11m
Kristen Johnson writes: “On June 5, Durham County (N.C.) Board of Commissioners ordered the immediate reversal of a decision that forced library staff to dismantle Pride Month displays. The initial order, sent by email from Durham County Public Library Director Dana Conners, required branches to take down all LGBTQ+ materials effective immediately June 4, citing federal action and executive orders that reject ‘illegal’ diversity, equity and inclusion actions in the workplace.” Supporters of the LGBTQ community gathered outside Durham’s main library June 5, including drag performer Stormie Daie, who read to children.
Raleigh (N.C.) News and Observer, June 6; WRAL-TV (Raleigh), June 5
5h
Nina Heller writes: “House lawmakers passed a bill June 8 aimed at preventing future executive branch interference in some legislative branch agencies, a year after President Donald Trump fired Librarian of Congress Carla Hayden. It would allow House and Senate leaders to appoint the heads of both the Library of Congress and the Government Publishing Office, removing that power from the president. The president would get new appointment authority over the register of copyrights. Now the bill heads to the Senate, where it would need enough bipartisan support to overcome a filibuster.”
Roll Call, June 8
22h
Kyle K. Courtney writes: “On May 28, Mayor Muriel Bowser officially signed B26-0490, the Library Ebook Pricing Fairness Amendment Act of 2025. The bill is now being prepared for remittance to Congress for the standard review period.” Readers First observes that the bill includes a trigger clause and will come into effect once 10 states with a total population of at least 50 million have similar laws in place. Connecticut passed a bill last year and several other states are considering similar legislation, including Rhode Island, where a bill passed out of its Senate committee June 4.
Ebook Study Group, June 1; Readers First, June 5; Connecticut Mirror, May 15, 2025
1d
Hilary Craiglow writes: “The growing federal skepticism toward research infrastructure is forcing institutions to explain both their contributions and their costs. Libraries that cannot do so risk being sidelined in decisions that shape their future and the future of research. But they have an important tool at their disposal: cost transparency. Libraries are still often treated as general overhead, allocated using methodologies designed decades ago. Cost transparency doesn’t have to compromise library values. It can strengthen them.”
Katina, June 3
1d
Russell Michalak, Trevor A. Dawes, and Ava Wallace write: “Rather than advancing a single argument, the contributors present their perspectives in conversation, showing how artificial intelligence (AI) is reshaping discovery, access, and professional practice while also raising pressing ethical and equity concerns. The discussion is framed around three interlocking themes: innovation, equity, and responsibility. AI’s potential to transform discovery is real, but its impacts depend on how librarians choose to shape and guide its use.”
College & Research Libraries News, vol. 87, no. 6 (June)
2d
Jennifer Sturge writes: “As I write this, for many of us, our school year is winding down. The students are looking forward to summer, classroom educators are counting down, and you are mentally preparing for your first morning where you can slowly sip your cup of coffee and read a book on the back deck. I wanted to spend some time in this blog post celebrating the school librarians who go above and beyond each and every day in their libraries and school communities but sometimes wonder if they are doing enough.”
Knowledge Quest, June 8
2d
Emily Durkin writes: “May 8 marked the one-year anniversary of the Trump Administration’s cancellation of the Digital Equity Act (DEA). The $2.75 billion DEA was a part of a coordinated effort to provide communities across the US with high-speed broadband and the skills and technology needed to thrive in our increasingly digital world. The abrupt cancellation of the DEA grants last year was a significant blow to digital inclusion programs nationwide, impacting millions of Americans.”
Public Libraries Online, June 5