An article published in the Toronto Sun details how one school in the Peel region has been accused of throwing out half of its entire library, supposedly for political reasons. A secondary school in the Peel Region has caught significant blowback from its weeding practices. The School Library caught the media’s attention when it was reported to have cut its library in half, having removed any book that was published before 2008, including the Harry Potter series and Ann Franks Diary.
Weeding is a standard procedure, practiced across a variety of public and private libraries. It refers to the process of reviewing existing materials against a set of criteria to determine if they should remain as part of the collection. The guidelines that the Peel Region and many other Canadian school boards follow for weeding are published by the Canadian School Libraries (CSL). These guidelines include various criteria including ensuring materials are up to date, not damaged, and considers the relevance of the material’s content. The guidelines also center on the concept of equity and suggest the collection should reflect diverse experiences and perspectives and should meet the needs of the diverse population it serves.
A review several years ago of the Peel School Board found that concerns with racial discrimination were being persistently ignored. The report suggested that “PDSB undertake a comprehensive diversity audit of schools – including naming, mascots, libraries, and classrooms. This should include evaluating books, media and other resources currently being used in schools for teaching and learning English, History and Social Sciences to ensure that they are inclusive and culturally responsive, relevant, and reflective of the student bodies and voices, and broader school communities.” In response to the report, Ontario’s Minister of Education Stephen Lecce ordered the board to follow directives to address the issues, including the development of an anti-racism policy, and to conduct diversity audits on its learning materials.
The Toronto Sun article suggests that the school library disobeyed the directive and compared the weeding incident to a political book burning. The issue, however, seems to be that the library weeded out a huge portion of its books based on publication age alone. The school board director, Rasmi Swarup, responding to the incident suggested this was an error in the implementation of the weeding policy. He released a statement suggesting, “PDSB teacher librarians have not been given the direction to remove all books published with a publication date older than 2008, nor has the board received provincial direction to remove particular books from our collections.”
Given the apparent lack of discretion in weeding their library, as all books regardless of content published prior to 2008 were thrown out, there does not seem to be any evidence materials were weeded out according to any political considerations, or even any measure of equity. It is likely an error in implementation, especially considering some of the noted titles were arbitrary and non-political, such as The Hungry Caterpillar.