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Colorado Booksellers' Efforts Result in Defeat of Censorship Bill
April 03, 2008
In response to strong opposition by booksellers and other supporters of First
Amendment rights, the Colorado legislature has killed a bill banning the sale
to minors of works that are "harmful" to minors because of their sexual
content.
In February, Matt Miller, general
manager of Denver's Tattered Cover Book
Store, and Lisa Knudsen, executive director of the Mountains
and Plains Independent Booksellers Association, told the Colorado Senate
Judiciary Committee that Senate Bill 125 would have a chilling effect on the
sale of books and magazines that are protected by the First Amendment. The legislation
was subsequently approved in committee, but was amended on the Senate floor
and sent to a second committee where it died.
The American Booksellers Foundation for Free
Expression (ABFFE) worked closely with Colorado booksellers in opposing S.B. 125.
"Booksellers played a critical role in the defeat of S.B. 125," said
ABFFE President Chris Finan in a statement. "While the sponsors tried to
paint it as protecting minors from pornography, the booksellers made it clear
that the law would affect books and magazines with serious literary, artistic,
and political value."
"We were very happy to hear that the 'Harmful to Minors' bill was defeated
in the Colorado Senate Appropriations Committee," Miller told BTW.
"It again proves to me the value and importance of groups like ABFFE in being ever vigilant of threats to our First Amendment rights. I
appreciate the help we received from Chris Finan at ABFFE in providing the necessary
resources to help fight this case."
The booksellers also received strong editorial support from Denver's Rocky
Mountain News.
Other groups opposing S.B. 125 were the American Civil Liberties Union of Colorado,
the Colorado Library Association, Equal Rights Colorado, Colorado Organizations
Responding to AIDS, Planned Parenthood of the Rocky Mountains, the Colorado
Coalition Against Sexual Assault, the Colorado Academy of Family Physicians,
and the Colorado Association of Family and Children's Agencies.
Topics: News - Bookselling, Free Expression,
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