The House debated and moved to amend S.220, an expansive bill based on a multi‑year working group report addressing the state of Vermont public libraries, selection and reconsideration procedures, confidentiality, and professional supports for librarians.
The strike‑all amendment rewrites library statutes to emphasize intellectual freedom, require public libraries to adopt selection and reconsideration policies that comply with the First Amendment and state anti‑discrimination law, and direct the Department of Libraries to develop continuing education programs and model policies. A notable change lowers the age for confidentiality of library records (for public libraries) to protect patrons under age 12 from disclosure of circulation records except to custodial parents/guardians.
During floor discussion members raised concerns about school vs municipal libraries, how confidentiality and FERPA intersect, whether materials appropriate for older students are properly segregated in k–12 settings, and whether parents should automatically be notified about materials a child checks out. Supporters argued the bill protects intellectual freedom and provides needed standards, professional development and model policies; opponents pressed specifics about parental rights and practical implementation in combined school/municipal libraries.
The House recorded a division and later announced the vote tally: 97 yes, 20 no. The committee reports and working group documents were cited repeatedly as the basis for the changes; the Department of Libraries and state librarian provided input during committee testimony. The bill was proposed to the Senate with the Committee on Government Operations and Military Affairs’ amendments and third reading was ordered.