MARTINSVILLE, IL (DH) –
Residents of Martinsville can rest assured that only safe, pre-approved news appears on their library shelves. Head librarian Bethany Hubbard ([email protected]) has seen to it that only news sources with which she agrees 100 percent will be admitted to the Martinsville Public Library.
In a Facebook message sent late last evening to the new Disclosure Heartland newspaper, Ms. Hubbard informed them that she will not be ordering the newspaper for the Martinsville Public Library because she disagreed with some assertions made by eyewitnesses interviewed for Angela Howser’s article on the Terry Payton trial in our most recent issue.
“Although there are reports from police and court reports; the story is mostly gossip from neighbors whom state they saw abuse for years yet did nothing to help this child. I assure you that you did not report the entire story. I am dissapointed. I would have loved to have added this paper to our local library but at this point and time I will not,” she said.
Sources used in the article included neighbors and relations who may be called to testify at the trial.
Although this was the only article with which Ms. Hubbard seemed to take issue, she decided this made the entire newspaper unacceptable for public library shelves. A librarian refusing to carry a newspaper over a personal disagreement with facts presented in one article may have chilling consequences for other news organizations who wish to report on controversial issues.
Disclosure Heartland has a strong commitment to the facts, as well as to sharing the many perspectives of community members involved in events of interest to the public. If a reader disagrees with statements made in the newspaper, they are free to present to them other evidence or write in to letters to the editor.
We feel that Ms. Hubbard has gone too far in banning this publication over what amounts to nothing more than a personal disagreement, and has abused her position at the Martinsville Public Library. As a public institution, after all, the library should provide local residents with a variety of news sources, whether or not one librarian disagrees with what is written therein.
We encourage our Clark County readers to politely petition Ms. Hubbard to allow this and future issues of Disclosure Heartland on library shelves. The Martinsville Public Library can be reached at (217) 382-4113.
6 Comments
Anonymous
Posted at 15:04h, 14 Julyjmkraft
Posted at 13:37h, 14 JulyHere are my thoughts on the subject:
Saying the Martinsville Library can’t afford $3 per month
for the publication is one thing.
Putting it in writing saying that you won’t allow the Public
to read it at the “PUBIC LIBRARY” because you, as an
employee, do not agree with how an article was written
is a completely different animal, and is CENSORSHIP.
Nobody called her a Nazi, but the Nazis and communists did,
and some still do, ban books and other publications that
disagree with their way of thinking. Some Christian groups
right here in Illinois still have book burnings. Each for their
own reasons.
What cannot be allowed is a single employee, not carrying
a news publication because she doesn’t agree with the
how it was written. Since she quantified her decision on
carrying the paper by putting her personal opinions
in this mix, the $3 per month is a non-issue. The issue is
her decision making.
Incredulous
Posted at 11:11h, 14 JulyNewsflash; the Internet is KILLING printed publications left and right. Oh wait,
we’re on the Watchdog website so you all apparently know that…
Consider, for just a moment, that the ‘Disclosure’ periodical is a FRINGE publication at
best. Is it archived at the Library in Champaign? Chicago? Washington DC? But this is
all about saying someone is a Nazi, banning/burning literature that doesn’t agree with
a them. yeah, that analogy isn’t making you all look like crack pots. You do realize that
analogy only really makes sense to people over 30 right?
Most of the small community Libraries around here are underfunded and understaffed
trying to optimize their shelf space in buildings never meant to be a library or
have been falling apart over the last century. No, a single publication isn’t that
sizable but what criteria should ‘We The People’ mandate on how they stock their
shelves?
I know, let’s ban ’50 Shades of Grey’ and replace it with this publication no one
will ever ask for. That’ll generate more patron traffic for sure.
Understanding the Outrage
Posted at 14:20h, 14 JulyI really think you are missing the point. It was not rejected because the
library didn’t feel the publication was widely read or of good quality, it
was rejected because this one librarian didn’t like what it published in a
single article. Think of the repercussions for news media.
Understanding the Outrage
Posted at 16:12h, 13 JulySo if Ms. Hubbard does not like what is being reported in a newspaper or news
magazine she can simply remove those periodicals from the public library shelves?
Or not order them for her patrons at all? I was unaware that all information at
the public library had to meet Commissar Hubbard’s personal approval. So much
for the First Amendment. If this was a private library it would not be an issue,
but it is supported by the taxpayers.
Incredulous
Posted at 10:27h, 13 JulyReally? So a librarian isn’t allowed to make decisions regarding what publications
should be on the shelves? Personal disagreement or not, if she hadn’t bothered to
inform them of the reason and simply chose not to carry the publication would have
drawn this much ire? Also, is there no other place for people interested in reading
the publication to find their own copy? The term ‘Tempest in a Teapot’ comes to
mind here. With all the other juicy information you’re reporting why would you
even bother to give this any attention?