Enough is enough: Let Iowa libraries do their work
Enough is enough.
For years, Iowa’s libraries have faced a steady stream of legislative attacks, which are often driven by special interests and advanced through processes that avoid full transparency. The latest example, the library amendment attached to SF 2432, is not just concerning for what it does, but how it was done: quietly bundled into an unrelated health bill, limiting debate and obscuring accountability.
Libraries are not a problem to be solved. They are essential infrastructure.
At a time when communities are navigating an increasingly complex digital world, libraries are leading the way by helping residents access telehealth, apply for jobs, complete schoolwork, and build critical digital skills. They are also on the front lines of addressing struggling literacy, providing early learning support, tutoring, and lifelong education opportunities.
The return on investment is clear: public libraries in America generate between $5 and $9 for every dollar invested. More importantly, they are designed to create an informed, engaged constituency and have served as the very foundation of our healthy, civil society for 250 years.
So why are they under constant threat?
Iowans should ask that question and demand better. Policy that reshapes our public institutions should be debated openly, not slipped through as an afterthought.
Contact your legislators. Tell them to stop the attacks on Iowa libraries. Tell them to support transparent governance and stand with the institutions that strengthen our communities.
Our libraries, and the people who rely on them, deserve nothing less.
