Censorship controversy leads to ousting of Kingsland librarian

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  • Suzette Baker, the Kingsland librarian who was fired for refusing to comply with what she called “censorship” by taking books from the library shelves, said she’s also consulting legal counsel about the possibility of filing suit against the county. File photo
    Suzette Baker, the Kingsland librarian who was fired for refusing to comply with what she called “censorship” by taking books from the library shelves, said she’s also consulting legal counsel about the possibility of filing suit against the county. File photo
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Llano County’s Library Advisory Board will meet behind closed doors in the future after members complained of being “intimidated” by interruptions during regular public meetings, officials explained.

The board is exempt from the Texas Open Meeitngs law because it isn’t a rule-making body.

That law defines a “governmental body” as, among other things, “a deliberative body that has rule-making or quasi-judicial power and that is classified as a department, agency, or political subdivision of a county or municipality.”

The library board is none of those things.

Llano County Judge Ron Cunningham said interruptions to board meetings in the past had “the potential to lead to violence.”

He said any recommendation made by the board to Llano County Commissioners Court would have to be acted on in open court sessions; otherwise, there’s no way for the public to know what happens in Library Board meetings.

Cunningham also declined to discuss the firing of former Kingsland Library Director Suzette Baker other than to confirm that she was “terminated.” He couldn’t comment further because of possible pending litigation, implying the Baker had threatened to sue the county.

Baker was reportedly fired earlier this month when she refused to remove books from library shelves as she was told to.

Jeanne Puryear, a Llano library patron who objects to not only the meeting closure but to the way the book removals have been handled, said she’s never seen anything in a library board meeting that amounted to a threat.

“There are those (people) that went direct to the (county) commissioners and the judge calling some books pornographic,” she said.

She added that’s not the process that should have been followed because the county had set up a system for patrons to ask that books be reviewed.

To be considered pornography, Puryear said, material “has to incite people to indecency.”

She said she, and others who also believe the library board is not acting properly, are thinking of filing a lawsuit against the county.

However, Puryear said no decision has been made about that yet.

Baker, the Kingsland librarian who was fired for refusing to comply with what she called “censorship” by taking books from the library shelves, said she’s also consulting legal counsel about the possibility of filing suit against the county.