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Public speakers clash over Policy 57-80 after dozens of books moved to high school
Summary
At the Dec. 11 Bellbrook-Sugarcreek Local board meeting, dozens of residents — parents, teachers and students — debated Board Policy 57-80 and the district's decision to relocate books from elementary and middle school libraries to the high school; commenters split on opt-in vs. opt-out and on whether removals constitute a 'book ban.'
Public comment at the Bellbrook-Sugarcreek Local Board of Education meeting on Dec. 11 focused on the district's parental-rights/library policy, Policy 57-80, and the recent relocation of multiple titles from elementary and middle school collections to the high school library.
Supporters of the policy, including Rachel Brucker, a parent and homeschool advocate, praised the board's move to require opt-in permission for certain age-sensitive materials and said reorganizing the high-school collection reduces inadvertent exposure for younger students while preserving access for older teens. "This opt-in policy made parental notification very clear," Brucker said.
Opponents said the policy goes too far. Sharon Hawkes, director of Right to Read Ohio, called…
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