The National Museum and Library Services Board, which serves in an advisory capacity to the director of the Institute of Museum and Library Services (IMLS), pens a letter to new Acting Director Keith Sonderling outlining which functions it considers essential obligations of the organization.
Just days following the installation of Keith Sonderling as the new Acting Director of the Institute of Museum and Library Services (IMLS), the National Museum and Library Services Board acted within its statutory capacity to advise the new director on "the essential functions of the Institute of Museum and Library Services as expressly provided by the Museum and Libraries Services Act of 2018 and budget appropriations enacted by Congress."
In a letter dated March 24, the Board reinforced the statutory obligations of IMLS that are not considered discretionary under the law: the Grants to States program; Native American Library Services; National Leadership Grants Program; State Plan Requirements; and Statutory Disbursement of Funds. The letter goes on to say that the Board considers all current-year and multi-year grants that have been authorized and funded by Congressional appropriation to constitute statutory obligations.
Per Executive Order 14238, signed by President Trump on March 14, IMLS is directed to reduce the "non-statutory components and functions" of its operations. With this letter, the Board makes clear its perspective on which aspects of IMLS' work must be retained.
I lived in the Boise/Meridian area for over 26 years and am a writer. I met weekly at The Cabin, a literary center in Boise, to work with other writers on our craft. I am so glad we have people like Megan Larsen to stand up for us. I now live in the Portland, Oregon area and am proud to have just had my novel, The Map of Orbis Terrarum, selected for the Library Writers Project by Multnomah County Library. We have always thought of libraries as quiet, dosel places, to read and study, yet now they are the front lines in a fight for one of our most important rights--to read what we choose.
We are currently offering this content for free. Sign up now to activate your personal profile, where you can save articles for future viewing