How Huntington Beachās library became a culture war battleground
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Good morning. Itās Friday, May 10. Hereās what you need to know to start your day.
- The book war is intensifying in Huntington Beach.
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The book war intensifies in Huntington Beach
A passionate crowd spoke in support of the Huntington Beach Public Library at a five-hour City Council meeting this week. When the conservative-majority council voted to continue its exploration of privatizing the library, attendees shouted: āShame!ā
The conservative block, led by Mayor Gracey Van Der Mark, says they have a responsibility to find the cheapest way to run the library, and that includes considering the option of hiring an outside contractor to take over daily operations.
The large and vocal turnout of library supporters saw something else: the latest in a series of orchestrated and ideological efforts by the City Councilās conservative majority to censor books, remove librarians and dismantle a beloved public institution.
Van Der Mark has publicly accused city library workers of āinfecting our children with obscenity or pornographyā and has drafted policies that grant a politically appointed panel power to deem certain books inappropriate for the childrenās section ā and potentially block new books from the library altogether.
Van Der Mark did not respond to multiple requests to talk for this newsletter.
Librarians say they feel vilified by some community members, who have referred to them as pedophiles and groomers in public and online. One senior librarian resigned, citing a lack of support from city leaders.
The city in red-turned-purple Orange County has become Californiaās ground zero in the national culture war over access to books ā and longtime residents and librarians I spoke with say the focus on the library is disheartening.
āLibrarians and the library [are] under attack,ā retired childrenās librarian Barbara Richardson told me. āWeāre part of a war we didnāt want any part of.ā
Books removed from the childrenās section
Carol Daus, a board member of Friends of the Huntington Beach Public Library, and Richardson, who worked as a city librarian for 32 years, pointed me to a small note on some empty shelves in the childrenās section of the cityās renowned Central Library: āBooks in this section of the Childrenās non-fiction collection may have been relocated.ā
Resolution No. 2023-41, authored by Van Der Mark and approved 4 to 3 by the council, directed library staff to remove books from the childrenās section determined to contain āany content of sexual natureā and relocate them to the adult section.
That led to librarians reviewing and pulling books about puberty, feminine hygiene, potty training and even a books about ships. But after complaints, the reviews and relocations were put on pause.
Critics say conservative city leaders are conflating books meant to provide information to adolescents about puberty and human sexuality with obscene sexual content. The council members supporting the new policies say they want to ensure that parents know the content of books before they get checked out.
āWeāre not banning books,ā Mayor Pro Tem Pat Burns said during a meeting last June. āThe real intent of this is to protect kids from ā really ā mind poison or unwanted viewing of material that they shouldnāt probably view.ā
Carol Daus and other library advocates contend the argument of protecting kids is a āperformativeā cover for the book access battles playing out across the nation.
āIf thereās so much dangerous material in this library, why havenāt they brought the police in here and removed it?ā Daus said.
Daus and Richardson told me roughly 100 books had been relocated to a corner of the adult section section, but a community activist group called HB Banned Books Story Time had checked the majority out and was displaying the books in public to raise awareness of the cityās efforts to restrict access to books and explore privatization.
āLibraries are supposed to be neutral,ā Richardson said. āDo we really want a library thatās just one point of view?ā
How the so-called Fab Four turned Surf City into ground zero for the culture wars
After taking office in 2022, four conservative council members ā called the āFab Fourā by their supporters ā set their sights on new voter ID laws (drawing a state lawsuit) and state housing mandates (another lawsuit), changed rules that restricted which flags can fly on city property and altered the prayer policy in council chambers. Then they turned to books at the library.
The City Council approved a motion in June 2023 to make library books and materials considered āobscene and/or pornographicā inaccessible to minors.
Then in October came Resolution No. 2023-41, also authored by Van Der Mark and approved 4 to 3 by the council, which directed library staff to remove books from the childrenās section determined to contain āany content of sexual natureā and relocate them to the adult section.
Six months later, in March, the council passed a motion to create a Community Parent/Guardian Review Board. Members of the 21-person panel will be able to nominate childrenās books for review to determine if they meet ācommunity standards.ā
What exactly are those community standards? Whatever a majority of the politically appointed panel decides them to be, according to the ordinance.
That same month, the council majority approved a motion to request proposals from third-party contractors to take over operations of the library system after being approached by one such contractor earlier in the year.
After council members and supporters accuse library staff, a senior librarian resigned
For Melissa Ronning, the library is āprobably the most inclusive place in any society.ā She was the principal librarian for the city after previously serving as childrenās librarian and senior librarian for youth services.
But her decade of work for Huntington Beach is over. Ronning announced her resignation in front of the City Council last month, which was met with cheers from some in the crowd. She said her decision was a result of the efforts by the councilās conservatives to undermine her work and that of her fellow librarians.
āIt doesnāt feel good when somebody takes away the things that youāve spent your career building,ā she told me, adding that it was ādishearteningā to see and hear people call city librarians pedophiles and groomers in public and on social media. Worse still, she said:
āNobody came to protect us. ā¦ Nobody in our city management spoke out and said that these comments do not reflect what our librarians do and who they are. It made us feel very much alone.ā
When rumors spread earlier this year that the city would explore privatizing the library, that was āthe nail in the coffinā for her. Even if privatization doesnāt end up happening, Ronning expects a mass exodus of the cityās library staff, who she said have been increasingly stressed about the book restrictions and the possibility of losing their jobs.
āThe damage has been done,ā she said. āIt really has been affecting their ability to feel good about working for the city of Huntington Beach.ā
Public reaction has been swift and strong
Residents are gathering signatures in hopes of putting a citywide initiative to voters in November that would repeal the upcoming review panel.
On social media and in council meetings, residents have decried the initiative to privatize as a bad-faith effort to control the library system.
The sharp divide over the library extends to the City Council, as Councilmembers Natalie Moser, Rhonda Bolton and Dan Kalmick have consistently pushed back on efforts to restrict childrenās and teensā access to books and any steps toward privatizing the library.
Kalmick, who authored the failed motion that would have let city residents decide on privatization, said āmorale is in the toilet at City Hall.ā He says the āFab Fourā are using their power to push an ideological agenda and neglecting their core responsibilities as municipal leaders.
Mayor Pro Tem Burns and Councilmember Tony Strickland did not respond to interview requests.
āItās really disappointing that in 2024, we have folks in California and in Orange County that are still trying to turn the clock back to 1965,ā Kalmick said. āThis is local government. This should be boring. But our meetings are not ā they are gladiator matches ā¦ on national and social issues that local government is not designed to handle.ā
More on Huntington Beach
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Commentary and opinions
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Todayās great reads
At L.A. Progressive Shooters, a gun space for people sick of American gun culture. Tom Nguyen had a toxic relationship with guns most of his life. But early in the pandemic, he slowly amassed a following as a liberal-minded firearms instructor focused on helping gun-averse Angelenos learn how to handle firearms properly, without having to engage the gun culture they abhor.
Other great reads
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How can we make this newsletter more useful? Send comments to [email protected].
For your downtime
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And finally ... a great photo
Show us your favorite place in California! Weāre running low on submissions. Send us photos that scream California and we may feature them in an edition of Essential California.
Todayās great photo is from Times photographer Brian van der Brug. He captured this aerial shot of Western Avenue as it transitions into Paseo Del Mar.
Have a great day, from the Essential California team
Ryan Fonseca, reporter
Defne Karabatur, fellow
Christian Orozco, assistant editor
Stephanie Chavez, deputy metro editor
Karim Doumar, head of newsletters
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