Sunday, September 17, 2023

2 librarians were fired after the board mistook an autism symbol for a Pride display. They’re suing. (Daniel Villareal, September 14, 2023 LGBTQ Nation)

When one of our new St. Johns County Commissioners inquired in a Commission meeting about the political affiliation of prospective appointees to the our. Johns County Library Board, I called her out.  She never apologized.  

Commissioner Krista Keating Joseph later allegedly made non sequitur remarks to a constituent about "drag queens," as if their existence were offensive to her, or as if that somehow explained First Amendment violations. 

And no, I will not become a Republican to run for County Commission.

We, the People, deserve a two-party system, free of dueling drooling ideologies and fawning worship of Trumpery, flummery, dupery, nincompoopery and insurrectionist  Big Lies.

https://cleanupcityofstaugustine.blogspot.com/2023/05/shhh-silence-on-commission-inquisition.html

https://cleanupcityofstaugustine.blogspot.com/2023/05/county-commission-asks-illegal.html


From LGBTQ NATION: 

2 librarians were fired after the board mistook an autism symbol for a Pride display. They’re suing.  

By Daniel Villareal, September 14, 2023 

LGBTQ Nation

Two former librarians of the Sterling Free Public Library in Sterling, Kansas have filed a lawsuit claiming they were fired over a June library display featuring a rainbow symbol that was mistaken for a Pride Month display.

The library’s board fired library director Kari Wheeler and assistant librarian Brandy Lancaster on July 5 after library employee Ruth Splitter complained to the board about the display. Lancaster created the display as part of a national summer reading program with the theme of “All Together Now,” The Topeka Capital-Journal reported.

The display featured a rainbow infinity symbol, a logo often used by neurodivergent and autism rights advocates, along with a heart and the words, “We all think differently.” The display also featured a rainbow image of a child in a wheelchair and a quote from Black writer Maya Angelou that said, “In diversity there is beauty and strength.”

The display also included the books Emma & Mommy Talk to GodThe Color PurpleUncle Tom’s CabinSeparate is Never EqualWonder, and To Kill a Mockingbird. Of the books, only The Color Purple contains any LGBTQ+ content.

On June 22, Splitter, a temporary summer library employee, complained about the display to Lancaster, saying she found the “gay Pride” symbol offensive and going into “an anti-LGBT diatribe” even though Lancaster explained that the infinity symbol represented neurodiversity and autism.

The contentious display at the Sterling Free Public Library in Kansas
screenshot of court documentsThe contentious display at the Sterling Free Public Library in Kansas

Splitter then complained about the display to Michelle Miller, vice chair of the library board. Miller reportedly told Lancaster that she could get her fellow board members to have Lancaster take down the display.

“I am totally fine with diversity of skin color display, just not represented with rainbow colors,” Miller texted Wheeler, the director, according to the lawsuit. “I do not want any kind of rainbow display especially in this month. We have a conservative town and as a library do not need to make political statements (see Target and Budlight as negative examples). I certainly do not want the library to promote LGBTQ agendas.”

Wheeler removed the display, thinking its removal would just be temporary until the board advised her on how to change it. Instead, two weeks later, the board decided that it had lost confidence in Wheeler and Lancaster and voted to fire them.

Now, Wheeler and Lancaster — who are both neurodivergent — and two other library patrons are suing the Sterling Free Public Library, the library’s board, the city, and its mayor for allegedly violating their constitutional rights to free speech, due process, and equal protection and for violating the Kansas Open Records Act, a law that allows the public to view and copy records maintained by public entities.

The lawsuit argues that the city’s residents “are entitled to a library that embraces a range of viewpoints, not just the viewpoints of those with an aversion to rainbow colors and a disdain for LGBTQ citizens.” It also alleges that the board had previously objected to buying a book featuring a nonbinary teenage character and to sponsoring a city 4th of July parade because one of the floats advertised a Pride event.

The lawsuit seeks the former employees’ lost and future wages, compensatory damages, and an unspecified injunctive relief.



1 comment:

  1. Anonymous4:32 PM

    I don't know any drag queens and probably saw a drag queen twice in 40 years. These stupid wedge non-issues that the right wing likes to throw in there and exaggerate is nonsense and a diversion from the fact that they don't do much for people otherwise. One day they will run out of these stupid stunts and then what will they do? Try to eliminate science and create a complete lie based society? Always harping about The Constitution yet separation of Church and state they would like to overlook and give power to theocrats and plutocrats...do favors for their cronies and eliminate the federal government so that corrupt local hogs can take advantage of more people and hoard more money.

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