Letter to the Editor: Public libraries wild, not always wonderful
								(Letter to the Editor - Graphic Illustration/MetroCreativeConnection)
In response to Brian Raitz’s op-ed on Oct. 15, 2022: I attended the library board meeting of Sept. 28 to which he refers. I strongly share the concern the group had over the book “Gender Queer” (among others), which is aimed at young readers and is nothing more than a pornographic novel displaying explicit sex acts under the pretense of being, as Raitz puts it, “a graphical autobiography of someone’s life growing up with gender identification issues.”
One day after the board meeting, Raitz contacted me to meet, and in the ensuing two weeks we met three times for over three hours. We discussed issues of library autonomy, freedom of speech, handling of obscene materials and social responsibility. To be sure, I found Raitz to be very gracious and generous with the time he gave to our group’s concerns, even willing to consider a suggestion I made that would accommodate his desire for “free speech,” yet stay within the law.
The idea presented to Raitz was not to remove the book “Gender Queer” from their online listing but rather to withhold it from view of any minor person unless accompanied by a parent (who he said was the one primarily responsible.) However, this book banned in many school districts across the country, was available on a featured display of “Banned Books” … an obvious attempt to draw people in to investigate further, and may still be available on the shelf for such illegal perusal by minors.
In his op-ed Raitz stated: “It (the book) offended most, but not all (at the board meeting), and this may be the heart of the issue.”
I agree, and it is for this very reason that our public library must provide the same protection for our children that all other retail and commercial establishments in Wood County provide, in accordance with the law! Our children’s well-being is at stake.
(WV Code 61-8A-3(b) “Exemptions from criminal liability”) states:
(There is an exemption for) “A public library, or museum, which is displaying or distributing any obscene matter to a minor only when the minor was accompanied by his or her parent.”
Currently there is no reasonable means of preventing a minor from looking through the book without adult supervision as is required by state law!!
The MOVCAC (Motivate, Organize, Volunteer Citizen’s Action Coalition) is a group of independently minded people who are not monolithic in their opinions, with one exception … that of concern for our children. My appeal to Raitz was, and is, to take action out of respect for the social responsibility that his position as executive director o the Parkersburg-Wood County Public Library demands.
It appears, however, that a regretful pursuit of the enforcement of our state law is the only option left.
Tom Zawatsky
Parkersburg

