Several Peel District School Board students, parents and community members are concerned about a seemingly inconsistent approach to a new book weeding process intended to ensure school library books are inclusive, but that appears to have led some schools to remove thousands of books published in 2008 or earlier.
Directive 18 instructs the board to complete a diversity audit of schools, which includes libraries.
First, teacher librarians were instructed to focus on reviewing books that were published 15 or more years ago — so in 2008 or earlier. For those reasons, the documents say the books cannot be donated, as "they are not suitable for any learners." "That is where many of us have a real issue. None of us have an issue with removing books that are musty, torn, or racist, outdated. But by weeding a book, removing a book from a shelf, based simply on this date is unacceptable. And yes, I witnessed it."
Trustee and chair of the board, David Green, told CBC Toronto the weeding process itself "rolled out wrong."
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