, meetings that typically draw only a handful of
    residents. At those meetings, residents demanded the book be
    pulled from the shelves. The library board moved the book behind
    the counter, where children couldn’t happen upon it by accident.

    Complaints were filed about several other books, including
    “Spinning,” a graphic novel about a teen girl and her attraction
    to other girls, and “Kiss Number 8,” a graphic novel with
    similar themes. Those books remain on the shelves of the young
    adult (high-school age) graphic novels section.

    Library Director Amber McLain resigned this spring, telling
    Bridge she had been harassed online and accused of
    indoctrinating children. Interim director Matthew Lawrence
    resigned later.

    When the Patmos staff and elected board of directors declined to
    remove the books from the library’s collection, some upset
    residents organized an effort to defeat the library’s millage
    renewal.

    The group, called Jamestown Conservatives, passed out flyers at
    the town’s Memorial Day parade that referenced “Gender Queer: a
    Memoir,” a Pride Month display at the library and a director
    who, in the group’s words, “promoted the LGBTQ ideology.”

    “Pray that we can make changes and make the Patmos Library a
    safe and neutral place for our children,” the flyer said.

    Yard signs urging residents to vote no on the library millage
    popped up along Riley Street, Jamestown’s main drag. One sign
    was directly across the street from the library, and another was
    conspicuously in the lawn of a library board member. That board
    member could not be reached for comment.

    One resident posted a large, homemade sign that said, “50
    percent increase to GROOM our kids? Vote NO on Library!”

    Salem Sousley, who identifies as nonbinary and lives close by,
    said when they see the sign “it turns my stomach.”

    Having books young adults can access on LGBT themes “is
    incredibly important,” Sousley said. “When I was growing up in
    Jenison (in Ottawa County), the language of who I was as a
    nonbinary person didn’t exist yet. When I read ‘Gender Queer,’
    it was the first time I ever saw myself represented in a book.

    “So many kids are struggling in silence, especially in areas
    like this,” Sousley said. “Having access to resources and
    materials of people who are sharing your experiences is
    literally life-saving.”

    Jamestown Township, population just under 10,000, is politically
    conservative even for conservative Ottawa County. The township
    voted for Donald Trump for president by a margin of 76-21
    percent in 2020. About 92 percent of residents are white, and
    the median income of $81,000 is 37 percent higher than that of
    the state median household income of $59,000.

    The village of Jamestown, which is within the township, has
    streets of well-maintained homes and sidewalks shaded by large
    trees, with construction of new subdivisions nearby. There is an
    ice cream shop at the main intersection, just across a parking
    lot from the township library.

    The library is built to resemble a train depot, commemorating
    the interurban trolley that ran from Holland to Grand Rapids a
    century earlier. Inside the library on Tuesday, staffers helped
    patrons check out books and find materials. A young mother
    laughed as her son played with hand puppets. Someone had brought
    a box of zucchini, with a sign for patrons to help themselves.

    The main display inside the library was of “never out of print
    classics,” including the Bible and Ayn Rand's “The Fountainhead.”

    One of the township’s three voting precincts Tuesday was in the
    community room of the library. Most of the people who spoke to
    Bridge outside the library said they voted to defund the
    facility.

    “We don’t need to see those books out front,” said Sarah
    Johnson. “We’re all for the library. I use it. We want to make a
    statement that we want some say in the books (chosen to be in
    the collection).”

    Steve Wiltz said he voted no because of “some of the materials
    that are in here I don’t agree with.”

    Amanda Ensing, one of the organizers of the Jamestown
    Conservatives group, emerged from the library Tuesday wearing an
    “I voted” sticker. “They are trying to groom our children to
    believe that it’s OK to have these sinful desires,” Ensing said
    of library officials. “It’s not a political issue, it’s a
    Biblical issue.”

    Walton, the library board president, had been optimistic that
    the millage would pass when he spoke to Bridge Michigan on
    election day.

    On Tuesday afternoon as votes were still being cast, Walton said
    that if the millage was defeated, the library would continue to
    receive tax funds from the old millage through the first quarter
    of 2023. After those funds dry up and the library’s fund
    reserves of about $325,000 are depleted, “we would close,” he
    said.

    Walton estimated that closure would be in fall 2023, barring a
    second millage renewal attempt approved by voters before then.

    Most people who said they voted to defund the library Tuesday,
    said they didn’t believe it would close.

    But without tax funds, the library doesn’t bring in enough in
    grants, fines and community room rentals to keep its doors open.

    With a library closure, that community room where residents
    voted Tuesday would be unavailable, Walton said, so would the
    mobile wifi hotspots used by residents who lack wifi in their
    homes.

    “There are community members who sit in the parking lot to use
    our wifi,” said Marcia Frobish, who serves on the library board.
    “The library is a lot more than books.”

    The library has 67,000 books, videos and other items in its
    collection, of which about 90 have an LGBTQ theme, library
    officials said.

    Ensing, who helped organize the no campaign, said she hoped the
    millage rejection would be a “wake-up call” that would encourage
    library officials to remove books from shelves that community
    members find objectionable.

    If that’s done, “they can ask for a millage again,” she said.

    But Walton didn’t appear ready to compromise Tuesday. He said he
    didn’t believe the library needed a wake-up call and shouldn’t
    remove books.

    “A wake-up call to what? To take LGBTQ books off the shelf and
    then they will give us money? What do you call that? Ransom?

    “We stand behind the fact that our community is made up of a
    very diverse group of individuals, and we as a library cater to
    the diversity of our community,” he said.

    Walton could not be reached Wednesday.

    Mikula of the library association said the Patmos Library could
    still get a millage on the November ballot, if ballot language
    is given to the Ottawa County clerk’s office by Aug. 16.

    But after having just lost by 25 points, turning around public
    sentiment in less than three months might be difficult without
    concessions by the library, which Mikula said is difficult
    because public libraries must follow its “collection development
    policies. If patrons have challenged (books) and the library
    board has made a decision to keep them, then … the First
    Amendment protects the process.”

    It’s a difficult position for the library, Mikula acknowledged.
    “It's hard to look at being threatened with the closure of your
    library because they won’t remove LGBT materials.”

    Frobish, the board member, said she doesn’t want to remove
    materials from the library, but didn’t know what the board would
    do. “We’re in uncharted territory,” she said.

    A millage ballot effort in 2023 would be difficult because there
    are no elections scheduled for that year, which would force the
    library to pick up the cost of holding a millage vote, Mikula
    said.

    The library board will talk about its financial outlook at its
    next meeting on Monday.

    “I love my country, and I believe what is happening is going
    against the First Amendment,” said Lawrence, the former
    director. “The people who need the library the most can’t vote
    because they are children.”

    Children don't need to have queerness forced in their faces.
    Let them be children.

    https://www.bridgemi.com/michigan-government/upset-over-lgbtq- books-michigan-town-defunds-its-library-tax-vote

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)