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ABFFE
UPDATE
March 18, 2008 Previously
in ABFFE Update
Volume 10,
Number 3
ABFFE Leads Booksellers in Urging
Veto of Unconstitutional Indiana Bill
On
March 13, ABFFE sent a letter to Indiana Gov. Mitch Daniels urging him
to veto a bill that would require bookstores to register with the state
if they intend to sell "sexually explicit materials." Local government
officials and zoning boards would be notified of the booksellers’
registration. There would be a $250 fee to register, and failure to do
so would be a misdemeanor.
In the letter, ABFFE declares that the
vague definition of will have a chilling effect on
mainstream novels and other artistic works with sexual content as well
as books that provide information about sexuality and health. “Some
booksellers will be reluctant to identify themselves as sellers of
‘explicit’ books and magazines and will choose not to carry them,
depriving adults and older minors of works they have a First Amendment
right to purchase,” ABFFE said.
The letter was cosigned by the Great
Lakes Booksellers Association (GLBA), 15 independent Indiana
booksellers, and Borders.
Click here to
read the letter.
ABFFE Files Amicus Brief in NSL
Case
The fight to restore the safeguards
for reader privacy that were eliminated by the USA PATRIOT Act continues
in the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit. The U.S.
Attorney General is appealing the decision of a district court in New
York, which found that a section of the law that authorizes the FBI to
issue National Security Letters (NSLs) to bookstores, libraries and
Internet service providers (ISPs) in terrorism investigations violates
the First Amendment. On March 17, ABFFE joined the American Library
Association, the Association of American Publishers, the American
Association of University Professors, the Freedom to Read Foundation,
and PEN American Center in filing an amicus brief that supports the
fight being waged by an unnamed ISP and the American Civil Liberties
Union.
In 2006, following a campaign by
booksellers, librarians and others, Congress made a number of changes in
the PATRIOT Act. It authorized recipients of secret demands for
documents to contact a lawyer, challenge them in court and demand the
removal of the gag that accompanies them. However, it made it
impossible for a judge to lift a gag if the government insists that
secrecy is still necessary. As a result, the government can permanently
deny the public any information about the order. The amicus brief
argues that a permanent gag violates the First Amendment. The brief was
written by Theresa Chmara of Jenner and Block, a member of the ABFFE
board.
Click here to
read the brief.
ABFFE Welcomes New Board Member
The
ABFFE board of directors has elected Betsy Burton of The King’s English
Bookshop, Salt Lake City, Utah, to fill the unexpired term of Jack
Buckley of Ninth Street Book Shop, Wilmington, Delaware. Buckley
resigned because of an increase in his workload as a member of
the Wilmington school board.
Burton has been a bookseller for
over 30 years. She is the co-owner and co-founder of The King’s English
Bookshop, which opened in 1977. She has long been active in free speech
fights and is currently a plaintiff in ABFFE’s challenge to a Utah law
that censors the Internet. Active on numerous boards in
the book business and in her community, Burton co-founded and is board
chair of Local First Utah, and is on the boards of two national
organizations whose member-networks are composed of independent
businesses—BALLE (Business Alliance for Local Living Economies) and
AMIBA (American Independent Business Alliance). She is the
author of The King’s English: Adventures of an Independent Bookseller,
which was published in 2005.
ABFFE Defends Challenged Books
The Kids’ Right to Read Project (KRRP)
reported success in two of three cases this month. A collaboration
between ABFFE and the National Coalition Against Censorship (NCAC), KRRP engages booksellers, librarians, teachers, and others in
responding to book censorship incidents in schools and libraries. In
the past year, it has confronted challenges and bans involving 35
books in 22 states.
This
month, the project opposed challenges to three books: Looking for
Alaska by John Green, And Tango Makes Three by Justin
Richardson and Peter Parnell; and The Kite Runner by Khaled
Hosseini. Parents in Depew, New York, near Buffalo, challenged
Looking for Alaska in the local high school because of its sexual
content and graphic language. Joined by Jonathon Welch of
Talking Leaves…Books in Buffalo, NY, KRRP sent a
letter to the school
board opposing the challenges; the board voted unanimously to keep the
book in classes.
One parent in Loudoun County, VA,
objected to the storyline in And Tango Makes Three, a book about
two male penguins parenting an egg, as an attack
on families headed by heterosexuals, and the superintendent placed the
book on restricted access in elementary school libraries throughout the
district, despite two committees’ recommendations that it be kept widely
available. KRRP sent a letter to the school board and superintendent
urging them to return the book to general circulation. Citing a
procedural error, the superintendent lifted all restrictions. Click
here to read the
letter.
The Kite Runner remains under
scrutiny in Burke County, NC, schools following complaints from a
community member who objects to sexual violence and graphic language in
the book. In direct violation of district policy, the superintendent
suspended the book's use throughout the district pending a committee’s
review. KRRP mobilized a coalition of six free speech groups and sent a
letter opposing the challenges. Click
here to read the
letter.
This Week Is Sunshine Week
ABFFE
is a cosponsor of Sunshine Week (March 16-22), a national initiative to
highlight the importance of open government and freedom of
information. Events during Sunshine Week include public forums, panel
discussions, and essay contests. Participants come from the news
media, civil liberties and civic groups, libraries, schools, non-profit
organizations, and others interested in the public’s right to know.
In this election
year, Sunshine Week is offering sample questions to ask candidates
about government transparency and reporting on what the candidates have
said about open government.
To learn more
about Sunshine Week, click here.
ABFFE Book of the Month is The Ten Cent Plague
The
ABFFE Book of the Month for March is The Ten Cent Plague: The Great
Comic-Book Scare and How It Changed America by David Hajdu. Hajdu,
a bestselling author, describes how exaggerated fears
about the impact of comic books on children crushed the comic book as a
creative force in the 1950s. He is the author of Lush Life: A
Biography of Billy Strayhorn and Positively Fourth Street: The
Lives and Times of Joan Baez, Bob Dylan, Mimi Baez Farina and Richard
Farina.
To read an interview with the
author, click here.
To read about recent ABFFE Book of the Month selections,
click
here.
Show Your Support for Freadom!
ABFFE's
popular, newly-redesigned “freadom” t-shirts, buttons, and bumper
stickers are available during Banned Books Week and all year round. To
order online, visit the ABFFE store.
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