Texas Library Association

The Texas Library Association (TLA) is a charitable non-profit group that promotes libraries in Texas. It was founded in 1902. TLA is affiliated with the American Library Association (ALA) and has more than 6,000 members made up of librarians and library workers from academic, public, school and special libraries. Membership also includes library advocates, educators, and vendors. The organization has established annual awards and scholarships that honor excellence in the library profession. It also curates reading lists each year for multiple age groups, ranging from fiction, nonfiction, graphic novels, picture books, to bilingual and multicultural books.

Headquartered in Austin, Texas, the association is governed by a Council that meets at the TLA Annual Conference and the Annual Assembly. The executive board serves as the central management board and recommends matters of policy, budget, and operations to the council. Board members are elected annually by the membership.

To address the international disruption caused by the COVID-19 pandemic and the attention paid to social justice issues following the murder of George Floyd, the TLA in 2021 hosted nationally recognized programs on both topics.

In the fall of 2021, TLA released a statement, "The Freedom to Read is a Right and Must Be Protected," to make it clear that TLA opposes efforts that restrict the freedom to read through banning, removing, or other forms of restricting access to books or other materials. The controversy erupted after State Rep. Matt Krause, a Fort Worth Republican running for Texas attorney general, sent a letter to certain school districts with an 850-book list that included novels about racism and sexuality, asking the districts whether they had those books, how many copies they had and how much money was spent on them. Governor Greg Abbott joined the fray, saying "A growing number of parents of Texas students are becoming increasingly alarmed about some of the books and other content found in public school libraries that are extremely inappropriate in the public education system.”

Texas Public Radio's "The Source," a live call-in program, featured TLA member Sara Stevenson and author Ashley Hope Pérez discussing the GOP-fueled fight over kid-appropriate library books.

TLA President-Elect Mary Woodard spoke to the Dallas Morning News. Librarians could search for topics flagged by the legislator — such as human sexuality and sexually transmitted diseases — through subject headings in the Library of Congress Classification system used by most districts, Woodard said.

But determining which items might cause students distress because of their race or sex is an entirely subjective request, she said.

“What causes discomfort to one person may not cause discomfort to another person,” Woodard said. “That’s going to be very difficult to provide. And I feel like in most districts, their attorneys will probably say, ‘We cannot provide this information for you.’”

Several TLA members also launched the social media movement #FReadom, to celebrate diverse books and authors.

“One of the chilling effects is people get scared, and you get siloed. You're afraid, you're alone,” says Carolyn Foote, a library consultant who spent 29 years as a school librarian. “We hope people realize they’re not alone—there are people and librarians fighting for students to have rights to literature and information.”

Awards
The Texas Library Association annually bestows the Distinguished Service Award to a librarian who has demonstrated leadership and service, the first recipient was Edwin Sue Goree.